After a decade of development and billions of dollars, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg in September pulled back the curtain on one of the company’s most ambitious projects: an augmented reality prototype called Orion. A week earlier, Snap CEO Evan Spiegel took the stage at its annual Snap Partner Summit to introduce its AR capable, 5th-generation Spectacles. Both companies see massive potential for the technology, with a grand vision for AR glasses to usurp smartphones as the next generation of computing.
“This is a major leap forward for technology,” Chris Cox, Meta’s chief product officer, told CNBC’s Julia Boorstin in an exclusive interview. “It’s a big step forward for our sort of goal to help define the next generation of computing.”
The dream of augmented and mixed reality is something tech giants have been pursuing for years.
Earlier this year, Apple started selling its Vision Pro virtual reality headsetfor $3,500. Over a decade ago, Google was first to market in 2013 with Google Glass, an …