More than a decade ago, when I was still a starry-eyed, sweet-summer-child tech reporter, I watched Google’s Project Glass video and got embarrassingly close to tears. The future looked so clean in that commercial. Directions floated in front of your eyes. Photos happened with a voice command. Life looked frictionless, connected, and just tasteful enough to make wearing a tiny computer on your face seem profound instead of deranged.
I remember thinking, yes, we live in the future now.
Then Google Glass became real, reached early users in 2013, and the future got called “glassholes.” Google had started selling early Explorer units to selected users before Glass became publicly available in the US in 2014.
A decade and a pandemic later, the category has dragged itself back into the room, somehow looking calmer and better dressed.
How face tech learned to dress down
What annoys me is that this generation does feel different.
Google Glass arrived like a gadget from a keynote slide that had escaped containment. The new pitch is softer. Meta has already done some of the social laundering with Ray-Ban Meta glasses, which look close enough to regular sunglasses that the tech becomes easier to miss. EssilorLuxottica reportedly said Ray-Ban Meta glasses had sold 2 million units by early 2025, before later reporting much stronger smart glasses sales momentum.
Google and Samsung are now taking a similar route with Android XR eyewear, with Warby Parker and Gentle Monster involved. That changes the mood. This is not a tech company asking people to wear a prototype in public and act normal about it. It is tech hiding inside brands people already associate with taste, identity, and “these frames make my face look less tired.”
Google’s latest pitch puts Gemini inside the experience, with directions, texts, photos, and other phone-adjacent tasks pushed into glasses. Google says frames from Gentle Monster and Warby Parker are included in that intelligent eyewear effort. Samsung and Google are also positioning the category around fashion and AI rather than raw gadget spectacle.

The sales pitch has been cleaned up beautifully. These are normal glasses, apparently. They just happen to contain cameras, microphones, speakers, and an AI assistant.
The strangeness has not vanished. It just got better frames.
Why I still want to roll my eyes
Even with all that, my first reaction is still: stop trying to make smart glasses happen.
Some tech ideas feel less invented than repeatedly reanimated. This is one of them. It keeps returning with a cleaner industrial design, a better assistant, a more fashionable wrapper, and the same basic social question underneath: what happens when someone’s face becomes a recording device?
That discomfort does not go away because the frames look expensive. If anything, the disguise makes the whole thing slipperier. A phone camera announces itself because someone has to pull out a phone, point it, and become annoying in the traditional way. Glasses are quieter. They blur the line between looking, recording, asking an assistant, and turning everyone nearby into background data.
The camera-free versions almost make the problem clearer. They’re better for privacy, obviously, but without the lens, the whole thing starts to feel like earbuds that got ambitious and learned how to hold prescription lenses. You still get audio, assistant access, maybe notifications or translation, but the AI can’t really see what you see.

That trade-off is probably why the category keeps circling the same uneasy center. The most useful version is also the one that makes people glance twice at your face. The safest version is easier to accept, but easier to ignore. Somewhere between those two versions is the product tech companies keep trying to convince us we already wanted.
That leaves the category stuck with an ugly little bargain. The camera gives the product its strongest reason to exist. It also makes the whole thing socially cursed.
This is where the category still feels undercooked. Tech companies can design the hardware, tune the assistant, and work with the right eyewear brands. What they can’t instantly create is the etiquette around wearing a tiny recording device in a restaurant, classroom, office, or living room. Phones eventually became normal in public, but only after years of everyone being terrible with them first.
Why I might be wrong again
The problem is that I’ve been confidently wrong before.
When COVID first started dominating the news, I remember thinking it was another story being inflated past its natural size. I don’t present this as evidence of good judgment. Two years later, I’d barely left the house and gained 30 pounds. To say I was wrong is an understatement.
Smart glasses are not a pandemic. Please, let’s not insult pandemics or eyewear. My point is smaller and more annoying: eye-rolling still isn’t analysis on its own.
Maybe smart glasses didn’t need one perfect feature. Maybe they needed better timing, better AI, better battery life, and enough fashion camouflage to make the whole thing feel less like a dare. Phones were once rude in public too. Then everyone got one, and the etiquette arrived late, grumbling and half-formed, like most etiquette does.
I still don’t love the idea. I don’t want every coffee shop, commute, family dinner, and awkward elevator ride to become part of someone else’s ambient AI session. But I can see how this version sneaks further than the last one. It’s quieter, less desperate, and less visibly pleased with itself.
Maybe that is how this stuff actually wins. It doesn’t have to look futuristic. It only has to look ordinary enough that people stop asking questions. And yes, I want one.
