And now we know the specs
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© Image: Tencent via Twitter |
Tencent, China’s biggest tech company, has made its own pair
of video-recording sunglasses this week that bear a slight resemblance
to Snap’s Spectacles. The Weishi smart glasses have a camera on the
front, like Spectacles, so you can record video.
Snap’s Spectacles haven’t exactly done well in sales — the first generation lost the company nearly $40 million in unsold pairs.
Unlike the first generation Spectacles, the Weishi glasses don’t
highlight the camera with an ugly yellow ring. Instead, they’re all
black, with a subtle cat eye, more like the second generation of Spectacles.
Tencent’s
Weishi glasses, which mean “micro shows” in Mandarin, have the same
name as the company’s Vine-like video app that it has been pushing.
Tencent’s Weishi currently lags behind TikTok (formerly Musical.ly),
which dominates the Chinese short video market right now and is seeing
massive global success as well. The idea behind the glasses’ release is
likely for users to record more short videos to upload to Weishi, to
hopefully boost the platform’s popularity.
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© Image: Weishi via the App Store |
Weishi told The Verge on Saturday that the product is not officially released yet but it already has its own app on Apple’s App Store.
It shared the specs: the camera is 8-megapixels and can shoot in 720p
or 1080p HD resolution. The Weishi glasses are also capable of remote
shooting, different modes, live broadcasts, previews, and uploads to the
Weishi app. The glasses are manufactured by Shenzhen-based Tonot and the iOS app also bears the same name.
Currently,
Tencent remains Snap’s largest investor, with a 17 percent share in the
company. The Chinese conglomerate is most famous for its WeChat app
that doubles up as a messaging and payments app, but it also has
multiple investments. In the video games industry, Tencent fully owns
Riot Games, which makes the game League of Legends.
The
Weishi glasses will be available on November 11th, which is Alibaba’s
Singles Day, a large shopping event that sold more units than Black
Friday or Cyber Monday last year.
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