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Google Accelerates Agentic AI Shift With New Enterprise Platform DeFi Security Suffers New Blow With $3 Million Volo Exploit Uninvited Users Access Anthropic’s Mythos AI Model Block and Uber Expand Partnership Across Several Global Markets OpenAI Pledges $1.5 Billion to PE Enterprise AI Project Podcast: Inside the $9 Billion DeFi Hack That’s Shaking Crypto’s Foundations Synchrony CFO Flags Momentum in Spending and Credit Banks Risk Slowing the Emerging Middle Market Firms Driving Growth Paysafe Expands Digital Wallet Availability Across 18 European Markets Bad Data Can Break Good AI in Payments 50% More Digital Shopping Days Put Parents at the Center of Retail’s Shift 65% Call Insurance Essential. Why Most Spending Isn’t So Clear-Cut Amazon Recasts Marketplace Fraud as a Broader Trust Problem Capital One’s Q1 Shifts Attention From Spending to Strategy Lawmakers Question JetBlue About Surveillance Pricing Allegations Small Businesses Stop Chasing Amazon on Delivery Speed Google Embeds AI Into Chrome for 3.5 Billion Users Adobe Plans Outcome-Based Pricing for New AI Product Suite UnitedHealth Spends $1.5 Billion on AI and Wants Double Back MiCA Forces Crypto Firms to Get Licensed or Get Out Prediction Market Kalshi Targets Crypto Perpetuals New York Sues Coinbase and Gemini Over Prediction Markets Amazon and Anthropic Deepen Ties With Investment and Hardware Pact Commercial Loans Show US Economy Defies Sluggish Forecasts The Web Is Gaslighting AI Agents and Nobody Can Tell OCC Enters the Interchange Fight and Raises the Stakes Amazon Dismisses New Evidence in California Antitrust Suit AI Finds Its Best Customer on Main Street Coinbase Opens Services Marketplace for Agentic Commerce Feds Start Processing $127 Billion in Tariff Refunds for Importers Zenskar Raises $15 Million For Agentic-Powered Revenue Automation Payments Modernization Is Insurance’s Next Big Margin Engine How Visa Is Rewiring Bank Infrastructure for the AI Era Instant Payments Grow but the Real Barrier Is Human The Old-School Card Product Banks May Need Most 43% of SMBs Would Pay to Make Purchases in Installments The Real AI Edge in Payments Comes From Better Judgment In the Age of Agentic AI, Data Control Is Power Verizon’s Dan Schulman Tells CEOs to Be Open About AI Job Cuts Walmart Eyes Stores as Warehouse Space for Same-Day Delivery QVC Was TikTok Shop Before TikTok Shop Loop Raises $95 Million to Bridge Supply Chain Data Gap Cursor Eyes $50 Billion Valuation as AI Coding Demand Surges Commercial Lending Rescues Regional Banks From Consumer Slowdown Anthropic and White House Aim to Make Peace in Friday Meeting Home Depot Buys SIMPL Automation to Support Same-Day Delivery The Riskiest Words in B2B: This Is How We’ve Always Done It France Urges Euro Stablecoins to Break Dollar Dependency Importers Prep for Monday Opening of Tariff Refund Portal Permitting Hurdles and Labor Shortages Threaten AI Data Center Timelines Token Freezes Force CFOs to Rethink Stablecoin Risk X Money Tests Whether Social Commerce Can Hold Consumer Deposits Anthropic Briefs EU Regulators on Mythos Cybersecurity Concerns Welcome to Vibe Ordering, ChatGPT Is Taking Your Order Now Nvidia Says AI Can Finally Make Quantum Computing Work QVC Files Chapter 11 to Slash Debt and Pursue Growth Uber Eats Lets Customers Return Their Retail Purchases Financial Officials Sound Alarm About Anthropic’s Banking Risk 71% of Billion-Dollar Firms Face Agent Identity Threats What If Clearing Had Its Stripe Moment? 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If AI Fixed Smart Glasses, Why Aren’t Consumers Wearing Them?
PYMNTS · 2026-04-28 · via PYMNTS.com

Big Tech really wants augmented reality (AR) smart glasses to happen, no matter the Google Glass graveyard, Apple Vision Pro pivot or Meta’s failed metaverse roadmap.

On Monday (April 27), details about an alleged Samsung smart glasses product leaked, while earlier in the month news broke that Gucci and Google were partnering on a luxury pair of smart wearables set to debut next year.

And at the start of the year, smart glasses maker XReal raised $100 million at a valuation of over $1 billion, while Meta and eyewear maker EssilorLuxottica let the marketplace know they were considering doubling their capacity to produce Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses from 10 million to 20 million by the end of the year, with additional room for up to 30 million.

Apple is also refining its approach to the space and moving from bulky virtual reality (VR) goggles to sleeker artificial intelligence (AI) wearables. Aside from the companies mentioned above, major tech firms like AmazonSnapBaiduXiaomi and others are all investing heavily into smart glasses; as are smaller, AI wearable-specific startups like VitureEven RealitiesBrilliantSolos and Halliday, to name just a handful.

But while the introduction of AI has undoubtedly given the category a shot in the arm, it may not have fundamentally altered the core behavioral challenge of convincing users that wearing a computer, and a video camera, on their face is not just useful, but necessary.

Or, has it?

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Read more: Wearables, Robotics and Infrastructure Become Big Tech’s New Focus 

AI Changes the Interface, Not the Fundamentals

If there is a through line in the current wave of AR glasses, it is a sense of convergence. Hardware is becoming more wearable and AI is making interactions more intuitive. Enterprise use cases are proving viability in specific contexts, with the London Marathon this past weekend even featuring vision-impaired runners using AI-powered smart glasses.

Yet convergence does not guarantee adoption. The history of consumer technology is littered with products that were technically impressive but failed to find a durable place in everyday life.

Wearing early AR glasses in public often felt like announcing oneself as a beta tester. Today’s designs aim to disappear into daily life, a prerequisite for any consumer technology aspiring to ubiquity. Advances in microdisplays, waveguides and battery efficiency have allowed manufacturers to shrink components without sacrificing performance. Devices like Meta’s Ray-Ban smart glasses and Snap’s Spectacles are now closer to conventional eyewear than conspicuous headgear.

What has changed more dramatically is the software layer, particularly with the integration of generative AI. The rise of large language models and multimodal systems has given AR glasses a more compelling narrative: not just as display devices, but as intelligent companions.

In this framing, glasses become a gateway to real-time assistance. They can summarize conversations, translate languages on the fly, identify objects and provide contextual prompts based on what the wearer sees. Startups are leaning heavily into this “AI-native” positioning, arguing that the true breakthrough is not the hardware itself but the intelligence embedded within it.

But AI does not eliminate the need for a clear use case. It enhances interactions, but it does not define them. The question of why a user should wear AR glasses for hours each day, rather than pull out a smartphone when needed, remains open.

See also: How Big Tech’s XR Push Could Redefine Both Payments and AI 

What Comes Next

The next phase of AR glasses will likely be defined less by breakthroughs and more by iteration. Incremental improvements in battery life, display quality and comfort will continue. AI capabilities will expand, becoming more personalized and context-aware. Partnerships between hardware makers and software developers may begin to seed more robust ecosystems.

A PYMNTS Intelligence report found that people often use connected devices to multitask, especially among the younger, digital-first generations. Smart glasses, for example, can provide hands-free connectivity to users, who can use the embedded AI assistant to do online searches, take photos or videos, read and write text messages, and translate foreign languages in real time, among other capabilities.

But incremental improvements are unlikely to drive behavioral change at scale.

For now, AR glasses remain a category defined as much by its potential as by its limitations. More are being made than ever before. The technology is better than it has ever been. But the fundamental questions—what they are for, and why they matter—remain unresolved.