Rabbit OS on Meta Ray-Ban glasses

Anyone tried to flash ROM with Rabbit OS on Meta Ray-ban?

It would be really cool update. I like Meta AI, but it’s way more basic comparatively to Rabbit R1? The power of wearable device, totally hands-free experience and brains of Rabbit :slight_smile:

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This will be the next one … I hope…

I did a while ago, connect my Rayban over Bluetooth to my R1. Worked like a charm.

All is missing is a wake world and it would be flawless.

In this setup, you push the R1 button, the audio is carried on the Rayban glasses, mic included if I remember well.

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Interesting tip — I’ll give it a try.
But what I actually meant is having the “brain” of the R1 integrated into the Meta Ray-Ban glasses, using their built-in camera.

Right now, you can connect the glasses to R1 via Bluetooth, and they act like Bluetooth headphones. However, you can’t use the Meta Ray-Ban camera to take a photo with an AI filter from R1, or ask R1 something while leveraging the glasses’ camera.

I think the next logical and exciting step for the R1 to become a truly wearable device is to migrate to glasses hardware.

I really like everything about the R1 — it’s smart and intuitive — but it’s not fully wearable in the same seamless way Meta Ray-Bans are in terms of usability. That said, I also feel the limitations of Meta AI, which isn’t nearly as smart or capable as R1.

It would be cool to have a jail break rabbit OS installble on Meta Rayban

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My (personal) take - It’s far from proven that glasses are the obvious form factor here. And with Meta and Google now fighting over that market, it might not make all that much sense for us to jump in there - unless someone really wants to do a partnership.

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It’s not about competing with Google or Meta (Meta is already ahead with the third generation of Meta Quest, a strong gamer base, an active community, and open-source support). It’s about doing something different — much like Apple did when it opened the App Store to all developers, in contrast to Nokia’s closed Symbian OS.

In this sense, making something different means turning Rabbit OS into a product in its own right — one that can be installed on multiple devices: PCs, Macs, or even Meta Glasses — to deliver a smoother, more intuitive user experience. You simply talk, take a photo, and ask.

The problem with Meta’s AI is that it’s still relatively limited compared to Rabbit. Its glasses offer only very basic functionality: taking photos, checking the weather, playing music, translating — and that’s about it. There’s no agentic AI, no support for calendars, events, notes, to-do lists, or automation. That’s where Rabbit clearly stands out.

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