By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
The Tech DiffThe Tech DiffThe Tech Diff
  • Home
  • Shop
  • Computers
  • Phones
  • Technology
  • Wearables
Reading: “Revolutionizing Art: Meta Ray-Ban Displays Count Renaissance Butts in Rome”
Share
Font ResizerAa
The Tech DiffThe Tech Diff
Font ResizerAa
  • Computers
  • Phones
  • Technology
  • Wearables
Search
  • Home
  • Shop
  • Computers
  • Phones
  • Technology
  • Wearables
Follow US
  • Shop
  • About
  • Contact
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
© Copyright 2022. All Rights Reserved By The Tech Diff.
The Tech Diff > Blog > Wearables > “Revolutionizing Art: Meta Ray-Ban Displays Count Renaissance Butts in Rome”
Wearables

“Revolutionizing Art: Meta Ray-Ban Displays Count Renaissance Butts in Rome”

Admin
Last updated: November 17, 2025 6:26 am
Admin
Share
“Revolutionizing Art: Meta Ray-Ban Displays Count Renaissance Butts in Rome”
SHARE

The Intersection of Art and Technology: A Journey Through Rome with Meta Ray-Ban Display Glasses

This is Optimizer, a weekly newsletter sent every Friday from Verge senior reviewer Victoria Song that dissects and discusses the latest phones, smartwatches, apps, and other gizmos that swear they’re going to change your life. Optimizer arrives in our subscribers’ inboxes at 10AM ET. Opt in for Optimizer here.

Contents
The Intersection of Art and Technology: A Journey Through Rome with Meta Ray-Ban Display GlassesTechnology Meets TraditionAn Unexpected AdventureEncountering the DivineReassessing Smart GlassesConsidering the Future of Wearable Tech

It’s a truth universally acknowledged that an art history buff in Rome ought to see the Sistine Chapel. Less acknowledged is that getting there from the Vatican Museum will potentially take longer than Frodo Baggins’ entire journey to Mordor.

-7% Bluetooth Speaker Clip: AI Translator & Hands-Free Calls!
Wearables

Bluetooth Speaker Clip: AI Translator & Hands-Free Calls!

$29.99 Original price was: $29.99.$27.99Current price is: $27.99.
Buy Now
-47% Boost Wellness with IAMJOY Smart Health Wristband – Track & Improve!
Wearables

Boost Wellness with IAMJOY Smart Health Wristband – Track & Improve!

$188.22 Original price was: $188.22.$99.99Current price is: $99.99.
Buy Now
ANCwear Mini Bluetooth Speaker: HD Sound & 9.5H Playtime!
Wearables

ANCwear Mini Bluetooth Speaker: HD Sound & 9.5H Playtime!

$26.99
Buy Now
-8% HD Camera Glasses with 64GB: Perfect for Outdoor Adventures!
Wearables

HD Camera Glasses with 64GB: Perfect for Outdoor Adventures!

$49.99 Original price was: $49.99.$45.99Current price is: $45.99.
Buy Now

Ostensibly, a well-prepared art lover might have a docent or, at the very least, a working audio guide to help pass the roughly two to three hours it takes to meander past countless busts of naked marble men and Greek amphoras. I was not well prepared. My family’s tickets were purchased at the last minute. I drew the short stick with a solo self-guided tour during one of the last slots of the day.

All I had was a pair of Meta Ray-Ban Display glasses, a T-Mobile international data plan, and an iPhone 17 running dangerously low on battery. Imagine my surprise when I actually had a great time.

Technology Meets Tradition

Twenty-five days ago, I arrived in Italy as a desiccated husk. Technically, vacation had started. Work complete, bags packed, and cat sitters arranged, I should’ve been able to relax. Instead, I spent the roughly eight-hour flight to Rome mulling over my then freshly published Meta Ray-Ban Display review and the minor existential crisis it’d sparked.

In a nutshell, the glasses were an impressive piece of engineering. I felt conflicted about the privacy and cultural questions they raised while using them in my daily life, as well as the genuine opportunities that technology promised. I was curious to see how well the glasses’ live translation feature worked. As soon as I landed in Rome, out came the glasses.

The Belvedere Torso did not count as one of the Renaissance butts. Photo: Victoria Song / The Verge

An Unexpected Adventure

Ironically, live translation kind of sucked. (Hence why I didn’t mention it in last week’s Optimizer.) I’m sure it would’ve been fine in one-on-one conversations, but that almost never happens when you’re a tourist in a touristy area. Crosstalk is inevitable, public announcements are often garbled, and upon seeing my very not Italian face? Experienced retail and hospitality workers usually gave an obligatory buongiorno and switched to English.

So, I wasn’t expecting much when my audio guide died unceremoniously 10 minutes into my journey to the Sistine Chapel. If you’ve seen one naked marble man… do you need to know how the next 20 over the next 1.86 miles are infinitesimally different? Still, Meta had specifically called out using the AI glasses to contextualize art at a museum in my hands-on demo. Here was an opportunity to test it in the wild, far from the guardrails of corporate demos.

It wasn’t perfect. At one particular marble bust, where there was a wisp of LTE, Meta AI told me I was looking at the Belvedere Torso. My signal crapped out before it could explain anything further. Still, I felt relief from my frustration with the Vatican Museum’s labyrinthian layout. And if the Vatican were to one day invest in Wi-Fi (it won’t, for security reasons), I could see this being a less cumbersome audio guide.

When my sister-in-law texted to ask if I was close to the chapel — her tour group departed a half hour before I was even let in — I was happy that I could see her message, look up, snap a photo of the frescoed ceiling, and send a text. It took three tries to send, but 15 minutes later, I got a text back reading, “Oh, you’re not close at all.”

But the real “fun” was taking short videos and narrating my experience that I later sent to a friend back home. Was I talking to myself under my breath, earning the occasional side eye? Yes. At the same time, I kept my phone in my bag. I wasn’t viewing all this capital-A Art through my phone like every other tourist standing between me and Michelangelo’s greatest work.

Encountering the Divine

When I finally made it to the Sistine Chapel, a guard yelled at me as I tried to use my phone camera to zoom in on details. Phones and photos, I learned as he tapped a sign, were banned in the chapel. Fair enough. Still, the guard didn’t clock that I was wearing the Meta glasses. Craning my neck back, I spent 10 minutes using the glasses to zoom in and count as many expertly painted cherub butts as I could find. It might seem odd to travel across an entire ocean and brave an entire maze just for that. But Michelangelo was one of my mom’s favorite artists, and when I was a bratty kid at art museums, we made a game of counting Renaissance butts. (All things I’d rather die than explain to a grumpy museum guard.)

A part of me scolded myself for engaging in the kind of glasshole behavior I fretted about in my review. The other part of me laughed, because I was jetlagged and, well, angel butts. When it was time to leave, I felt satisfied taking the glasses off.

Reassessing Smart Glasses

The Sistine Chapel experiment, although flawed, was like a lightbulb turning on in my head. While this tech has come a long, long way, smart glasses often don’t make sense to wear all day, every day. Battery life is too short. The glasses are too big, clunky, and heavy. But the flaws don’t matter quite as much when you’re wearing them for a specific purpose for a limited time.

Commuting to The Verge office, I feel creepy recording video or taking photos. New York City’s grid system is also so logical, you hardly need AR walking directions. In my neighborhood or going about my usual routines, I rarely have questions I’d ask Meta AI. But traveling in Italy, where I never knew how to get anywhere, and crossing the street is a deadly game of Frogger? Those heads-up walking directions were a game-changer. And, whenever I’d arrived at a destination, back into the charging case they went.

Later, on a tour of the Pompeii ruins, the glasses came in handy while listening to my docent. Tapping your fingers to take a photo is inherently less distracting. Sure, sometimes I’d have to pull out my phone to really capture the essence of a stray cat. But it wasn’t lost on me that whenever my phone came out, I’d fall behind the group. Again, once the tour was over, I took the glasses off and felt lighter for having done so.

The key was the freedom to put the glasses away.

In Italy, wearing the glasses was reserved for Tourist Mode and public places. That felt more natural and less creepy than using these in daily life.

In Italy, wearing the glasses was reserved for Tourist Mode and public places. That felt more natural and less creepy than using these in daily life. Photo by Amelia Holowaty Krales / The Verge

Considering the Future of Wearable Tech

Meta, and other companies in this space, often market these devices as general-purpose devices that could replace your phone. And maybe that’ll be true one day. But today, I’m struck by how whatever cultural qualms I had were alleviated by tying them to a temporary use case. In Italy, whenever I put on the Display glasses, I entered Tourist Mode. When I took them off, I was me again. It didn’t matter if things were imperfect, partly because it was just one of many travel tools I had in my arsenal.

Now that I’ve returned home, I feel pressure to use the glasses whether it makes sense or not. Partly for work, partly because why have them if I’m not going to try and replace my phone?

But what if these gadgets didn’t have to inherit the mantle of smartphones, general in their purpose and mass market in their appeal? What if we allowed them to be specific, niche devices — “sometimes” gadgets that you perhaps rent instead of own? Maybe you rent Tourist Smart Glasses from a travel agency before a trip, or your company provides a pair if it’s relevant to your job. Maybe stadiums and concert venues allow you to rent a pair for an event. Theaters and opera houses could use them for subtitling foreign works. And when you’re done for the day, you go back to your phone.

This, of course, is a solution with its own set of problems. Long before Meta’s current consumer push for AI glasses, smart glasses makers pivoted to enterprise in the wake of Google Glass crashing and burning. We live in late-stage capitalism, and this is arguably the more complicated, logistically nightmarish route to profitability. Some of these use cases have already been explored, and the expense, lack of long-term commitment, price, and bulky hardware never quite added up. And, even if smart glasses were limited to these use-specific cases, it only takes one tech-savvy jerk to reopen the glasshole and privacy debate.

Still, it’s not lost on me that the most positive experience I’ve had with smart glasses was when they didn’t have to be a “do everything” device.

Here

Image Credit: www.theverge.com

You Might Also Like

Amazfit T-Rex 3 Pro: A Budget-Friendly Alternative to Apple Watch Ultra 3

“Wellness Redefined: The Diminishing Meaning in Health Technology”

“Huawei Smartwatch Introduces First Diabetes Feature, But There’s a Catch”

Samsung Galaxy Watch 4 LTE Rolls Out One UI 8 Update

“Shokz Fitness Headphones Lead President’s Day Deals: Top Picks Inside”

Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Copy Link Print
Previous Article “Confronting AI in the Workplace: Strategies for Success” “Confronting AI in the Workplace: Strategies for Success”
Next Article Mac Pro Release No Longer Expected Anytime Soon Mac Pro Release No Longer Expected Anytime Soon
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Product categories

  • Computer & Accessories
  • Headphones
  • Laptops
  • Phones
  • Wearables

Trending Products

  • Raycon Bone Conduction Headphones: 13HR Playtime & IP68 Fit! Raycon Bone Conduction Headphones: 13HR Playtime & IP68 Fit! $99.99 Original price was: $99.99.$79.99Current price is: $79.99.
  • Experience Faith: LIAISE Audio Bible Wrist Band – WWJD Edition! Experience Faith: LIAISE Audio Bible Wrist Band - WWJD Edition! $29.99
  • MSI Katana 15 HX: Powerhouse Gaming Laptop for Pros! MSI Katana 15 HX: Powerhouse Gaming Laptop for Pros! $1,658.65
  • Maximize Space: WESTREE Dual Monitor Stand with Storage! Maximize Space: WESTREE Dual Monitor Stand with Storage! $49.99 Original price was: $49.99.$29.99Current price is: $29.99.
  • HP Chromebook 14″ – Power & Style in Chalkboard Gray! HP Chromebook 14" - Power & Style in Chalkboard Gray! $262.98 Original price was: $262.98.$249.95Current price is: $249.95.

You Might also Like

“Sleep Trackers: Can They Detect My Sleep Apnea?”
Wearables

“Sleep Trackers: Can They Detect My Sleep Apnea?”

Admin Admin 7 Min Read
“Augmented Reality Unveils Unmatched Artistic Potential Through an Ark Experience”
Wearables

“Augmented Reality Unveils Unmatched Artistic Potential Through an Ark Experience”

Admin Admin 5 Min Read
Huawei’s Smartwatches Can Potentially Detect Diabetes, Claims Company
Wearables

Huawei’s Smartwatches Can Potentially Detect Diabetes, Claims Company

Admin Admin 3 Min Read

About Us

At The Tech Diff, we believe technology is more than just innovation—it’s a lifestyle that shapes the way we work, connect, and explore the world. Our mission is to keep readers informed, inspired, and ahead of the curve with fresh updates, expert insights, and meaningful stories from across the digital landscape.

Useful Link

  • Shop
  • About
  • Contact
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy

Categories

  • Computers
  • Phones
  • Technology
  • Wearables

Sign Up for Our Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

The Tech DiffThe Tech Diff
Follow US
© Copyright 2022. All Rights Reserved By The Tech Diff.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?