Tech
We tried Google’s AI glasses and they’re almost there
At the Google I/O developer conference this week, we had the opportunity for a brief hands-on with Google’s upcoming AI-powered glasses — not the audio-only glasses that the company said will begin shipping this fall but rather the glasses that offer a combined audio and visual experience.
First announced at last year’s event, these Android XR glasses offer an in-lens display that puts helpful information in front of you, overlaid on top of the real world. This includes widgets that could display things like the weather, walking directions, Uber pickup details, live translation, and more — even widgets you designed yourself using AI.

The glasses will also pair with iOS and Android phones, the company noted, both in the audio-only format and in the future display version.
The eyewear with the display is meant to be the next step beyond the first generation of audio glasses coming out later this year. The glasses were developed in partnership with Warby Parker, Gentle Monster, and Samsung, blending Google’s technology with their brands’ design aesthetics.
The glasses we tested, meanwhile, were still very much a prototype, although one polished enough to now be tested externally. The reps demoing the XR glasses explained that the prototype allowed Google to not worry about some of the cosmetic details related to different styles and shapes, so it could instead focus on experimenting with the display technology more freely and its impacts on battery life. That means these spectacles are very different from any future shipping version of glasses, in terms of fit, shape, dimensions, and attention to detail. Rather, it’s more like being able to experiment with the “insides” of the glasses, while still in a basic, comfortable frame.
The shipping version of the glasses will be able to detect when the glasses are placed on your head and taken off, but the ones we tried didn’t have this feature.

To activate Gemini, you perform a two-second press on the right side of the glasses’ frame. A startup chime sounds, letting you know that Gemini is on and listening. In the demo version, starting Gemini also starts the camera at the same time, but the shipping version will allow the user to configure whether they want to turn on the camera when Gemini starts.
In an initial test, we played music via the glasses by asking Gemini to play a favorite artist. The venue was too noisy to evaluate the sound quality, unfortunately, as the music was dialed up to the maximum volume and was still relatively hard to hear crisply and in detail. But the initial impression from this limited experience was that the glasses would not be a great substitute for higher-quality earbuds, though they would do if you just wanted some music while you were outside, walking, hiking, or doing chores around the house. The advantage of not having earbuds in is that you can more easily hear someone talking, compared with the transparency mode experiences on devices like Apple’s AirPods.
To turn the music off, tap once on the side of the frame, around the middle, as if tapping on your temple.

In the second test, we pressed the photo capture button to take a photo of a person. The display was off, so the picture was transferred to our phone and watch. (You’ll later be able to capture video with a long press, but this option was not available to test with the prototype. In the case of video, you would see a video thumbnail preview instead of a photo.)
You can also simply ask Gemini to take a photo without having to press the photo button, and perform some sort of AI manipulation on the result. For instance, you can say something like, “Take a photo and turn the person into an anime character.” The photo is sent to the phone, then to the Gemini and Nano Banana servers, and then returns in its edited version.
At the Google I/O venue, where Wi-Fi was under a heavy load, the round-trip took around 45 seconds.

With the display enabled, you’ll see a simple home screen appear in your field of view. The demo version had some widgets preloaded that showed the weather and a countdown to Google’s I/O event. You could also build quick launchers into specific apps, like Google Maps or Translate, if those were among your main use cases for the glasses.
The prototype had just one display over the right eye, but the platform can support both single and dual displays, as well as audio-only glasses. The image itself was a little fuzzy, but we chalked this up to our prescription contacts, which involve wearing one lens optimized for distance on one side, and one optimized for near vision on the other. When we closed one eye, the image came into better focus, but the experience almost immediately left us with some eye strain above the right eye, and it’s unclear if the prescription was entirely to blame.

One of the best demos was of the language translation experience on the glasses, which is backed by the Google Translate app on the phone. One of the demonstrators spoke rapid Spanish, and the glasses automatically detected the language and showed the text in English on the display, while Gemini spoke English in our ear. We could see world travelers buying the glasses for this experience alone.
We should note that Translate will work on the audio-only glasses, too, just without the text being displayed on the glasses. Instead, you could see the transcription on the phone, if needed, in addition to the real-time audio feedback.
Another demo involved using the glasses to navigate. While obviously we couldn’t go out on a walk and leave the venue to test its accuracy, we could get an idea of how it works. You can start the Google Maps experience by asking Gemini to navigate to a destination — which can even be as vague as something like “the nearest coffee shop.”
Gemini will activate Google Maps on the phone, and after a brief delay while the experience loads, the glasses will display turn-by-turn directions. When you are looking forward, your next turn information will be displayed. But if you need to get oriented in space, look down at the ground to see your blue dot on a map. You can also turn to the left and right to rotate in space, just like you would try to get the blue dot to point the right way on your phone.
Then when you look up again, you can keep walking without the map being in your way.
Because the experience is tied to Google Maps on your phone, saved destinations like “home” and “work” will already be available.

We were also able to briefly use the glasses to identify a variety of objects in our view and ask questions about them. The glasses initially struggled to identify the replica of a Monet painting on a shelf in front of us, but that’s because the prototype didn’t automatically enable the camera — it had to be turned on again from the app. Still, it took a couple of questions before Gemini said that it looked like a Monet even after we moved in closer to focus on the Monet signature in the bottom left.
Other tests were smoother, as the glasses immediately identified the plant on the shelf and answered questions about different recipes in a book. Still, these were things you could do today with Google Lens (or other AI models integrated in chatbot apps), though we suppose it’s interesting to be able to do them without having to pull your phone out.
Google says it will have more to share about its Android XR display glasses later this year, when it expands its trusted tester program.

In the meantime, the company believes that audio will suffice for some users’ needs, which is perhaps a smart way to spin the fact that it doesn’t have its display glasses ready, despite the competition from Meta and Snap on this front.
Like the display version, the audio glasses also provide access to Google’s Gemini AI, which you hear privately through the glasses’ frame speakers. You can do things like listen to music through the glasses, press a button to take a photo, make a call, or tap into your phone apps from these glasses, as you can on the future display versions.
Tapping into other third-party apps wasn’t among the items we demoed, but the glasses will allow users to tell Gemini to do things like “take the ingredients from this recipe and add them to my shopping list.”
In another example that Google showcased during the event’s keynote, the glasses could see a meal that the wearer was cooking on the stove and offer feedback about the meal, like whether the meat was fully done yet.
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Tech
Smart ring maker Oura files to go public
SpaceX may have stolen the show with its IPO prospectus, but Elon Musk’s aerospace-AI-data center company wasn’t the only notable business to file to go public this week. On Thursday, Finnish smart ring company Oura said that it had confidentially submitted a Form S-1 to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in preparation for an IPO.
Founded in 2015, Oura has emerged as one of the most popular wearable health trackers, setting itself apart from Fitbit, Garmin, and Apple’s watch products with a sleek, unobtrusive ring.
The Oura ring tracks activity, sleep, and daily “readiness,” among other health metrics, and today has customers around the world. At the time of its Series E last September, Oura said it had sold 5.5 million rings to date, a steep jump from the 2.5 million figure it had reported the prior year.
That Series E saw Oura raising $875 million at a valuation of $11 billion, more than double the $5 billion price tag it had earned in a prior round in 2024.
The company recently introduced a proprietary AI model geared toward women’s health in an effort to cater to its growing base of women customers.
Tech
Meta quietly launches a new Reddit-like app called Forum
Meta has quietly released a new stand-alone app for Facebook Groups called “Forum.” The company seems to be positioning Forum as a platform that functions similarly to Reddit, describing the app as a “dedicated space built for deeper discussions, real answers and communities you care about.”
The app appears to have first been spotted by social media consultant Matt Navarra.
After you sign in with your Facebook account, Forum will load in your groups, profile, and activity, and let you make posts with a nickname, just like on the standard Facebook app. Meta noted that your groups still exist on Facebook, and anything you share on Forum will be visible in your groups on Facebook.
Meta says Forum’s feeds are centered on conversations within groups, allowing users to see “what real people are saying, not just what’s trending,” and making it easy to pick up where they left off.
The app includes an AI-powered “Ask” tab that lets users ask questions and receive answers compiled from discussions across different groups. There’s also an admin AI assistant to help administrators manage groups and moderate content.
This isn’t the first time Meta has launched a stand-alone app for groups. Back in 2014, the company rolled out a dedicated Groups app that aimed to make it easier for users to share content across groups, but that effort was shuttered in 2017.
Forum is one of two new apps from Meta in recent weeks. Last month, the social media company rolled out a new app called Instants that lets users share disappearing photos with Instagram friends.
Instants and Forum come amid a broader effort at Meta to release more apps. The Wall Street Journal reported a few weeks ago that CEO Mark Zuckerberg told employees that with AI-driven efficiencies allowing the company to build more apps, the social media giant now aims to roll out many more apps than it has historically.
Referring to Meta’s chief product office Chris Cox, Zuckerberg reportedly said, “So Chris and I have been talking about ‘all right, well can we build 50 new apps?’ Like, yeah probably. But we probably should start by doing a few before we just, like, ramp up trying to do 50 all at once.”
Meta might think consumers want more apps, but that’s likely not the case, especially when its new apps mostly end up being copies of other popular services. Instants, for example, borrows ideas from BeReal and Snapchat, while Meta Edits, launched last year, is largely a copy of ByteDance’s CapCut.
Meta did not immediately return a request for comment.
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Tech
SpaceX files to go public, and the math requires a little faith
The SpaceX S-1 is finally here, and the story it tells goes way further than rockets. The filing runs to 36 pages of risk factors alone, and the numbers inside match the ambition: a $28 trillion total addressable market, a pay package tied to establishing a Mars colony, and a valuation target that would make it the largest IPO in American history.
Watch as Equity podcast hosts Kirsten Korosec, Anthony Ha, and Sean O’Kane dig into what the filing actually says, what it leaves out, and whether any of this math connects to reality. The team also covers NanoCo turning down a $20M buyout to raise a $12M seed for its secure Nano Claw alternative, Anthropic’s $300M acquisition of SDK startup Stainless, and the Google I/O announcement that promises to change search as we know it.
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