
The Singapore company supplies optical components, e.g., the prism and lens which sit in the bridge of the lightweight glasses. The eyewear is angled from the bridge to place the lens directly in front of the cyclist’s eyeline as he/she leans over the crossbar to ride.
The partners are currently developing eye tracking and AI in the second generation of glasses, which Opto Precision‘s Henry Ong expects to be available by the end of this year. The second generation glasses will be able to connect to AI phone apps and navigation devices, such as Garmin, said Ong.
The glasses are lightweight, weighing less than 50g and use a proprietary, compact, free-space, off-axis optical system powered by an ultrabright colour micro-OLED image which consumes less than 100mW. The display delivers a high contrast, wide filed-of-view display and can be used for up to eight hours on a single charge. The lens are designed to deliver >1000 nits for clear images even in bright daylight conditions, said Eversight.
The glasses are available with prescription lens.

Eversight is Elbit Systems’ augmented reality smartglasses spin-off.
Electronics Weekly