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I ditched my laptop for a pocketable mini PC and a pair of AR glasses by T-A

I ditched my laptop for a pocketable mini PC and a pair of AR glasses by T-A

I ditched my laptop for a pocketable mini PC and a pair of AR glasses by T-A

24 Comments

  • Post Author
    java-man
    Posted April 12, 2025 at 11:26 pm

    I don't understand. Is this an ad?

    How long this setup lasts on a single charge? For half the price, one can get a macbook air with fantastic battery life and a good keyboard.

  • Post Author
    tocs3
    Posted April 12, 2025 at 11:27 pm

    Can AR glasses be used as just a monitor? I am under the impression that they are sort of smart devices. How do they get a video signal from the computer?

  • Post Author
    tdeck
    Posted April 12, 2025 at 11:33 pm

    I thought it would be a mini laptop like these:

    https://gpdstore.net/product-category/gpd-mini-laptop/

    But no, he carries around a little Nuc style machine and a full, separate keyboard and charger. It's cool and all, but there's no way this whole jumble would fit in a pocket or be convenient to use on the go.

  • Post Author
    mrbonner
    Posted April 13, 2025 at 12:36 am

    The Xreal is a nice device. I got the first gen for $199. I'm able to plug this into the MacBook pro and watch Netflix in bed. The fonts do look a bit blurry and small. I don't think I can work with it full time. I don't have myopia (or my number is small to notice).

  • Post Author
    metalman
    Posted April 13, 2025 at 12:42 am

    ok, your a borg now:), should we call you 1 of 1 ?, or is resistance futile?

  • Post Author
    mdp2021
    Posted April 13, 2025 at 12:59 am

    I believe I have been more efficient with the Epson Moverio (1280×720, black-transparent OLED, Android, 5hrs battery, palm-sized processing unit with buttons and trackpad). Put the glasses on, the processing unit in a pocket (thumb on the controls), and you can walk around processing data overlaid to the scenery.

    But, like all tools, they are optimal for some tasks and inefficient for others. I never had the time to try and implement text-to speech, to overcome the absence of a practical keyboard (the on-screen one can only be an emergency tool) – with that, the system would have been much more flexible.

  • Post Author
    zabzonk
    Posted April 13, 2025 at 1:02 am

    All those wires! Far more than my laptop (basically none, or
    one if I am charging). And what is the total weight and volume of all this stuff?

  • Post Author
    herpdyderp
    Posted April 13, 2025 at 1:11 am

    How good are actual VR headsets at being virtual desktop screens? Specifically I've been interested in the Bigscreen Beyond 2 due to its extreme lightweight, but most people seem to use them for gaming instead of doing work. I want more screens (or, even better, an infinite screen) but I don't have the desk space for them. I know the Vision Pro sort of does this but I need the full power of my maxed out MacBook Pro, the Vision Pro is too heavy, and it's way too expensive.

  • Post Author
    jareds
    Posted April 13, 2025 at 1:14 am

    I got excided looking at this hoping there was a laptop with out a screen. I'm totally blind so the power draw of a screen is pointless. I currently use my ROG Alli with a Bluetooth keyboard to connect to my more powerful laptop which has a keyboard that's going bad. While this setup works well and the battery life is pretty good it would be much nicer if I didn't have to put a keyboard on my lap, and the Alli on a table. At least the Alli doesn't need to be somewhere where I can look at it.

  • Post Author
    sathackr
    Posted April 13, 2025 at 1:33 am

    I've been doing this a few months now with an xreal one and minisforum um790.

    Same ability to power via usb-C and have other ports available.

    It's worked very well, the 1920×1080 resoultion of the glasses is pretty clear but I find "anchoring" the screen to be most usable because the edges do get a little blurry, but with the screen anchored you can just "look around" a little to bring them into focus.

    The biggest drawback is the resolution. While still very sharp and clear, it's tough going from a framework laptop 2256×1504 to 1920×1080.

    I'm just used to everything being a little smaller and being able to fit more info into my FoV vs having to look around a "larger" screen for it.

  • Post Author
    eternityforest
    Posted April 13, 2025 at 1:52 am

    Seems like the thing that actually makes this all work is the built in battery on the mini PC. Without it, accidentally unplugging the power bank would be a big problem.

  • Post Author
    anonzzzies
    Posted April 13, 2025 at 1:58 am

    I have used a similar setup for a couple of years now; just plug the glasses into my phone.

  • Post Author
    tcherasaro
    Posted April 13, 2025 at 4:58 am

    This setup reminds me of “Snow Crash” that Neal Stephenson novel.

  • Post Author
    jz10
    Posted April 13, 2025 at 5:11 am

    tried this before. great for videos, images but fonts were hard to read and edges were blurred. i concluded it wasnt conducive for work so i decided to sell it and stick with my laptop

  • Post Author
    plun9
    Posted April 13, 2025 at 5:37 am

    Using AR glasses instead of computer monitors can prevent nearsightedness (myopia) because the virtual image is several meters away.

  • Post Author
    ctrlp
    Posted April 13, 2025 at 5:42 am

    What do you do if you already wear prescription lenses?

  • Post Author
    tippytippytango
    Posted April 13, 2025 at 5:49 am

    These glasses give me an instant headache and 1080p is abysmal if you are used to 5K displays. I love the idea, hate the actual glasses.

  • Post Author
    kelvie
    Posted April 13, 2025 at 6:09 am

    This is how I use my Framework laptop around 80% of the time. So much so that I wish I could just detach the screen (and re-attach it easily).

    I have the xreal air 1, and have the xreal one's on order, they seem to be the leader in this space with their on-glasses processing for "anchor" mode.

    I got these primarily to start gaming, but really, I just use the one hour of downtime before bed to do side projects (usually coding) while laying down, and it's been great. And the spouse does not complain about the bright screen.

    Another advantage is that the muscles around my elbows are a lot less sore, as a laptop really isn't ergonomic to stare down into, unless you build one with a much taller screen [1].

    [1]

  • Post Author
    raffraffraff
    Posted April 13, 2025 at 6:17 am

    I tried this with the Viture Pro XR glasses last year and it sucks. Can't use it with Linux, except in dumb monitor mode. No head tracking unless you're using a supported OS. Android app sucks becaus you can't use it with any old app, eg productivity apps (their app is like a demo of head tracking that only supports stuff like YouTube and local media). Maybe I should have purchased the Xreals?

  • Post Author
    Abishek_Muthian
    Posted April 13, 2025 at 6:35 am

    AR glasses brings great accessibility improvements, especially those who are bedridden; I wrote the need-gap for wearable low latency computer displays[1] ~6 years ago when I was in bed recovering from a spinal fusion surgery as the only option available to me were those unwieldy bed mounts for monitors and it requires help from others to adjust the angles.

    [1] https://needgap.com/problems/16-wearable-low-latency-display…

  • Post Author
    supermatt
    Posted April 13, 2025 at 6:44 am

    How can the xreal one glasses be 3Dof and stay in place while this guy is moving forward and backwards in his chair?

    https://us.shop.xreal.com/cdn/shop/videos/c/vp/bc70020e90a74…
    https://us.shop.xreal.com/cdn/shop/videos/c/vp/a2b82ae2ea714…

    I appreciate its a marketing video, but this is just a lie, no?

    What is the actual supported input resolution of the display? How do virtual monitors work – are they just a composite screen that needs to fit in that max input resolution, or is there some virtual viewport that is being managed by the connected device?

    There is so little information about these on the website, and the few reviews I can find are basically people who got them for free (youtube is seemingly full of these right now) and clearly don't use multi-monitor setups to any great extent.

  • Post Author
    aquir
    Posted April 13, 2025 at 7:13 am

    I would do the same but with a Mac Mini!

  • Post Author
    seltzered_
    Posted April 13, 2025 at 7:18 am

    Fwiw, the /r/ergomobilecomputers tracks a number of these setups involving xreal glasses: https://www.reddit.com/r/ErgoMobileComputers/search/?q=xreal .

    Hasn't been my cup of tea but seems tempting if one has specific ergonomic needs like supine computing. There was one post of someone using them to juggle getting computer work done while handling childcare (endorsing such a thing likely depends a lot on context).

  • Post Author
    KolibriFly
    Posted April 13, 2025 at 7:20 am

    I love the creativity, but for me? If I forget one cable, the whole mission falls apart and I'm back to scribbling in a notebook like it's 1995.

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