Updated
Updated · Gizmodo · May 21
Google Limits 7-Minute Gemini Glasses Demos as Tiny Screen Raises Utility Questions
Updated
Updated · Gizmodo · May 21

Google Limits 7-Minute Gemini Glasses Demos as Tiny Screen Raises Utility Questions

2 articles · Updated · Gizmodo · May 21
  • A roughly 7-minute hands-on at Google I/O’s AI Sandbox suggested Google is tightly controlling exposure to its prototype smart glasses with a small right-lens display.
  • The demo highlighted Gemini’s strengths in object recognition, music playback from a poster and one-way Korean-to-English translation, but offered only a brief weather widget view and no back-and-forth translated conversation.
  • Google also steered the session to Nano Banana image generation, which produced a distorted selfie that appeared to lighten the user’s skin tone, undercutting the pitch for practical everyday use.
  • That narrow showcase fueled speculation Google is downplaying the screen itself—because of privacy concerns, limited utility or a desire to avoid Google Glass-style comparisons.
  • The restraint reflects a broader challenge for single-screen smart glasses: users may expect apps and phone-like functions, even as companies increasingly position them as audio-first accessories.
With Meta selling millions of smart glasses, is Google's flawed prototype already too little, too late for the AI wearables race?
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