<p>Facebook parent Meta has opened its first physical store — in Burlingame, California — to showcase its hardware products like virtual and augmented reality goggles and glasses.</p>.<p>The store, which is open to the public as of Monday, is made for people who want to test out products like Ray-Ban Stories, Meta's AR glasses and sunglasses, along with the Portal video calling gadget and Oculus virtual reality headsets.</p>.<p>Shoppers still have to order the glasses from Ray-Ban but can buy the other products at the store.</p>.<p>“It's a very concrete step from moving away from social media and ads that mislead people and elections and spying and data and all those things to a very physical representation of clean, classy, well-designed, cool hardware that makes you go, ah,” said Omar Akhtar, research director at Altimeter, a technology investment firm.</p>.<p>Akhtar said he “didn't believe in virtual reality” until he sat and tried on the Oculus headset for the first time — and believes this will be the same for others who are able to put on the goggles and try it out.</p>.<p>Apple pioneered physical retail stores in Silicon Valley and Meta, which owns Instagram and Facebook, is likely hoping it'll replicate at least some of that success.</p>.<p>“The truth of it is that physical things never went away and they're never going to go away,” Akhtar said.</p>.<p>“Everybody realises that even if we are going to step into the virtual world, we're going to need to access it with hardware.” </p>
<p>Facebook parent Meta has opened its first physical store — in Burlingame, California — to showcase its hardware products like virtual and augmented reality goggles and glasses.</p>.<p>The store, which is open to the public as of Monday, is made for people who want to test out products like Ray-Ban Stories, Meta's AR glasses and sunglasses, along with the Portal video calling gadget and Oculus virtual reality headsets.</p>.<p>Shoppers still have to order the glasses from Ray-Ban but can buy the other products at the store.</p>.<p>“It's a very concrete step from moving away from social media and ads that mislead people and elections and spying and data and all those things to a very physical representation of clean, classy, well-designed, cool hardware that makes you go, ah,” said Omar Akhtar, research director at Altimeter, a technology investment firm.</p>.<p>Akhtar said he “didn't believe in virtual reality” until he sat and tried on the Oculus headset for the first time — and believes this will be the same for others who are able to put on the goggles and try it out.</p>.<p>Apple pioneered physical retail stores in Silicon Valley and Meta, which owns Instagram and Facebook, is likely hoping it'll replicate at least some of that success.</p>.<p>“The truth of it is that physical things never went away and they're never going to go away,” Akhtar said.</p>.<p>“Everybody realises that even if we are going to step into the virtual world, we're going to need to access it with hardware.” </p>