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Apple is developing a wearable AI device that's been described as a pin or pendant, and that could compete with a similar AI product coming from OpenAI's Jony Ive. It wasn't clear if the wearable would actually make it to launch because Apple sometimes cancels projects, but it is still in the works and could come as soon as next year.

Second-Generation-AirTag-Feature-Purple.jpg

1. It'll Look Like an AirTag

Apple's design plans could change, but rumors suggest the device is a pin or pendant that looks similar to an AirTag. It's been described as having a thin, flat, circular disc shape, with an aluminum and glass shell. A physical control button is included on one edge.

Apple wants the final version of the device to be about the same size as an AirTag, but because of the hardware inside, it could be thicker.

It sounds like the wearable will be versatile. It could have a clip to attach to clothing like a pin, but there's also supposedly a hole in the device so it can be worn as a necklace. Rumors have referred to it as both a pin and a pendant.

2. There Will Be Cameras

Apple's AI wearable is going to have at least one camera, but rumors are mixed on exactly what the camera will be used for.

Bloomberg says the pin will have a low-resolution camera that gives it info about its surroundings rather than a camera for capturing photos and videos. The camera will be always-on and processing visual data, but users will not be able to use it for images.

The Information reports there will be two front cameras, one with a standard lens and one with a wide-angle lens for capturing photos and videos.

Apple's AI device will rely heavily on Visual Intelligence, which is currently an iPhone feature that uses the camera to provide users with more information about places and objects around them.

3. Siri is the Brain

Rumors have described Apple's wearable as an AI pin or pendant, because it's going to be reliant on artificial intelligence. It's one of several AI-equipped devices that Apple is working on, and it will give wearers a way to interface with Siri without having to use an iPhone.

The camera on the pin will give Siri insight, and Siri will be able to answer questions about what the wearer is looking at or the wearer's surroundings.

Apple is planning to completely overhaul Siri in iOS 27, turning the personal assistant into a much smarter chatbot on par with Claude, Gemini, and ChatGPT.

4. iPhone Required

While the AI wearable will have a chip inside, it will be a smaller chip that's similar to the H2 in the AirPods. It won't use a high-powered chip, and most processing will need to be done on the iPhone.

The pin is not meant to be a standalone device, and it will instead be marketed as an iPhone accessory.

5. It'll Listen, But Might Not Talk Back

To listen for voice requests and to pick up sounds around the wearer, the AI pin will have a microphone. Apple has not yet decided whether to add a speaker for back-and-forth Siri conversations and audio playback.

If there's no speaker, responses might be directed to the wearer on the iPhone, Apple Watch, or AirPods.

Release Date

Bloomberg's Mark Gurman said this week that the AI wearable could see a launch as soon as 2027.

Article Link: Apple's AirTag-Sized AI Pendant: Five Features Rumored So Far
 
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Reactions: jw2002
Nobody wants a pendant (or AirPods) with hidden cameras, except technological adolescents (read: adolescence is a state of mind, not an age). Those of us who live in the real world and have a grasp on reality (and the real problems that should be solved) know this is just another "solution" in search of a problem.

Can we redistribute some of the "AI" research to rainwater reclamation or ecologically-friendly transit, please? So many smart minds are wasted slaving away for a few billionaires' dreams to make lines go up.
 
3. Siri is the Brain

Rumors have described Apple's wearable as an AI pin or pendant, because it's going to be reliant on artificial intelligence. It's one of several AI-equipped devices that Apple is working on, and it will give wearers a way to interface with Siri without having to use an iPhone.
You lost me at that 🤦🏼‍♀️
 
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Reactions: Huck
Another rumored Apple device that relies on AI servers and an iPhone, and features a privacy-compromising camera? Certainly Apple can create something that contributes more to human creativity and the welfare of society than this.
 
5. It'll Listen, But Might Not Talk Back

To listen for voice requests and to pick up sounds around the wearer, the AI pin will have a microphone. Apple has not yet decided whether to add a speaker for back-and-forth Siri conversations and audio playback.
I'll acknowledge right away that this product is not for me. But what the hell is even the point? All the other Siri devices already tell me to unlock my phone to see the answer.
 
  • Haha
Reactions: Huck
Answers to a question no one asked. Cameras that are low res but can provide details and context to what people are seeing? iPhone needed for the GPS presumably. Cameras must suck up the juice, so is this a weekly charge? Speakers that may or may not be two way.

Sounds like Apple not wanting to be upstaged by Ive and his forthcoming device.
 
Regarding Humane’s now defunct AI pin:

"In a world where smartphones dominate our lives, why would consumers pay a premium price for an inferior, redundant device? Consumers don't adopt technology because it's futuristic; they adopt it because it seamlessly improves their daily lives," said Francisco Geronimo, VP of data and analytics for global market intelligence firm IDC. "This was never about a lack of marketing or consumer readiness -- the AI Pin simply didn't solve a real problem."

Does anyone see a reason why the same wouldn’t apply to Apple’s device?
 
Apple is developing a wearable AI device that's been described as a pin or pendant,
Is this really safe to wear near the heart and lungs for several hours per day? I hope people raise concerns rather than putting blind trust into a corporation that stands a lot more to gain than to lose if such a device is proven to be harmful to health only after many years.
 
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