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Scooped by
Richard Platt
onto Wearable Tech and the Internet of Things (Iot) May 23, 2022 1:21 PM
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Qualcomm has introduced a wireless version of its AR Smart Viewer powered by the Snapdragon XR2 chipset, The reference design could be used by OEMs could adapt into commercial headsets. QCOM's new wireless version of its Augmented Reality (AR) Smart Viewer, a reference design that manufacturers . The Wireless AR Smart Viewer updates QCOM's earlier smart glasses design with a higher-powered chipset, plus a tethering system that uses Wi-Fi 6 / 6E and Bluetooth instead of a USB-C cable. That comes with the tradeoff of a potentially very short battery life — although Qualcomm says consumer-ready versions might be designed differently. (Obviously QCOM doesn't know how to manage tradeoff in design if they still have this tradeoff in the design, QCOM needs to learn Inventive Design and Competitive Engineering practices I would argue).
A comparison between Qualcomm’s wired and wireless glasses
It's substantially smaller than the non-consumer-focused Magic Leap 2, that offers closer to 70 degrees. In its favor, the Smart Viewer has a slimmer profile than either the wired Smart Viewer and most competitors. Current tech probably can’t support some of AR’s most obvious applications, like creating a set of virtual monitors you can use all day at work. Read on for more AR details.