RayNeo V4 Bets on Speed and Battery, Not New Tricks

RayNeo's V4 AI glasses ditch feature bloat to focus on speed, battery life, and practical imaging. Faster wake times, a larger custom sensor, and a new semi-solid battery aim to make wearable AI genuinely usable all day.

Emma Collins Emma Collins . 2 Comments
RayNeo V4 Bets on Speed and Battery, Not New Tricks

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You tap the temple and the glasses are ready before you've finished blinking. That immediacy is the gamble RayNeo is making with the V4: strip back the showy features and perfect the basics that actually matter to people who wear AI glasses every day.

Focus on responsiveness, endurance, and practical imaging

Instead of chasing a laundry list of new AI gimmicks, RayNeo rewired the V4 around two goals: make it fast and make it last. The company points to a sobering stat — hundreds of new functions added to AI glasses in the past year, yet fewer than 6 percent see regular use. The V4 is the counterargument: fewer bells, smarter engineering.

Under the hood sits a dual-chip layout pairing Qualcomm's Snapdragon AR1 with a Hengxuan BES2800 low-power processor. The trick is moving core AI functions onto an RTOS-based low-power system so the glasses can wake straight into the AI engine without Android's scheduling overhead. The result? RayNeo claims a wake time of 0.2 seconds, a voice response around 2.1 seconds, and image recognition in roughly 3.7 seconds—a noticeable jump from the previous model.

Voice capture gets attention too. A four-microphone array is joined by a bone conduction mic so the V4 can pick up commands cleanly in quiet settings where conventional microphones falter. Short commands feel instantaneous. Conversations remain natural.

Battery life is where RayNeo says it moved heaven and earth. The company calls its new cell the Blue Whale semi-solid battery. Built with a high-silicon anode and steel-shell packaging, the pack delivers about 57 percent more capacity than the V3. In real terms that translates to roughly 47 minutes of continuous video recording, about 11.5 hours of music playback, or nearly 950 photos before the battery hits 10 percent. The included charging case offers seven full charges and the glasses reach 80 percent in around 25 minutes with fast charging.

On the imaging side, RayNeo co-developed a custom OG09B square sensor with OmniVision Technologies. The 1:1 sensor measures 1/2.9 inch, roughly 50 percent larger than a common competitor sensor, and features 2.09 micrometer pixels for stronger low-light performance. The optics include an F2.2 aperture and a 17mm ultra-wide lens capable of 2.5K video. Dynamic image stabilization and ArcSoft-tuned algorithms across more than 150 scenarios aim to make capture less fussy and more shareable.

A user-friendly addition called Awesome Mode will arrive via OTA in June, letting the glasses capture a photo or a 15-second clip automatically without any manual trigger. Little conveniences like that are exactly the sort of friction reduction that matters if you want people to keep wearing a device.

The V4 is also the first RayNeo model rated IP67. It weighs 38 grams, uses titanium hinges, has a multi-layer sandblasted finish, and sports an air nose pad intended to feel like ordinary eyewear rather than a gadget strapped to your face. Color choices include Midnight Black, Fog Gray, and Wilderness Green, plus a sunglasses variant that mixes transparent and gradient lens technology.

The launch pricing in China is set at about €289 for the standard pair, €314 for the sunglasses version, and €367 for the full kit that includes the charging case and accessories. The charging case is offered separately for around €39, or €26 if bought with the glasses. First deliveries began on May 30.

RayNeo's strategy is simple and stubborn: stop piling on features few people use, and instead refine responsiveness, battery life, and everyday camera performance. If those three pillars hold up in regular use, the V4 could be the most sensible wearable yet for people who want AI assistance without the constant compromises.

Source: gizmochina

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Comments

Reza

finally a pair that cares about battery and speed, not gimmicks. design looks wearable, curious about comfort after a few hours, will it fog up?

atomwave

Is that 0.2s wake real or just marketing? sounds promising, but 950 photos... hope battery life holds up IRL