August 3, 2011 - According to a report by foreign media outlet The Verge on August 1, the startup Brilliant Labs The new model, priced at $299 (note: about Rs. 2154 at current exchange rates), has been launched.Smart glasses HaloNoa, a multimodal AI intelligence, is capable of natural conversations."Hearing" and "seeing" the surroundingsand provide relevant information in real time.

Unlike Meta's wearable, Halo doesn't rely solely on audible prompts, but is equipped with a piece of 0.2-inch color microOLED display, projecting the retro arcade style interface into the side view. Sound is provided through theBone conduction speaker for mirror legsOutgoing for enhanced privacy. With a low-power camera and an AI chip with a Neural Processing Unit (NPU), battery lifeUp to 14 hoursIts overall weight remains in the low 40-gram range. Its overall weight is still just over 40 grams, making it light to wear.
Brilliant Labs says Noa provides more relevant information based on the user's environment, making conversations "as natural as talking to a real person". AI control is further enhanced by the ability to mute or put the glasses into sleep mode via voice command.
For users with diminishing memory and eyesight, Halo also features Brilliant Labs' patent-pending Narrative, an "intelligent body memory system" that uses a camera, microphone, and recorded data from daily interactions to build a proprietary knowledge base for the user -- the ability to talk again and again. -- that can be used when talking again.Prompting for names and even recalling past conversations.
In addition, Halo has experimented with a new feature called Vibe Mode, which allows users to create their own apps by simply giving commands in natural language. Brilliant Labs gives the example of generating a customized mapping tool based on your own navigational habits, so you don't have to try and sift through the app store to find what you want to do, you just generate it.