“Facebook sees computing's future on your wrist”#VoiceFirst. https://t.co/BQScOy7MWf
— Brian Roemmele (@BrianRoemmele) March 18, 2021
Facebook researchers are rapidly learning how to replace mouse clicks and screen taps with finger twitches. They're doing it by putting a band on your wrist that reads nerve impulses sent by your brain to your hand. https://t.co/4D3Yj09PGW
— Axios (@axios) March 18, 2021
Facebook reaveil their Wrist Band which can reads nerve impulses sent by your brain to your hand. #Facebook
— Sam Region (@RahulP2021) March 18, 2021
Details: https://t.co/31FzylAxG5 pic.twitter.com/xTt59LRLUD
If you think ‘Mark Zuckerberg is a fucking dweeb’ it just tightens around your wrist until you pass out https://t.co/JqA4ZepPHP
— Alexandra Haddow (@MissAHaddow) March 18, 2021
Facebook is working on a new neural interface wrist device to go along with its AR glasses – it reads the signals sent from your brain to your hand. https://t.co/GyO3cif1NU
— Katie Notopoulos (@katienotopoulos) March 18, 2021
Stuff like this used to make me worried. Now it just makes me sad for the engineers that this (possibly genuinely useful!) tech will likely never see the light of day because FB's privacy track record is so horrible. https://t.co/X3Z78WmcGd
— Kevin Roose (@kevinroose) March 18, 2021
Facebook shows off mind-reading technology it hopes to use one day with smart glasses https://t.co/6pkSPLMGxd
— CNBC Tech (@CNBCtech) March 18, 2021
Facebook shows off mind-reading technology it hopes to use one day with smart glasses https://t.co/tOVJIa4O79
— CNBC (@CNBC) March 18, 2021
I have huge concerns about AR glasses, but I cannot overstate how much I want these armbands (which I was lucky enough to try before Facebook acquired CTRL-Labs) as an input device https://t.co/WuKrvICF0Y
— Adi Robertson (@thedextriarchy) March 18, 2021
Facebook shows off how you’ll use its neural wristbands with AR glasses https://t.co/ueUaCcKahL pic.twitter.com/EUv68SJFhE
— The Verge (@verge) March 18, 2021
This reminds me of something I wrote about that Facebook announced at F8 way back in 2017, which allowed people to operate computers with their thoughts: https://t.co/0c4sBmue58 https://t.co/RbWfZo2Sze
— Marty Swant (@martyswant) March 18, 2021
Here’s some mind-blowing technology being developed by @boztank and his team for our AR glasses: wrist-based sensors that let you control devices using the same electrical motor nerve signals you use to move your handshttps://t.co/UsVsGA7tm6 pic.twitter.com/T6xZzfoEdM
— Mike Schroepfer (@schrep) March 18, 2021
Great work @boztank and the @oculus team! The tech is super impressive, can't wait to see it in action. We all know what happens to that data is the elephant in the room. How about an open pledge/policy on the Facebook site? Something like, say: https://t.co/7ARkgODEAX https://t.co/XC44sHgtLr
— Michael Sitarzewski (@msitarzewski) March 18, 2021
This feels so un-exciting to me. Unless you can put that tech into an Apple Watch-like device, I’ll pass. https://t.co/0qQgm0oYDZ
— Thomas Nigro (@ThomasNigro) March 18, 2021
3/ Part 2 of 2 of a @FBrealitylabs video on their "intelligent click" that combines contextually-aware AI with their wrist-based EMG device, customizable neural inputs, & haptics.
— Kent Bye VoicesOfVR (@kentbye) March 18, 2021
Their Tech Blog:https://t.co/A0uP6pAhGo
My podcast context & analysis:https://t.co/nLRELjVBPC pic.twitter.com/2n1iqryFW5
If this works, Facebook is inventing the next keyboard + mouse https://t.co/ZZKZeW6L7T
— Alex Heath (@alexeheath) March 18, 2021
I am keeping an open mind! But it does strike me as tech that would be much more likely to be commercially successful if it came from a trusted entity.
— Kevin Roose (@kevinroose) March 18, 2021
ElOhEl, the efficiency and utility of AR gadgetry will be inversely correlated with the number, cost and bulkiness of sensors you'd have to wear or carry. https://t.co/bgKdOi40WB
— Kontra (@counternotions) March 18, 2021
This technology has amazing potential, especially in making devices more accessible. I'm pretty excited about the idea of a full sized keyboard anywhere I go... pic.twitter.com/JRCMjTqPNw
— Mike Schroepfer (@schrep) March 18, 2021
This research, along with VR, AR, and a bunch of new technologies, is both incredibly interesting and also entirely too powerful for anyone to be comfortable with FACEBOOK leading the charge on it https://t.co/qJK2WTZ4wp
— Pat Dennis (@patdennis) March 18, 2021
AR glasses will enable us to be present and connected—how we communicate with this new device will be critical. Building this interface demands advances from numerous technological areas and I’m proud of our research teams and the progress we’ve made: https://t.co/6ztS7bYQCw https://t.co/SJgViVJt5e
— Boz (@boztank) March 18, 2021
Holy sh*t. https://t.co/SFFTJWs6V9
— Adam Mosseri ? (@mosseri) March 18, 2021
It’s an act of faith to wear any computing device on your body. Should we trust a wearable from @Facebook that reads certain signals from your brain? Fascinating piece by @LaurenGoode explains Facebook’s wearable project and raises the question. https://t.co/AiLNvmBMVi
— Walt Mossberg (@waltmossberg) March 18, 2021
This week, we gave the world a glimpse inside our labs, inviting journalists from all over the world to learn more about our research.
— Tanya Jonker (@trjonker) March 18, 2021
Our tech blog post provides an overview, including our work on adaptive interfaces (featuring quotes from yours truly!)https://t.co/HNJJKFq4n6
The result of an acquisition: https://t.co/avbkLUDiu8
— Justin Hendrix (@justinhendrix) March 18, 2021
Reading your nerve signals to recreate your hand. The new tech Facebook is developing for augmented reality is kinda nuts. pic.twitter.com/LSOvFwuwDd
— Alex Kantrowitz (@Kantrowitz) March 18, 2021
Facebook wants to develop new human-computer interactions. Will we be able to trust it with a new form of personal data? That's one of the things I asked @boztank https://t.co/qb5lfQ6qaS
— Lauren Masks Are Goode (@LaurenGoode) March 18, 2021
Had a great conversation with Facebook's hardware head Andrew @boztank Bosworth about what it takes to build a smart interface for AR glasses. Turns out we may have to rethink the idea of a digital assistant. Sorry, Alexa! https://t.co/eQlN7GkWWT
— Janko Roettgers (@jank0) March 18, 2021
If you think ‘Mark Zuckerberg is a fucking dweeb’ it just tightens around your wrist until you pass out https://t.co/JqA4ZepPHP
— Alexandra Haddow (@MissAHaddow) March 18, 2021
It's pretty remarkable that Facebook cannot come up with anything remotely convincing to say to the obvious question, “Are you going to harvest and monetize the data this gathers in ways people hate?”
— Gilad Edelman (@GiladEdelman) March 18, 2021
Facebook’s AR/VR boss @boztank on building AR assistants you won’t hate https://t.co/sncfuPY2Bn
— ? Matt Navarra (@MattNavarra) March 18, 2021
Read more about the research here: https://t.co/D7g4ZO4Ax3
— Facebook Reality Labs (@FBRealityLabs) March 18, 2021
This is a great conversation between @jank0 and @boztank, and I will now forever think about virtual assistants as six-year-olds https://t.co/tfXJGewsih pic.twitter.com/UWoE5E5oCC
— David Pierce (@pierce) March 18, 2021
Facebook is developing a wristband that'll allow wearers to interact with the virtual world as seen through smart glasses with subtle finger movements - or "intelligent clicks"
— Hannah Murphy (@MsHannahMurphy) March 18, 2021
It's part of efforts to take on Apple in the next generation of computing:https://t.co/wNJkRqcScA
This might make it possible to type in VR/AR without actually having hands https://t.co/lI223OfkwG
— Jane Manchun Wong (@wongmjane) March 18, 2021
Apple: Facebook’s smartwatch is going to be so lame ?
— ? Matt Navarra (@MattNavarra) March 18, 2021
Facebook: https://t.co/RU2a7RwgIl
Facebook revealed a plan to let you control augmented reality with your thoughts.
— Geoffrey A. Fowler (@geoffreyfowler) March 18, 2021
It’s wristband that can react to nerve signals.
Cool, but nobody is ever going to use this tech as long as it’s associated with Facebook. They’ve squandered too much trusthttps://t.co/k1EPw8DYLJ
Facebook is focused on "building an interface for AR that won’t force us to choose between interacting with our devices and the world around us."
— Product Hunt ? (@ProductHunt) March 18, 2021
But why are they focusing on the wrist?pic.twitter.com/aVlYY37euj
Why the wrist? "...As we explored the possibilities, placing an input device at the wrist became the clear answer: The wrist is a traditional place to wear a watch, meaning it could reasonably fit into everyday life and social contexts..." https://t.co/9W8yI3ioEK
— Facebook AI (@facebookai) March 18, 2021
Pretty awesome. Plus, Oculus hand tracking has already gotten so much better. https://t.co/yI5VvopCbe
— Joanna Stern (@JoannaStern) March 18, 2021
In which @StevenLevy and @snackfight and I discuss Facebook's vision for the future of human-computer interactions, whether we should trust the company with wearable data, and Boston accents (unrelated to Facebook) https://t.co/oYCX4XFWQF
— Lauren Masks Are Goode (@LaurenGoode) March 19, 2021
Sometimes my brilliant colleagues at the WIRED @gadgetlab podcast invite me to the show. That happened this week, and we talked Facebook, reality, and what a @boztank is. https://t.co/tV5NsLbMWS
— Steven Levy (@StevenLevy) March 19, 2021
? What could go wrong? #Facebook shows off mind-reading #technology https://t.co/Xr8DM28DWI
— Evan Kirstel $B2B (@EvanKirstel) March 19, 2021
Facebook shows off how you’ll use its neural wristbands with AR glasses https://t.co/2aNXYCz8D9 pic.twitter.com/LzJxqlDO82
— The Verge (@verge) March 19, 2021
The future of #AR and neural haptic interfaces.... https://t.co/yDmFCD4j29
— Exponential Medicine (@ExponentialMed) March 19, 2021
Facebook shows off how you’ll use its neural wristbands ? with #AR glasses ? https://t.co/KfzaqquWCR @verge #AugmentedReality #SmartGlasses #Wearables #IoT #XR #haptics #futureofwork #5G
— Glen Gilmore ? (@GlenGilmore) March 19, 2021
cc @Fabriziobustama @arlenenewbigg @RickKing16 @CurieuxExplorer @Nicochan33 pic.twitter.com/SL6W286aNO