Ray-Ban Display glasses look like regular glasses but embed a transparent display directly in the lens, projecting information into your line of sight without blocking what's in front of you. Think of it as a heads-up display you wear all day. Paired with the Meta Neural Band worn on the wrist, they respond to simple hand gestures — no touchscreen, no voice commands, no reaching for anything. It's a computer you wear, not one you carry.


Frequent travelers
Anyone navigating a busy airport who wants their flight details, gate, boarding time, and carousel immediately visible without stopping to check their phone.






Your flight details, always in view
A live flight HUD that surfaces the details you actually need and keeps them present for the duration of your time in the airport. Gate, terminal, boarding time, baggage carousel. No unlocking, no digging through notifications.


Enter your flight number and the app pulls live data from the aviationstack API. Boarding time, terminal, and gate on departure. Baggage carousel on arrival. Updates in real time, no refresh needed.
An open-source starting point from our team
This is a Baseplate application — one of dozens of open-source foundations built by L+R as part of our alpha partnership with Meta on the Ray-Ban Display platform. Baseplates aren't always finished products. They're minimal, readable, and forkable. Built to show what's possible and give developers a working foundation to learn from and build on.
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