Alright, so picture this: Meta—yeah, the folks who gave us the Quest headsets—are now, believe it or not, teaming up with a military tech company. Forget about gaming for a second; they’re aiming to drop their XR wizardry onto the battlefield. Yup, seriously. And as if that wasn’t enough of a twist, they’re eyeing the medical field now too.
So I stumbled across these job listings, and they’re like hunting for some regulatory whizzes—kind of sounds important, right? The Reality Labs squad—they’re Meta’s XR division—wants to snag people who can navigate all that bureaucratic red tape for medical gadgets. One gig is for a “regulatory affairs specialist.” Sounds fancy. Anyway, they’re talking SaMDs, augmented reality glasses, wrist doodads, and I don’t even know what else. Whole lot of tech speak, but basically, it’s about making these gadgets legit so they can hit the market.
And there’s this other role they posted called ‘Medical Devices Regulatory Affairs Strategy Specialist’—a mouthful, honestly. But the gist? They need someone to buddy up with the likes of the FDA and other bigshot regulatory folks. The end game? Get all the hoops jumped through so they can push these new Meta gadgets out there, stat.
Now, they didn’t spill all the beans on what exactly they’re cooking up for the medical scene. But it wouldn’t be a shocker if those Orion AR glasses they’ve been tinkering with show up in a doctor’s toolkit someday. I mean, think about it: real-deal visuals, no passthrough nonsense, just straight-up reality. Docs could be all surgeon-like, slicing and dicing without losing sight of reality—not a bad thing when you need precision, right?
And then there’s the whole AI thing. Yeah, they’re thinking about chatty AI helpers and nifty wrist-wear for hands-free action. How 2025 is that?
But, and here comes the kicker, living up to medical standards—especially with all the legal mumbo jumbo—ain’t a sprint. More like a marathon. So who knows when or if we’ll see Meta docs rolling into hospitals with all this jazzed-up hardware.
It’s a wait-and-see, folks. But, man, what a ride it could be.