XGIMI is stepping into wearables at CES 2026 with MemoMind, its first lineup of AI glasses, built around a simple idea. You should be able to wear them because you like how they look, not because you’re willing to tolerate a tech prop.
XGIMI says the first lineup focuses on all-day comfort and brief help like translation, summaries, notes, reminders, and contextual guidance.
If you’ve ignored smart glasses so far, MemoMind is trying to remove the usual friction. It’s aiming for a normal eyewear vibe, plus customization that lets you make the frames feel like yours.
Built to match your style
MemoMind’s big differentiator is modular design. XGIMI says you’ll be able to choose from eight frame styles, pair them with five interchangeable temple designs, and keep full prescription lens support. That’s a practical move for anyone who already wears glasses daily and doesn’t want a second set of frames just to get the smart features.
It also gives MemoMind a better shot at looking intentional. Instead of one fixed design, the lineup is built to adapt to your face and your style, which is the kind of thing that decides whether these glasses leave the house or stay in a drawer.
The AI side stays subtle
On the software side, MemoMind runs a multi model hybrid operating system that can pick between OpenAI, Azure, and Qwen depending on the task. The promise is less chatter and more utility, with features designed to stay in the background until you want them.
The lineup shows two approaches. Memo One is positioned as the most feature complete model, combining integrated speakers with a dual eye display for both audio and visual interaction. Memo Air Display goes lighter and simpler with a monocular display, a 28.9 gram target weight, and a charging case that the company says can stretch use up to a full week.
What to watch after CES
MemoMind still needs specifics before it feels buyable. Memo One is expected to cost about $599 and preorders are set to open soon, but there’s no firm preorder date, shipping window, or regional availability yet.
After CES, the most important update will be the full spec sheet, especially battery details, display brightness, field of view, and how usable the audio is in real world noise. If those basics land, customization could be the reason these AI glasses don’t feel weird to wear.
