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Oppo Has a New Pair of Smart Glasses, But You Probably Can't Get Them

Oppo Air Glass is a new 'assisted reality' device that resembles Google Glass.

 & Mark Knapp Contributing Writer

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Oppo has just announced a new product coming to the Chinese market in Q1 2022 called Air Glass, which could be a spiritual successor to Google Glass

Oppo defines the Air Glass as an “assisted Reality” device. It's a heads-up display that attaches to the frame of a pair of glasses and uses a projector to beam an image into a waveguide at the corner of the user's vision. 

The Qualcomm Snapdragon Wear 4100-powered system can provide notifications, display weather and calendar info, offer navigation instructions and even function as a teleprompter. The device will also support live, two-way translation between Mandarin Chinese and English or Japanese, showing the translation on the display. Korean translation is also planned.

Users will be able to interact with the Air Glass using head gestures, spoken commands, touch, and hand motion enabled by a paired Oppo Watch 2.  

The Spark Micro Projector on the Air Glass was designed by Oppo to take up just a half a cubic center of space while using a Micro LED light source the company claims can reach a brightness of 3 million nits. The projector beams onto a custom-built optical diffraction waveguide, which Oppo says can offer 16-level or 256-level grayscale and provide an average 1,400 nits of brightness, more than enough for day-time visibility.  

Oppo has designed the Air Glass to attach to half-frames or full-frames for users who require corrective lenses. It will come in two sizes and colors.

Though the Oppo Air Glass may leap ahead of Google Glass in terms of design, particularly with the use of a thin waveguide instead of a blocky prism, it doesn’t appear to be a monumental leap in capabilities. Like Google Glass, it is offering a simple visual overlay to provide information at a glance. Whereas Google Glass could display color, the Oppo Air Glass appears limited to shades of green. Google Glass also featured an onboard camera — something that raised its fair share of privacy concerns — which Oppo has omitted on its device.

Where Google’s focus has shifted to enterprise for Google Glass, Oppo’s inclusion of walking and bike navigation suggests a broader market for the device. There’s no word on pricing just yet, though, nor on a release beyond the Chinese mainland market. Oppo has indicated a Q1 release date, though maybe take that with a grain of salt, given that Oppo has made similar announcements for the past two years.

About Our Expert

Mark Knapp

Mark Knapp

Contributing Writer

My Experience

I've covered the technology field for a decade, beginning a freelance career in 2017 and working with numerous publications, including PCMag since 2021. I have reviewed hundreds of products with a particular emphasis on computers and the broad field of peripherals, especially audio gear. At PCMag, I contribute audio device reviews of products like headphones and speakers, in addition to reviews of Windows laptops.

The Tech I Use

As a voracious reviewer, I'm cycling through different hardware at almost every corner of my life. My desk sees new speakers, monitors, keyboards, mice, computers, and laptops come across non-stop. I stick with Windows systems, as I have since I was a child, and can't get away from the familiarity with its organization and the many keyboard shortcuts that are now down to muscle-memory and all too essential to my workflows. On mobile, I've stuck with Android for its flexibility, though which phone is in my hand on any given day is a constant question. 

I keep an old pair of Monolith M570 open-back planar magnetic headphones around for focused listening and earbuds in my pocket to listen to podcasts on walks and bike rides. I keep a Logitech Wave Keys keyboard on my desk to enjoy its comfort and ergonomics as I type out thousands of words every week. Underneath my desk is a Lian Li 011 Air Mini case holding an ever-changing PC geared for testing speakers, monitors, gaming peripherals, and whatever else might come across my desk.

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