TRENDING
هكذا تلاعب الترابي الصادق وتابعه فضل الله برمة بالسودان • Ex-Gov Lalong, Former Reps Deputy Speaker, Others Win APC NASS Primaries In Plateau • Oyo trains 35 workers in human capacity building, reiterates commitment to training • UK proposes £5 million invite-only investor visa with 3-year path to settlement • US, Nigeria kill 175 ISIS terrorists in joint airstrikes – DHQ • Imo gov’s senate ticket stirs fresh controversy over tenure timeline • The Dangote Refinery IPO and the repricing of Nigerian capital market ambition • ذكرى انقلاب ٢٥ مايو وضرورة الخروج من الحلقة الجهنمية • حين خان السردُ التاريخ: الطيب صالح ومحمود ود أحمد (1-3) • الحلول المجتمعية والقانونية للعنصرية الناعمة في السودان بعد الحرب • Lecturers at University of Cross River begin indefinite strike • Customs Launches Smart Declaration Platform To End Airport Delays • 2027: They’ll lead you astray – Oseni Rufai advises Jonathan against contesting • Falana petitions African Commission over xenophobic attacks in S’Africa • Arsenal critics ‘not laughing anymore’ after title triumph – Saka • Saka calls out Arsenal critics after title win: ‘They’re not laughing at us any more’ • Championship playoffs should restart with Wrexham replacing Southampton, says Windass • Mineral Rights Must Be Assigned in Writing, Not Orally — Ex‑Deputy Lands Minister Testifies in Wontumi Trial • Africa’s Industrial Future Depends on Reliable, Affordable Energy Systems — Jinapor • Okuapehemaa Warns Against Purported Enstoolment of Ex‑CJ Sophia Akuffo as Mmrahene • هكذا تلاعب الترابي الصادق وتابعه فضل الله برمة بالسودان • Ex-Gov Lalong, Former Reps Deputy Speaker, Others Win APC NASS Primaries In Plateau • Oyo trains 35 workers in human capacity building, reiterates commitment to training • UK proposes £5 million invite-only investor visa with 3-year path to settlement • US, Nigeria kill 175 ISIS terrorists in joint airstrikes – DHQ • Imo gov’s senate ticket stirs fresh controversy over tenure timeline • The Dangote Refinery IPO and the repricing of Nigerian capital market ambition • ذكرى انقلاب ٢٥ مايو وضرورة الخروج من الحلقة الجهنمية • حين خان السردُ التاريخ: الطيب صالح ومحمود ود أحمد (1-3) • الحلول المجتمعية والقانونية للعنصرية الناعمة في السودان بعد الحرب • Lecturers at University of Cross River begin indefinite strike • Customs Launches Smart Declaration Platform To End Airport Delays • 2027: They’ll lead you astray – Oseni Rufai advises Jonathan against contesting • Falana petitions African Commission over xenophobic attacks in S’Africa • Arsenal critics ‘not laughing anymore’ after title triumph – Saka • Saka calls out Arsenal critics after title win: ‘They’re not laughing at us any more’ • Championship playoffs should restart with Wrexham replacing Southampton, says Windass • Mineral Rights Must Be Assigned in Writing, Not Orally — Ex‑Deputy Lands Minister Testifies in Wontumi Trial • Africa’s Industrial Future Depends on Reliable, Affordable Energy Systems — Jinapor • Okuapehemaa Warns Against Purported Enstoolment of Ex‑CJ Sophia Akuffo as Mmrahene
Google Unveils Smart Glasses, Taking On Meta
Back to Home

Google Unveils Smart Glasses, Taking On Meta

Channels TV about 1 hour 2 mins read

 

 

Google on Tuesday unveiled the design of new smart glasses, returning to a market the tech giant tried — and failed — to crack more than a decade ago.

The glasses, expected to go on sale later this year, will challenge Meta which has built a commanding lead with its Ray-Ban smart glasses, which have sold at least seven million units.

The Google’s so-called “audio glasses” will be equipped with a microphone, camera and small speaker, and will allow users to make calls, listen to music, take photos and chat with the Gemini AI assistant.

The company, which gave no firm release date or pricing details, unveiled two collections at its annual Google I/O developer conference near its Mountain View, California, headquarters: one from US eyewear brand Warby Parker and another from South Korean designer Gentle Monster.

Samsung handled the technical development. The glasses will be compatible with both Android and Apple phones.

 

Nishtha Bhatia and Sharam Izadi demonstrate integration between eyeglass cameras and wristwatches at the 2026 Google I/O technology developer conference in Mountain View, California, on May 19, 2026. (Photo by Karl Mondon / AFP)

 

For Google, the launch marks a long-awaited return to a sector where it suffered one of its most high-profile failures: the Google Glass, released in 2013 with an integrated camera, which was shelved after sparking widespread concerns about privacy and surveillance.

This time, the company is betting on design to win consumers over.

Google’s camera-equipped model is likely to invite the same privacy questions that have followed Meta.

Google is also working on glasses with a built-in display, similar to the latest model Meta brought to market in fall 2025. That version, previously shown as a prototype last year, has now advanced further in developer testing, Google announced, without providing additional details.

 

CEO of Google DeepMind, Demis Hassabis, speaks at the 2026 Google I/O technology developer conference in Mountain View, California, on May 19, 2026. (Photo by Karl Mondon / AFP)

 

The post Google Unveils Smart Glasses, Taking On Meta appeared first on Channels Television.

This article was sourced from an external publication.

Share this article

Comments (0)

Want to join the discussion?

Sign in to post comments and engage with the community.

Be the first to comment!

Anambra

View All
AD
OneClick Africa Logo

Africa's premier digital hub for impactful news, entertainment, and business insights.

© 2026 OneClick Africa. All rights reserved.