Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg reinforced his long-term vision for AI-integrated eyewear during the company’s second-quarter earnings call, emphasizing that smart glasses will become the primary interface for AI in everyday life. Building on ideas shared in his recent blog post on superintelligence, Zuckerberg argued that users without AI-enabled glasses could soon face a cognitive disadvantage.

The company’s existing line of smart eyewear, including the Ray-Ban Meta Glasses, has seen strong consumer uptake, with revenue reportedly tripling year-over-year. Still, Zuckerberg made clear that future iterations would feature displays capable of enhancing interaction — ranging from compact UI overlays to fully immersive AR fields of view, such as those planned for the next-gen Orion AR glasses.

Despite mounting losses at Meta’s Reality Labs division — $4.53 billion this quarter alone, and nearly $70 billion since 2020 — Zuckerberg framed the investment as foundational to AI’s physical integration into daily life. As competitors like OpenAI, Humane, and Limitless explore alternative AI hardware, Meta is doubling down on glasses as the convergence point for AI, spatial computing, and the Metaverse.