The glasses do need to pair to a smartphone to work, and Halliday has a well-designed app for iPhones and Android devices. Once paired, the glasses will use your smartphone's data. You control the ...
That's the Halliday smart glasses' screen. Credit ... to see what the smart glass space looks like at, say, next year's CES. But it feels like the direction that AR glasses are going in are ...
There's momentum building behind smart glasses right now—as these gadgets gradually get more useful and less ugly—and the Halliday Glasses are the latest pair to arrive, launching at CES 2025 ...
This CES is all about the tech race for space on your face. There’s a new set of smart glasses everywhere you turn this year. But Halliday’s new AI-packed specs are the apple of my eye at CES ...
Walk up to someone wearing a pair of Halliday’s smart glasses, and you might not notice they’re looking at smartphone notifications, live language translations, or advice from an AI assistant.
Wearables startup Halliday launched a pair of smart glasses at CES 2025 that projects a 3.5-inch round display into your line of sight. The device creating the display is called the DigiWindow ...
The company is showing off the glasses at CES this week ... Along with Google’s new smart glasses, Halliday’s offering could reinvigorate smart glasses for some. Many of these features ...
The Halliday smart glasses are expected to retail between $399 and $499 (approx. ₹33,000 to 42,000). Also Read: MSI unveils new laptops with NVIDIA RTX 50-series graphics and AI features at CES ...
especially after Meta entered the space with the launch of its Rayban Meta AI smart glasses. Now, brands like Halliday have jumped into the scene to claim their share of the market. At CES 2025 ...
Halliday’s smart glasses, for example ... Though many of the devices shown at CES are largely aimed at consumers, some smart glasses are also being tailored to enterprise customers (Vuzix ...
The first bucket is the simple and stylish glasses. The more stylish and comfortable smart glasses are, the fewer features they tend to have. But for this group, that’s often a good thing.