Lumus showed me a fragile prototype that delivered a surprisingly wide, clean view, hinting at the future of smart glasses.
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Lumus builds on Meta win with 70-degree, daylight-bright augmented reality waveguides
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 ...
Lumus Unveils Next-Gen Waveguides for AR Glasses, Including New ZOE Geometric Waveguide With Over 70 Degree Field of View | ...
Lumus developed the waveguide display for the Meta Ray-Ban Display. At CES, the company is presenting three new ...
Lumus, a developer of geometric (reflective) waveguide technology for augmented reality (AR) eyewear, has unveiled its wide ...
Collins Aerospace highlights military HUD display for drones and other mission-critical applications -- A broad array of smart-glasses projection engines integrated with Vuzix waveguides will be on ...
Lumus debuts ZOE at CES 2026, the first geometric waveguide with a >70° field of view that will make AR glasses look like ...
Throughout the evolution of AR technology, display systems have consistently aimed for a balance between clarity and compactness. Diffractive waveguides, known for their slim profiles, have become ...
Lumus, the pioneering developer of geometric (reflective) waveguide technology for augmented reality (AR) eyewear, today unveiled its wide field of view ZOE and optimized Z-30, two new waveguides that ...
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