Developers are finally getting their hands on Meta’s Ray-Ban Display, shifting the glasses from novelty to app canvas. A fresh mobile SDK for iOS and Android, plus support for web apps, tees up quick experiments from partners like Twitch, Disney, and 18Birdies, building on the eyewear that debuted in fall 2025. The hardware is modest, with a 20-degree field of view and a Neural Band controller for gestures, but demos like CTO Andrew Bosworth’s Darkroom Buddy, live subtitles for calls, and simultaneous recording hint at everyday utility and lightweight play, from chess to Snake. The catch is familiar: a thin app ecosystem and a six-hour battery, with hopes pinned on what Meta brings next at Connect.
A new chapter for Ray-Ban smart glasses
Meta is widening the horizon for its Ray-Ban Display smart glasses by opening them to third-party developers. First introduced in fall 2025, the glasses debuted in the US with a tight set of built-in apps. Now, Meta is laying the tracks for a broader ecosystem, aiming to turn a stylish wearable into a daily companion that blends utility with quick, glanceable information.
Tools to empower developers
Back in September 2025, Meta rolled out the Wearables Device Access Toolkit for its screenless Ray-Ban line. Building on that, the company is releasing a mobile SDK that works with iOS and Android, plus support for web apps that tap the glasses’ display. The pitch is simple: let developers reuse familiar tools to build glance-first apps, from productivity prompts to up-to-the-minute dashboards.
Highlights of the Ray-Ban Display lineup
The Ray-Ban Display offers a 20-degree monocular field of view, practical for subtle overlays rather than full immersion. Interactions lean on the Neural Band controller, which recognizes discreet finger gestures. During a recent demo, Andrew Bosworth, CTO, showed Darkroom Buddy, a prototype that guides film development steps inside your field of view. Casual features are also on the table, with mini-games like chess and Snake rumored to be in testing.
Updates enhancing communication
Meta has been seeding quality-of-life updates in recent months. A finger-tracking writing feature lets you trace letters to reply without pulling out your phone. Another update records the display view alongside your first-person camera, useful for sharing what you saw and how you saw it. Real-time subtitles now appear in calls on WhatsApp, Messenger, and Instagram, a nod to accessibility and quick comprehension.
Challenges and a glimpse at the future
The opening move is promising, but the catalog still needs breadth. Battery life remains the sticking point, with many users noting roughly 6 hours per charge in mixed use. Meta has hinted at a follow-on model, and Mark Zuckerberg teased future updates at Meta’s Connect event. The question now is whether developers will rally behind a glance-first wearable and turn it into a must-have companion.