
Earlier this week, Bloomberg reported that Apple will be “accelerating” the development of three upcoming AI wearables: smart glasses, a pendant, and AirPods with cameras. These three products are all meant to integrate Siri deeper into our everyday lives, and I’ll be focusing on the glasses aspect of it.
Obviously, Apple has always had an ambition to make glasses. The idea of Apple making AR glasses has been in the rumor mill for ages. For now, that’s on pause – and Vision Pro will have to do. In the meanwhile, the company is pursuing AI glasses, similar to Meta Ray-Bans.
Meta Ray-Bans have been a hit since they launched towards the end of 2023. Despite everyone knowing Meta for being a privacy-invading company, loads of people have been excited to have a pair of glasses from Meta with cameras on them. At their core, they have cameras, microphones, and speakers – allowing users to talk to Meta AI about their surroundings, listen to music, or take photos and videos.

Starting last year, we begun to hear that Apple was working towards releasing its own version of Meta Ray-Bans in the coming year. Now, development has advanced significantly.
Apple is reportedly integrating two camera lenses: one for computer vision, and another for taking photos and videos. The company has also figured out how to embed all of the components in the frame, when initially they were planning on relying on an external battery.
Apple has a new trick up its sleeve
When talking about products that rely on voice for communication, it’s always been easy to think about how it might not always be practical to communicate out loud. This is why I largely don’t use any of the voice assistant features on my Meta Ray-Bans.
Recently, though, Apple acquired a new startup for $2 billion: Q.ai.
While we don’t know loads about this company, we do know one thing quite clearly – it specialized in machine learning systems for interpreting silent voice input.
Right now, if you want to speak to a voice assistant, it has to be pretty audible. Even whispers can be hard at time for certain voice models, especially when you aren’t in a completely silent environment. This new acquisition could solve that.
Q.ai also researched systems for interpreting micro facial movements, enabling them to understand speech without it being audible at all.
If this can all come together nicely, I think Apple Glasses will be incredibly appealing to loads of people, and might make people take voice assistants more seriously.
Wrap up
Ultimately, I’m sure Meta Ray-Bans will end up being much cheaper than Apple’s AI glasses. However, if Apple is truly able to stick the landing with next-level speech recognition technology, I think a lot of people will be willing to overlook the price difference. While we don’t know a concrete release date, it seems likely that they’ll be released within the next year or so.
What do you think of Apple’s AI glasses? Are you excited for them, or will you be skipping? Let us know in the comments.
My favorite Apple accessory recommendations:
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