Meta is throwing open the doors to its Ray-Ban Display glasses. Starting today, developers can build third-party apps for the smart glasses using either a native mobile SDK (Swift or Kotlin) or web ...
Google AI Studio lets users test Gemini models, build apps, generate media, and export code. Here’s what it does, costs, and ...
Meta has opened up the Meta Ray-Ban Display for developers. One of the first apps tested is a port of the classic game "Doom" ...
Google announced over a dozen new features and changes for its Chrome web browser during its Google I/O conference today.
Updates for the web browsers Chrome and Firefox, as well as the Thunderbird email client, patch partly critical security ...
Meta revealed that it will deliver a Developer Preview and access for developers to begin creating mobile and web apps for ...
With the latest release, TestMu AI now supports running Playwright tests on real devices using Java, Python, and C# in addition to existing capabilities. This allows enterprise teams to adopt ...
Meta introduces writing gestures and walking directions to its augmented reality smart glasses, and gives developers the ...
Meta is opening up the Ray-Ban Display glasses to third-party developers, and it could change how useful smart glasses ...
Developers can now create visual, hands-free experiences for the glasses using mobile app tools or standard web technologies. Meta is opening more of its smart glasses hardware to developers, with ...
Honor is attempting to tamp down security concerns that saw its former parent company banned from doing business in the ...
Meta opened its $799 Ray-Ban Display to web-app developers and added handwriting input, screen recording, expanded walking ...