Lumus showed me a fragile prototype that delivered a surprisingly wide, clean view, hinting at the future of smart glasses.
The Israel-based optics company unveiled ZOE, a wide field-of-view waveguide exceeding 70 degrees, alongside an optimized ...
Lumus, the company that developed the waveguide optic used in Meta’s Ray-Ban Display smart glasses, says it has achieved a ...
Augmented reality (AR) technology developer Magic Leap has signed an agreement with the Taiwan-based electronics manufacturer ...
On the OEM waveguide front, Vuzix is once again pushing the boundaries of what's possible in advanced optics. Collins Aerospace will join Vuzix in booth #19340 to demonstrate a fully functional ...
DigiLens, creators of waveguide optics, today announced a “deeper” partnership with Mitsubishi Chemical to bring a plastic version of its waveguide technology to the market. The companies claim the ...
Wearing smart glasses at the biggest tech show of the year was a glimpse of the future, with plenty of caveats.
Lumus developed the waveguide display for the Meta Ray-Ban Display. At CES, the company is presenting three new ...
Lithium niobite (LN) with an ultra-wide optical transparent window has shown excellent nonlinear, electro-optic, acoustic-optic, piezoelectric, thermoelectric and photorefractive effects. It is an ...
Engineers have developed the thinnest optical device in the world -- a waveguide that is three layers of atoms thin. The work is a proof of concept for scaling down optical devices to sizes that are ...