Ray-Ban Meta AI Glasses Aid Paris Travel but Misstate 330m Eiffel Tower Height
Updated
Updated · BBC.com · Jun 14
Ray-Ban Meta AI Glasses Aid Paris Travel but Misstate 330m Eiffel Tower Height
1 articles · Updated · BBC.com · Jun 14
Summary
A Paris test found Ray-Ban Meta AI glasses handled translation, currency conversion and voice-guided navigation well, but gave conflicting answers on the Eiffel Tower’s height—330m, then 324m.
That error exposed a bigger reliability problem: the glasses cited vague sources such as training data and internet searches, making it hard to judge which answers can be trusted.
Other features were uneven too, with point-of-view photos lacking zoom and manual focus, and object recognition sometimes reduced to generic descriptions rather than useful identification.
Privacy concerns remained central because the camera-equipped glasses can record bystanders, while Meta says voice interactions may be stored and transcripts or audio kept for up to 1 year unless deleted.
The review argues the devices may suit harder trips or business travel, but their convenience can also replace serendipity and human interaction as smart-glasses sales reportedly topped 7 million in 2025.