Meta opens audio lab to improve AI smart glasses

Cambridge facility is Meta’s largest engineering investment outside the US, signalling a push for leadership in immersive AI wearables.

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Meta has unveiled a £12 million audio research lab in Cambridge’s Ox‑Cam corridor, aimed at enhancing immersive sound for its Ray‑Ban Meta and upcoming Oakley Meta glasses. The facility includes advanced acoustic testing environments, motion‑tracked living spaces, and one of the world’s largest configurable reverberation chambers, enabling engineers to fine‑tune spatial audio through real‑world scenarios.

Designed to filter noise, focus on speech, and respond to head movement, the lab is developing adaptive audio intelligent enough to improve clarity in settings like busy streets or on public transport. Meta plans to integrate these features into its next generation of AR eyewear.

Officials say the lab represents a long‑term investment in UK engineering talent and bolsters the Oxford‑to‑Cambridge tech corridor. Meta’s global affairs lead and the Chancellor emphasised the significance of the investment, supported by a national £22 billion R&D strategy. This marks Meta’s largest overseas engineering base and reinforces its ambition to lead the global AI glasses market.

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