Yea, that’s going to be interesting to learn how they pull that off, with such limited frame space. Regarding smart glasses appearance - its still early in the game. Come back in a year or so with Apple, Google, Microsoft, Meta and Amazon’s smart glasses hitting the market and I bet you’ll have a hard time telling which is normal eye wear and what is smart glasses.
Driving - multiple speakers? One passenger - multiple speakers?
If you’re talking car speakers/audio - Smart Glasses were not designed to work with music.
My assumption at this point is that XanderGlasses will work well with one on one conversations, with the speaking party directly in front of you. Throw in four, five plus people talking in a room and I see “possible overload” regarding text printout.
But again lets see what the Big tech companies come out with. And with more competition coming, what might cost $1500 for Smart Glasses (now), might drop to under $800 in a year or two.