The Digilens Argo is an industrial pair of AR glasses with a clear-looking set of lenses.
Scott Stein/CNET
I took a selfie of myself wearing the Digilens Argo AR glasses high in a hotel room at CES in Las Vegas, and of course I looked ridiculous. Unlike many devices that aim to make future AR glasses more normal-looking, this pair is focused on being safe and reliable: It’s designed for places like factories, industrial environments, and other workplaces. It doesn’t matter what I look like from the outside. From the inside, everything was crystal clear.
Digilens, makers of waveguide lenses for AR headsets that use these to help display the projected virtual objects that seem to float over the real world, decided to break off and make their own pair of glasses for release later this year. The Argo is both a showpiece for Digilens’ new lenses, which the company boasts are the best in the business, and a model for making safer workplace headsets. Digilens’ team helped create other ambitious AR glasses in the past, including the ODG (which I tried years ago) and the Daqri, which aimed to be a workplace competitor to the Microsoft HoloLens.
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We Tried These 48-megapixel AR Glasses From Digilens…
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According to the team I met with, the industrial landscape has been overlooked lately: The HoloLens 2 seems like it’s in a state of pause as Microsoft pivots to smaller glasses, while the Magic Leap 2 requires a tethered side processor that could get tangled on a workspace floor. The Argo is a pair of simple glasses, nothing else, powered by a Qualcomm Snapdragon XR2 processor similar to the Quest 2 — making it work without a phone or computer. The glasses have Wi-Fi 6E, and also a 4G cellular-connected head strap option.
Multiple companies are trying to make AR glasses happen over the next few years, with chipmaker Qualcomm promising a wave of smaller hardware between 2023 and 2025. The size and performance of these glasses are still a work in progress, with various component makers all still working on improvements. Instead of aiming for being stylish, these glasses are showing what’s possible for reliable function.
I tried on the pair with prescription inserts. Looks weird but my vision wasn’t obstructed at all: it felt like wearing regular glasses.
Scott Stein/CNET
Since these glasses couldn’t fit over my own and had their own prescription inserts that didn’t quite match mine (I didn’t bring contacts to Vegas), I had to squint a bit to make out the LCOS LED display’s readouts. But I did appreciate that the actual lens the floating color display projected on was super-clear. I saw no shimmers, and none of the rainbows or smudging I’ve seen on many headsets. It was like looking through a clean pair of glasses. The display’s a smaller field of view (30 degrees) than the HoloLens 2, but also brighter: It’s made for viewing outdoors.
The lenses are made of Gorilla Glass, with a layer that’s printed between the glass to make the waveguides which help project the display. The result was a lens that felt far clearer than I’ve been used to.
Prescription inserts, viewed through the very clear lens of the Digilens Argo glasses.
Scott Stein/CNET
As bizarre as Digilens’ glasses look from the outside, they don’t interrupt my field of view at all. The effect for me was identical to wearing everyday glasses of my own. That’s essential, according to Digilens, to using these to show heads-up displays without feeling like your safety is compromised.
Argo can show either heads-up instructions, or 3D and AR. The display area, like most AR glasses, feels constrained. It’s good enough to read info, or even see photos. The headset’s meant to be voice controlled, and it was pretty fast responding to me as I opened apps.
The headset can use objects like QR codes to launch anchored AR, and I had fun looking at a raised 3D city map sprouting from a folding Samsung phone I held in my hands. That AR feature only worked via a 2D video feed I saw in my display, like watching a pop-up video of the world around me, but should look more layered into the real world in future updates.
The glasses are fully standalone, and don’t need a phone.
Scott Stein/CNET
I also tried the onboard 48-megapixel front camera, which sounds like overkill for a headset but it was added so pixel-binning shots down to a more compressed size will result in higher-quality photos in low light, to catch details in environments and in field work. I took a snap of someone, then digitally zoomed in several times with my voice and could see a detail more closely.
More trippy was a beta mode that can cast what I see to others, or bring their video feed into my glasses from another pair of glasses, or a phone. I saw a live shot of myself wearing the glasses as I walked around.
These glasses are not meant for me, clearly, or you. But their focus on accessible use, if only for an industrial environment, made me think about considerations for an unsolved AR glasses world ahead. And those clear lenses, well, the next time I wear a pair of AR glasses I’ll be thinking about these and wondering if anything else I see is good enough.
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