What are AI smart glasses—and where could they fit in everyday life?
A clear introduction to intelligent eyewear, from voice assistance and open-ear audio to hands-free moments.
FUNFLIX Insights
Clear thinking on AI eyewear, responsible design and the technology we want to make part of everyday life.
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A clear introduction to intelligent eyewear, from voice assistance and open-ear audio to hands-free moments.
Trust begins with controls people can understand—and capture signals everyone around the wearer can see.
The thinking behind a premium smart-glasses concept created around balance, restraint and everyday wearability.
The terms are often mixed together, but they can describe very different product experiences. Smart glasses may focus on audio, cameras and AI assistance, while AR glasses add digital visuals to the wearer’s field of view. This guide explains the practical value, limits and questions to ask.
Travel involves constant context switching between directions, communication, photography and local information. A wearable assistant could reduce how often a traveller needs to stop and look down at a phone. This guide explains the practical value, limits and questions to ask.
Wearable translation aims to make conversations easier without placing a screen between people. The experience may combine microphones, language models, audio output and, in some designs, a visual display. This guide explains the practical value, limits and questions to ask.
Navigation becomes more natural when guidance arrives at the right moment without demanding full visual attention. Audio cues can be valuable even when a product has no display. This guide explains the practical value, limits and questions to ask.
Point-of-view capture can help creators document an activity while keeping both hands available. The result can feel more immediate than footage recorded from a separate camera position. This guide explains the practical value, limits and questions to ask.
Cyclists may value spoken directions, open-ear audio and hands-free communication, but any wearable feature must keep attention on the road and local safety rules. This guide explains the practical value, limits and questions to ask.
Professionals move between calls, notes, travel and focused work. A voice-first wearable may help with selected actions without becoming another screen to manage. This guide explains the practical value, limits and questions to ask.
Connected eyewear could support listening, reminders and accessible learning, but it can also introduce distraction or privacy concerns in classrooms. This guide explains the practical value, limits and questions to ask.
Open-ear audio directs sound toward the wearer without sealing the ear canal. In smart glasses, compact speakers are often placed within the temples near the ears. This guide explains the practical value, limits and questions to ask.