As momentous as it was for Meta to shove a display inside its smart glasses with the Meta Ray-Ban Display , whatever excitement the hardware generated was betrayed by the software side of things. The fact is, there just weren’t a ton of apps to use inside the company’s $800 smart glasses at launch, though things might finally be rounding the corner. Meta has opened up the Ray-Ban Display, which means developers can now make web apps that use the screen and the Neural Band , and launch them on the smart glasses via a URL. To be clear, this is for developers at the moment, but the early results are definitely interesting, and they’re a good sign for anyone who is left wanting for more from their pricey smart glasses. If you’re into early adoption, you can enable Meta’s developer mode on your Ray-Ban Display and start messing around yourself, but any apps you can get access to (again, you’ll need the URL from the developer) will likely be a work in progress.…