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Meta Connect 2025 live updates: Ray-Bans 2, Hypernova smart glasses, Oakley, more

Kerry Wan/ZDNET

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Meta Connect 2025<!–> kicks off today, and the company is expected to showcase several new products and use the event to sharpen its XR strategy toward AI-driven hardware that can be worn and used today.

Last year’s Connect 2024 conference brought some notable improvements to its Meta Ray-Ban smart glasses, including multimodal video support, live translations, and natural language processing. 

Also: 5 Meta Ray-Ban upgrades that have me truly hyped for today

Meta also previewed advances in Llama 3, showing how its AI research was driving new features. Connect 2024 showed how consumers could continue to embrace AI wearables, setting the stage for Meta to make a bigger leap into display-driven smart glasses and a full developer platform to support them. Here’s what’s on the docket for 2025, and how to tune in.

How to watch Meta Connect 2025

The main keynote with Mark Zuckerberg begins Wednesday, September 17, at 5:00 p.m. Pacific time, 8:00 p.m. Eastern time. The developer keynote follows on Thursday morning at 10:00 a.m. Pacific, 1:00 p.m. Eastern. 

While developers, media, and industry analysts have been invited to attend the event in person, Meta’s official Connect website–>Facebook Live<!–>, and YouTube–> (which wouldn’t require a Meta login) will offer streams for public viewing. Quest users can also experience it in virtual reality inside Horizon Worlds. ZDNET is reporting live from the event, and here are the latest updates.

What to expect at Meta Connect 2025

Meta Ray-Ban Display: A new version of the popular smart glasses features a waveguide display that projects helpful context, including translations, navigation paths, and more. The glasses may also work in tandem with an sEMG wristband to support gesture controls.

Meta Ray-Ban 2: Not to be mistaken for the Display model, the second generation of Meta Ray-Bans shares a similar design and functionality as its predecessor. It serves as a camera-first wearable with more generalized improvements, such as battery life and comfort.

Oakley Meta Sphaera: Based on the popular sports glasses, Meta is expected to extend its partnership with Oakley by releasing a new Sphaera model. The glasses will feature a centered camera and curved lens design.

Asus ROG Tarius VR headset: A new gaming VR headset, made in partnership with Asus ROG, is expected at Meta Connect. How the headset fares against the Meta Quest remains in question, but it’s safe to say that this is a totally different beast.

Latest updates (refresh for more)

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The skateboard ramps are out

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Kerry Wan/ZDNET

By Kerry Wan, Managing Editor / Sept. 17 at 4:37 p.m. ET

There’s a lot happening within the confines of Meta HQ today, much of which we can’t talk about just yet, but I can share this massive skateboard ramp.

It’s safe to say that Meta is continuing to target athletes and sports fans with its smart glasses, pitching the wearables as a hands-free alternative to more traditioanl action cameras.

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By Cesar Cadenas, Writer / Sept. 16 at 7:50 p.m. ET

Gurman’s report mentions that Meta will “begin offering a so-called neural wristband [codenamed Ceres] for the first time.” This will be an accompanying accessory to Hypernova that converts electrical signals from wrist muscles into gesture controls. For example, rotating your hands will let you scroll through apps, and a finger pinch will allow users to select specific items.

Also: Meta wears Prada? Why its next-gen AR glasses might out-style the Ray-Bans

Not much is known about Ceres; however, early renders and images of the accessory have leaked–>. These renders show Ceres could be a bracelet of sorts made primarily out of gray, elastic textile cloth, with the inner side holding a series of “high-performance EMG sensors.” 

These sensors capture the electrical signals mentioned earlier, which are then sent to an internal processor to “produce input events” on the smart glasses. It even has a haptic engine delivering tactile feedback to the user.

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