Popular Footballer Glasses Frames
Traditional thick dark frames, rectangular frames, aviators, circular frames, and sports goggles
Read the full blog post at Menswear Style here
Article by Menswear Style
Computers Tech Games Crypto Music and More
Traditional thick dark frames, rectangular frames, aviators, circular frames, and sports goggles
Read the full blog post at Menswear Style here
Article by Menswear Style
WATCH your cash when getting specs – and don’t spend over the odds.
Here are deals and tips to help you pay less for a pair of glasses.
Here are deals and tips to help you pay less for a pair of glasses[/caption]
FREE EYECARE: The NHS recommends getting eyes tested every two years.
Many people can get free tests, including those who are on certain benefits.
Or if you work on a computer, your employer may have to cover the costs of a test, so check with them.
Some people qualify for NHS optical vouchers, to put towards the cost of glasses.
The voucher value varies depending on your needs.
An optometrist should be able to discuss the level of help available to you.
If you are elderly or a student, you might qualify for discounts, of up to 25 per cent off.
Key workers can get offers that are worth searching out — for example, Vision Express gives them 20 per cent off online only.
BARGAIN HUNT: Shop around for glasses and contact lenses rather than simply buying from where you had an eye test.
Nimmi Mistry, professional services optician at Vision Direct, says: “The optician is obliged to provide you with the prescription following the eye test.
“You’re then able to order elsewhere, such as from cheaper online providers.”
SPECS APPEAL: Popular opticians often have multibuy deals so you save when buying more than one pair of glasses.
Own-brand lenses tend to have the lowest prices.
Specsavers offers two for one glasses from £69.
At Boots Opticians you can buy a second pair of glasses for half price, while own-brand styles start from £40.
Vision Express also offers half price on a second pair and now has 20 per cent off when you spend £50 on selected lines.
Asda Opticians has glasses starting from £45 with multibuy deals on designer ranges.
Online provider Feel Good Contacts has a virtual try-on tool to see how a pair look before buying them, with glasses in the sale starting at £6.
Upgrade your kitchen basics with this three-piece stainless steel pot and pan set, down to £10 at Dunelm[/caption]
UPGRADE your kitchen basics with this three-piece stainless steel pot and pan set, down to £10 from £20 at Dunelm.
SAVE: £10
Save 65p on Pots & Co double-chocolate ganache at Sainsbury’s[/caption]
INDULGE with Pots & Co double-chocolate ganache – on offer for £1.50 at Sainsbury’s, down from the usual £2.15.
SAVE: 65p
SAVE on a slice of Papa Johns’ new nduja-and-pepperoni flavour and get any small pizza for £7.99 or large pizza for £11.99 until March 27 as part of the chain’s Hot Deals offer.
Throw on this versatile double-faced jacket £99.99, from Zara for a sharp and stylish look[/caption]
Or try this one a take on the aviator jacket, by George at Asda for £38[/caption]
THROW on this versatile double-faced jacket £99.99, from Zara for a sharp and stylish look.
Or try this one a take on the aviator jacket, by George at Asda for £38.
SAVE: £61.99
BUY your five-a-day at Lidl for a chance to bag £10,000.
Spend £5 on fruit and veg at the store and download the free Lidl Plus app to earn a stamp.
Four stamps gives one entry into the prize draw, plus the chance to win a fruit-and- veg coupon.
Offer runs until March 1.
Save £3 on Pantene x Moschino Miracle Serum shampoo at Superdrug[/caption]
GIVE damaged hair some TLC with Pantene x Moschino Miracle Serum shampoo – now £2.99, down from £5.99, at Superdrug.
SAVE: £3
BUY two cards at Funkypigeon.com via Vouchercodes.co.uk to get 40 per cent off until February 13.
JOIN thousands of readers taking part in The Sun Raffle.
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The exec said that, initially, generative AI could be used to do things like improve the resolution and clarity of a Snap after the user captures it, or could even be used for “more extreme transformations,” editing images or creating Snaps based on text input. (We should note that generative AI, at least in the way the term is being thrown around today, is not necessarily required to improve photo resolution.) Spiegel didn’t pin any time frames to these types of developments or announce specific products Snap had in the works, but said the company was thinking about how to integrate AI tools into its existing Lens Studio technology for AR developers. “We saw a lot of success integrating Snap ML tools into Lens Studio, and it’s really enabled creators to build some incredible things. We now have 300,000 creators who built more than 3 million lenses in Lens Studio,” Spiegel told investors. “So, the democratization of these tools, I think, will also be very powerful,” he added, in reference to the future integrations of AI tech.
What’s most interesting, perhaps, was the brief insight Spiegel offered about how Snap foresees the potential for AI when used in AR glasses. Though Snap’s Spectacles have not broken any sales records, the company continues to develop the product. The most recent version, the Spectacles 3, expands beyond recording standard photos and video with the addition of new tools like 3D filters and AR graphics. Spiegel suggested that AI could have an impact on this product as well, thanks to its ability to improve the process of building for AR. “We can use generative AI to help build more of these 3D models very quickly, which can really unlock the full potential of AR and help people make their imagination real in the world,” Spiegel added.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
There’s a scene in the telenovela Senhora do Destino in which actress Renata Sorrah, playing Nazaré Tedesco, is surrounded by floating mathematical equations. It has become a meme to depict when you’re confused and, with the new TCL RayNeo X2, it might be the future of how we do math.
At CES 2023, TCL — the Chinese-owned company known best for its TVs — introduced the RayNeo X2, a pair of augmented reality smart glasses with thick black rims that are reminiscent of the glasses movie theaters gave out in the early aughts for 3D movies. These glasses can do a whole lot more than those could, though.
The RayNeo X2 glasses are intended to be used as your typical everyday glasses, meaning you can put your own prescription in the glasses. By projecting microLED displays that hover in front of both eyes, the glasses can display information like smart GPS navigation, auto-translation, phone call and message notifications, as well as the ability to take photos and videos or listen to music.
“TCL RayNeo has created the world’s first binocular full-color Micro-LED optical waveguide AR glasses,” Howie Li, the CEO of TCL RayNeo, said in a press release. “The technology RayNeo has developed will set the bar for future innovations in wearable AR as there is no compromise in top technology, style or ease of use. RayNeo X2 is the new frontier of AR glasses, and we’re just getting started.”
For instance, if you’re trying to locate your nearest library, the RayNeo X2 will show you exactly where to go without even having to look down at your phone. One of the most fascinating aspects of the new gadget is the automatic translation assistance. Let’s say you’d like to chat with someone in a language you don’t speak: The RayNeo X2 will be able to display translations before you, aiming to make connectivity more accessible. But, as CNET pointed out, the live translation also presents what anyone in the room is saying, including yourself, which can get annoying.
The RayNeo X2 isn’t available to the public yet, but it’s supposed to be available for developers by spring; it’ll launch for the rest of us shortly after that, though some features might be different by then.