惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
A
About on SuperTechFans
IT之家
IT之家
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
Blog — PlanetScale
Blog — PlanetScale
aimingoo的专栏
aimingoo的专栏
云风的 BLOG
云风的 BLOG
The GitHub Blog
The GitHub Blog
Vercel News
Vercel News
G
Google Developers Blog
J
Java Code Geeks
宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
Cloudbric
Cloudbric
L
LINUX DO - 最新话题
MyScale Blog
MyScale Blog
H
Heimdal Security Blog
PCI Perspectives
PCI Perspectives
Attack and Defense Labs
Attack and Defense Labs
S
Security @ Cisco Blogs
Latest news
Latest news
I
Intezer
L
Lohrmann on Cybersecurity
C
CXSECURITY Database RSS Feed - CXSecurity.com
月光博客
月光博客
T
Threatpost
博客园 - 【当耐特】
S
Schneier on Security
P
Privacy International News Feed
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
T
Tenable Blog
AWS News Blog
AWS News Blog
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
雷峰网
雷峰网
博客园 - Franky
Engineering at Meta
Engineering at Meta
美团技术团队
S
Secure Thoughts
T
Troy Hunt's Blog
Microsoft Security Blog
Microsoft Security Blog
SecWiki News
SecWiki News
V
Visual Studio Blog
人人都是产品经理
人人都是产品经理
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
Cisco Talos Blog
Cisco Talos Blog
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
Martin Fowler
Martin Fowler
Webroot Blog
Webroot Blog
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
H
Hackread – Cybersecurity News, Data Breaches, AI and More

Forbes - Retail

Burberry Bets On Heritage As Americans Lap Up Hamptons Of England Look Chip Wilson’s Five-Pillar Plan To Fix Lululemon—Working It Falls To Heidi O’Neill And The Board Swap Storefront Delivers 2X Conversion Rates As Brands Embrace AI-Powered Commerce InMobi’s MobileAction Deal Boosts Agentic Commerce And Global Advertising Mattel’s First ‘KPop Demon Hunters’ Toys Arrive In Stores And Online ‘The Devil Wears Prada 2’ Lands As Luxury Fashion Fights To Pull Gen Z Into Its Orbit First Look At Primark Herald Square Manhattan Flagship Store AI-Run Store Hires Humans: What Andon Market Reveals About the Future of Retail Jobs Retail Investors Are Doubling Down And Fear May Be Driving The Rally Gen Z Discovers Apparel Shopping IRL Is Cool Barbie Styles A New Life For Herself As A Creative Director Here’s What Happened After AI Launched And Ran A Café In Stockholm Amazon Opens Its Vast Logistics Network To Every Business—Not Just Marketplace Sellers How Retailers Can Thrive With Agentic Commerce Saks May Exit Bankruptcy. Success Is The Next Question. CVS Profits Eclipse $2.9 Billion As Aetna Health Plan Costs Ease The Billion-Dollar Women’s Health Market Driving A New Endometriosis Focus Disney’s New CEO Starts With Job Cuts And A Corporate Reputation To Rebuild Miami’s Grid Proved The Catwalk As Fashion x F1 Drive Billion Dollar Opportunity Gap Co-Founder Doris Fisher, Who Clothed A New Generation, Dies At 94 Home Depot’s Orange Apron Media Targets High Intent Shoppers And Pros May The Fourth And The Rise Of The Luxury Fan The Met, The Mark And New York’s Most Watched Night The French Riviera Has Entered Its White Lotus Era Mango, The Stealth Retailer That Has Crept Up On Fast Fashion Giants Esteworld: From Cosmetic Surgery To Wellness—And The U.S. A Target Minted Doubles Profitability, Grows Retail Partnerships How Longevity Is Becoming The Wellness Industry’s New Gold Rush AI Earned The Right To Guide Shopping Decisions, But Not To Buy Altos Carves Out A Distinctive Position In The Global Tequila Market Iconic Jersey Mall Garden State Plaza Is Reinventing Itself, Again Whimsy, Wonder And Mother’s Day 2026 Consumers Won’t See Tariff Refunds. Smart Retailers Will Turn Them Into Price Cuts VF Corp CEO Pledges To Deep Brand Turnaround At Berlin Congress Henkell Freixenet Bets On Growth Segments To Reignite Sparkling Wine How Sleepmaxxing Became The Latest Status Symbol “Nesting”…Retailers Have A Gen Z Problem How Ace Hardware Employees Are Using AI To Serve Shoppers How The Garden Became The Good Place, As A $3.5 billion Market Continues To Bloom Could Rhode Island Bill Hit Aldi As It Expands New U.S. Format? California Unseals Evidence Supporting Price-Fixing Allegations Against Amazon New Michael Jackson Action Figure On The Way As ‘Michael’ Movie Mania Hits Raw Uncut Diamonds Give Jewelry Shoppers A Visible Difference Traditional Designs Can’t Match Welcome To The First-Ever Store Designed, Developed And Run By AI Louvelle Links Lenders And Renters Of High-End Fashion Lumas Tests Art’s Airport Potential With Frankfurt Terminal 3 Debut Ulta Partners With Google Gemini To Power Agentic AI For Beauty Shoppers Whole Foods Market Debuts Line Of Robert Hall Wines, The First Domestic Regenerative Organic Certified Wines On Its Shelves Parke X Target, A Match Made In Gen Z Heaven QVC Was Slow To The Shift, And Now It’s Costly To Catch Up How Coachella Became A Testing Ground For Cultural Brand Relevance How AI Agents Could Rebuild Fashion’s Visual Production Layer Waitrose To Test Airport Retailing At London Heathrow Inside Bed Bath & Beyond’s Grand Vision For An ‘Everything Home’ Ecosystem How Luxury Brands Are Quietly Leaning Into Artificial Intelligence How Prime And A Smarter Alexa Are Giving Amazon An AI Shopping Edge Fresh Fizz Organic Soda Doubles Its Retail Footprint As It Enters National Distribution With Sprouts Farmers Market QVC Chapter 11 Signals Change At Company That Once Ruled Home Shopping Google Pixel And Highsnobiety Build A Talent Pipeline For Fashion 7-Eleven To Close 645 Stores As It Races To Catch Up In Convenience Why Shakespeare And Company Feels Newly Relevant In A Digital Age A Parisian Pause In The Luxury Retail Quarter Tim Cook Has Bet On Nike But That Doesn’t Mean You Should Just Do It For Gen Z Apparel Brands, The Mall Is Fashion-Forward Hiring Lessons: Why Target Chose An Insider And Kroger Hired An Outsider For CEO First Look At New Aldi Format Set To Rollout Across The U.S. Fashion Unit Takes Middle East Hit, But LVMH Proves Resilient In Q1 When It Comes To Marketplaces, More Is Exponentially Better Neato Raises $25 Million For 2P Expansion Beyond Amazon Google, DressX And The New Fashion AI Virtual Try-On Stack Why The AI Checkout Debate Misses The Real Shift In Retail Galeries Lafayettes Paris Just Opened Europe’s Largest Beauty Destination Cantino In As New CEO While Stefano Gabbana Relinquishes D&G Chair How To Turn 'Boring' Products Into Hype Brands (According To The Co-Founders Of Hears Earplugs) How Sinead Gorey Built A Cult Fashion Brand Worn By Sabrina Carpenter Menswear In The Post-Covid Age Is High Tech And High Touch Unilever Acquires Gummies Supplement Brand Grüns For $1.2 Billion How Caviar Moved From Old Luxury To New Demand Surging Digital Art Sales Put Early Pioneers Back In The Spotlight Latest Gen Z Spend Trend: Trading Down To Glow Up Swatch Urges Shareholders To Reject Activist's Investor’s Board Bid Adidas Is Winning The Hearts And Minds Of Consumers Globally As Nike Falls Gardening’s Cultural Return Is Reshaping How Consumers Invest In Home, Health And Time American Girl Historical Characters Dolls Return For Brand’s 40th Anniversary Bed Bath & Beyond To Widen Offer In $150 Million Container Store Deal Jockey Celebrates 150 Years and Launches Limited 1876 Collection ‘Beetlejuice’ Action Figure Of Winona Ryder’s Lydia Deetz Is In The Works How Home Depot Is Harnessing Weather Data To Drive Local Retail Sales Saie And Sephora Turn Earth Month Into Collective Initiative For The Planet Irish Airport Retailer Takes Over JFK T4 Stores From LVMH-Owned DFS Brands Keep Treating Gen Z Like Younger Millennials, And It's Costing Them Resale Becomes The Fashion Industry’s New Value Flywheel How Liberation Day Has Really Changed Retail And Prices One Year On Why The Home Spa Is The New Luxury Gift This Mother’s Day How Supply Chain Disruptions Are Reshaping The Future Of Startups Walmart Caught In ESL Controversy As Legislators Move Against Digital Shelf Labels The Trillion-Dollar Experience Economy And The Growing Execution Gap Heinemann Promotes Rajshree Dugar To CEO Of Asia-Pacific Unit First Photos Of ‘Supergirl’ Movie Action Figures Take Flight WSI Seals 10‑year Retail Deal At Australia’s 1st Major Airport In 50 Years
Snap Smart Glasses Hit The Market At $2,195 As AR Wearables Reach Inflection Point
Kate Hardcastle · 2026-06-17 · via Forbes - Retail
woman using a smart glasses in front of an office building

Eyes on the Prize: Smart glasses introduces a category moving quickly from experiment to serious consumer market, as Snap, Meta and Google compete to define what comes next.

getty

After a decade of experiments, the smart glasses category is moving from curiosity to contest

In early formats, hardware was awkward, the battery life short, the social use case fuzzy, and the public memory still haunted by Google Glass.

This week, Snap has launched its first consumer AR glasses, Specs, at $2,195, moving the company out of its long developer-incubation phase and into a much more exposed commercial race with Meta and Google.

That price tells you almost everything about where the market is now. These are not mass-market sunglasses with a clever camera hidden in the hinge. Snap is selling a standalone spatial computer for the face, with a 51-degree field of view, dual Snapdragon chips, hand tracking, four hours of battery life, and up to 20 hours with the charging case. In other words, it is not trying to beat Meta’s Ray-Bans on wearability. It is trying to argue that the next important screen may not be a phone screen at all.

View of the Marketplace

For now, Meta is the clear volume leader. Industry estimates put the company at roughly 70% of the smart-glasses market, with 3.5 million Meta Ray-Ban units shipped.

Behind it sit Xiaomi at 8.5% and Huawei at 2.7%. The distinction, though, is not merely about brand strength, but product philosophy. Meta has won early by making smart glasses look and feel close enough to ordinary eyewear that people will actually wear them all day.

That matters because wear time is still the category’s unresolved truth. The vast majority of shipments, around 91%, by one 2026 forecast, are still audio-first smart glasses, not display-heavy AR devices. Lighter frames, familiar silhouettes and easier daily use continue to beat technical ambition when the product sits on the face rather than on a desk. That is why Snap’s new Specs, at 132 grams, are being positioned for shorter, more immersive sessions rather than all-day wear.

Double vision

Snap Specs product image Snap’s new Specs, priced at $2,195, are designed less as everyday eyewear and more as a standalone spatial computer - a sign the smart-glasses market has reached a genuine inflection point.

SNAP

The more interesting number is not market share but growth. One 2026 industry forecast expects AI smart-glasses shipments to rise 85% year over year, passing 15 million units worldwide. Another projects an even larger jump, from 6 million units in 2025 to 20 million in 2026. Forecasts vary, but the direction is the same: the category is no longer being treated as a novelty side-show. It is beginning to look like a genuine hardware frontier.

That does not mean the market has settled. In fact, the opposite. What is emerging now is a split between two distinct design languages.

One is the ambient AI companion: glasses that look normal, sound useful, and let you ask questions, take calls, listen to music, translate signs or capture moments without ever introducing a visible display. Meta’s Ray-Bans sit squarely here.

The other is the standalone spatial computer: devices that project digital graphics into the real world and ask the wearer to do more than listen. Snap’s Specs belong to that camp, which is much more ambitious and, for now, much harder to normalise. Yet it seems Snap has spent enough money to make this a serious test

News reporting highlights the company has now spent more than $3.5 billion on its AR glasses ambitions, after more than a decade of development, and had already reorganised the unit into a standalone subsidiary earlier this year. That sort of spend changes the tone. A prototype can afford to be charming. A multibillion-dollar bet cannot.

The pressure is softened only slightly by the rest of the business looking steadier. In Q1 2026, Snap reported $1.529 billion in revenue, up 12% year over year, while its “Other Revenue” segment, driven by subscriptions such as Snapchat+ and Lens+ rose 87% to $285 million. Clearly it is not funding Specs from a collapsing core. It has a platform business that is stabilising while the hardware story gets more expensive.

Are Snap then late to commercial smart glasses opportunity? That is true in one sense and slightly misleading in another. Snap has been working on this for years, and the company enters the consumer phase with a substantial AR ecosystem already in place. It has spent the past decade cultivating developers, creators and brands around augmented reality, and has repeatedly argued that its advantage lies not only in hardware but in the software and experiences layered on top. Snap said this week that developers have already published hundreds of Lenses for Specs, after a year and a half of 10 Snap OS updates and more than 40 new features and APIs.

That is a smaller claim than the broader, often-cited figure of 400,000 developers building 4 million AR lenses across Snap’s wider platform, but it is the more commercially relevant one right now. Consumer hardware does not succeed on technical merit alone. It succeeds when people can immediately understand what it is for.

Wearability v. Tech ability

That is where the category still feels unresolved. Earlier generations of smart glasses struggled badly with retention. Even Snap’s older Spectacles models were a reminder that novelty is not the same thing as habit. The industry has improved on battery life, display quality and AI use cases, but face-worn hardware remains more intimate, and therefore more demanding, than almost any other category in consumer tech.

Meta has answered that problem by making the glasses as close to normal eyewear as possible. Snap is answering it by betting that there are moments when people will accept a heavier device because the experience is strong enough: a 3D game hovering above a table, navigation layered onto the street, live visual coaching, spatial collaboration. The question is whether those moments are frequent enough to sustain a category beyond enthusiasts.

Meta’s Long Distance View

Meta’s advantage is not simply that it moved first. It is that it understood the category’s central tension sooner than most of its rivals: people may be curious about smart glasses, but they still need to want to wear them. That is why the Ray-Ban partnership matters so much. By placing the technology inside frames people already recognise, Meta turned a futuristic hardware problem into a familiarity play.

Recent reporting shows Meta accounted for 76.1% of global smart-glasses shipments in 2025, while Ray-Ban Meta and related models have already reached the multimillion-unit mark, giving the company a lead built less on technical spectacle than on social acceptability. Snap is betting on the next screen. Meta is betting that the first battle is still the face.

What Next?

For years, smart glasses were discussed as though one device would eventually win. The more plausible outcome is that the market becomes layered.

Audio-first glasses may become the everyday companion: lighter, cheaper, more wearable, closer in spirit to earbuds with a frame.

AR-first glasses may become the higher-value device: more immersive, less constant, used for gaming, shopping, navigation, work, sport and certain forms of entertainment.

That is what makes Snap’s launch this week significant, even if the product itself remains niche at first. It signals that the category has reached the stage where companies are no longer simply testing whether people might want smart glasses. They are beginning to define what kind of smart glasses people may want.

And that is usually the point at which a technology stops being experimental and starts becoming a market.