Samsung’ is exploring other ways to release AI-powered earrings and necklaces. “We believe it should be wearable, something that you shouldn’t carry, [that] you don’t need to carry,” Samsung COO Choi said in an interview on CNN. “So it could be something that you wear, glasses, earrings, watches, rings and sometimes [a] necklace.
The advancements of AI models that can handle more complex multi-step tasks with voice prompts is a natural fit for the wearable market. Instead of relying on a screen to type or tap, users can increasingly carry out screenless requests with minimal effort. And AI labs are banking on this becoming the future of how we use our gadgets. Samsung has reportedly accelerated its development of AR smart glasses, and teased its XR headset in collaboration with Google, dubbed Project Moohan. But it is also exploring devices beyond glasses and headsets.
Choi told CNN that they’re looking at all “kinds of possibilities,” since some people might not want to wear glasses. OpenAI is also taking this approach with acquisition of iconic Apple designer Jony Ive. Few details are know, even less so since the company is now dealing with a trademark dispute over the name and brand. But leaked memos say the AI companion device is not XR glasses.
Products like the Humane Ai Pin and the Rabbit R1 have tried and failed with alternative AI wearables and devices. But companies like Samsung, Google, and OpenAI clearly see the potential in wearables — whatever form it takes.
