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On October 8, 2018, Facebook, Inc. announced the sale and shipment of the 10.1-inch (25.7 cm) Portal and the 15.6-inch (39.6 cm) Portal Plus. [9] [10] The second generation of Portal devices was announced on September 18, 2019; the second-generation Portal and Portal Mini were released on October 15, while Portal TV was released on November 5.
Unlike other smart glasses, the Ray-Ban Meta glasses do not include any HUD or AR head-mounted display. Meta announced them on September 27, 2023. They use a Qualcomm Snapdragon AR1 Gen1 processor, upgrade of the cameras to 12 MP, improved audio, livestreaming to Facebook and Instagram, and Meta AI. [3]
The Smart Display was a battery-powered 10" or 15" LCD monitor with a touchscreen (similar in size and shape to a Tablet PC), connecting to a PC over an 802.11b WiFi network, with input via Transcriber (similar to Graffiti) or a pop-up soft-keyboard for text entry, and built-in speakers.
Unlike previous smart glasses by other companies, Ray-Ban Stories have no HUD or AR display but have integrated cameras, speakers, and microphones running through a Qualcomm Snapdragon processor and connect via bluetooth to integrate with Facebook on your phone.
The Microsoft Wireless Display Adapter, a Miracast HDMI dongle. Samsung televisions support Miracast [51] where it is named Smart View (including all models made since 2016 [52]). Miracast is also supported on LG smart TV models, some Toshiba TVs, [53] Sharp, Philips (Wireless Screencasting), [54] and Panasonic televisions and Blu-ray players.
Facebook Home was a user interface layer for Android smartphones. Developed by the company then known as Facebook (now Meta Platforms ), the software was designed to be a drop-in replacement for the device's existing home screen ("launcher").
Smart Display. Model Number Fab Cores Memory Additional 6710W 22 nm 2 DDR2 64Mb*16 Supports maximum 10bit FULL HD LVDS screen Built-in FHD TCON
Some devices may use other kinds of display technology, like holographic displays or multiscopic displays. Some devices employ eye tracking in aiming the 3D effect to the viewer's eye. Opic Technologies, Inc. offers a 3D smartphone with stereoscopic cameras, which enables 3D livestream technology.