Rado, a tech enthusiast with a love for mobile devices, brings his passion for Android and iPadOS to PhoneArena. His tech journey began with MP3 players and has evolved to include tinkering with Android tablets and iPads, even running Linux and Windows 95 on them. Beyond tech, Rado is a published author, music producer, and PC game developer.
There's a bit of an XR boom going on lately, and I love it. Companies like Xreal, Rokid and TCL's RayNeo are consistently giving us some of the best, most affordable and convenient ways to watch content on the go, with the RayNeo Air 2s being the latest we have to show you.
Behind the top half of the lenses is of course a familiar prism, that reflects the glasses' built-in screens directly into your eyes. As for the clarity part, we're told the RayNeo Air 2s have double the edge clarity of their predecessor, and it shows. I should also mention that the RayNeo Air 2's lenses are noticeably darker than most other similar XR glasses we've tried, meaning they work very effectively as normal sunglasses too.
Huge props to RayNeo for pushing the envelope on that one, with hardly anything to complain about in the audio department. I don't know how realistic it is to wish for bass next, but I am hoping we'll see XR glasses figure that out in the near future too. The effect isn't too strong, but if you're just using these at low volume levels, I doubt you'll disturb anyone anyway. At high volume, though – obviously people around you can hear what you're watching.
It's a lovely, pocketable, remote-like smart device designed specifically for RayNeo's glasses. The PocketTV has a smooth plastic build with rounded corners, fits nicely in the hand, has two USB-C ports for charging and connecting to the glasses respectively, a much-welcome microSD card slot for expandable storage, and smart TV controls up front.
The RayNeo PocketTV is simply a portable Google TV device, with seemingly nothing beyond that to take advantage of the XR-capable glasses you're meant to connect to it, so there isn't much to talk about here. If you buy just the RayNeo Air 2s glasses without the PocketTV, as I assume most people will, you can still obviously use them as an external display for pretty much any smart device you own – be that your smartphone, tablet, gaming console, or laptop.
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Android phones could get the same taskbar used by tablets in Android 15Alan, an ardent smartphone enthusiast and a veteran writer at PhoneArena since 2009, has witnessed and chronicled the transformative years of mobile technology. Owning iconic phones from the original iPhone to the iPhone 15 Pro Max, he has seen smartphones evolve into a global phenomenon.
Read more »
Google Pixel 9 series phones may be initially launching with Android 14 instead of Android 15Johanna 'Jojo the Techie' is a skilled mobile technology expert with over 15 years of hands-on experience, specializing in the Google ecosystem and Pixel devices. Known for her user-friendly approach, she leverages her vast tech support background to provide accessible and insightful coverage on latest technology trends.
Read more »
Samsung Galaxy S24+ with Android 15 beats the Android 14 benchmarkDaniel, a devoted tech writer at PhoneArena since 2010, has been engrossed in mobile technology since the Windows Mobile era. His expertise spans mobile hardware, software, and carrier networks, and he's keenly interested in the future of digital health, car connectivity, and 5G.
Read more »
The OnePlus Pad 2 Wants to Be the iPad Air of Android TabletsOnePlus is back again with a new tablet packing more power, a better screen, more speakers, and a higher starting price.
Read more »
iPhone 16: is this where it ends?Rado, a tech enthusiast with a love for mobile devices, brings his passion for Android and iPadOS to PhoneArena. His tech journey began with MP3 players and has evolved to include tinkering with Android tablets and iPads, even running Linux and Windows 95 on them. Beyond tech, Rado is a published author, music producer, and PC game developer.
Read more »
I tried every Apple Vision Pro alternative ($3,500 vs $500)Rado, a tech enthusiast with a love for mobile devices, brings his passion for Android and iPadOS to PhoneArena. His tech journey began with MP3 players and has evolved to include tinkering with Android tablets and iPads, even running Linux and Windows 95 on them. Beyond tech, Rado is a published author, music producer, and PC game developer.
Read more »