Samsungs revolutionary glasses are basically a selfie stick for your face
At MWC, Samsung unveiled a pair of spectacles that put a camera right where you stare, because clearly the world needs another excuse to be filmed while you sip coffee. Red Flag: they still rely on your phone for every ounce of processing, making the glasses feel like a glorified Bluetooth ear‑bud with lenses.
The solution: more sensors, less sense
Jay Kim promises AI that will understand what you're looking at and feed it to your phone. In practice, that means youll stare at a menu, your phone will whisper the calories, and youll wonder why you paid $300 for a pair of glasses that cant even show you the answer.
Camera at eye level - because privacy matters, right?
Mounting a camera where your eyeballs live is a bold move - bold enough to make strangers question your consent to be recorded. Its the digital ages version of a nosy neighbor peeking through your curtains.
No display - youll use your phone for that
Samsung conveniently skips a heads‑up display, forcing you to pull out your phone anyway. Its like selling a coffee mug with a hole in the bottom and telling you to drink from the saucer.
AI understanding your gaze - a fancy way of saying well guess poorly
The promised AI is supposed to read your intent, but without on‑glasses processing power, its as accurate as a fortune‑cookie. Expect mismatched captions and a lot of Did you mean... moments.
For a dose of reality, compare this to the Google Pixel 10as secret‑weapon camera that actually delivers usable photos without turning you into a walking surveillance hub.