Meta smart glasses get
Muse Spark on board
Meta's AI smart glasses have switched from Llama 4 to Muse Spark as of June 8. Native reasoning capability and multimodality make real-time scene understanding on the glasses meaningfully smarter.
Llama 4 on the glasses
had a reasoning gap
When Meta launched its AI smart glasses with Llama 4, the "see what I see and help me understand it" use case worked at a basic level, but complex scene understanding — reading context, making inferences, providing situationally relevant advice — exposed clear limits. A more capable reasoning model was the obvious next step.
Muse Spark was deployed on Meta AI smart glasses on June 8, 2026, replacing Llama 4. It brings native reasoning capability and multimodal understanding to Meta's wearable hardware.
Real-time scene reasoning
becomes more practical
Muse Spark has native reasoning built in, so the glasses can understand what they see at a deeper level and return contextually appropriate responses.
Moving beyond "what is this object" to "given what I'm looking at, what should I do next" is a meaningful step for hands-free AI utility. Cooking assistance, navigation cues, unfamiliar environment guidance — scenarios where hands-free matters most are where this upgrade will be most felt.
Only relevant if you own
Meta's smart glasses
This change applies exclusively to Meta's physical smart glasses hardware. Llama API, Meta AI on mobile, and other Meta AI services are unaffected. For those who don't own Meta's glasses — or have no interest in wearable AI — nothing changes right now. Teams tracking Meta's hardware AI roadmap should watch subsequent software updates as Muse Spark matures on the device.