Updated
Updated · Engadget · Jun 18
XGIMI MemoMind One Smart Glasses Impress at $399, but $19.99 AI Journal Draws Sharp Criticism
Updated
Updated · Engadget · Jun 18

XGIMI MemoMind One Smart Glasses Impress at $399, but $19.99 AI Journal Draws Sharp Criticism

1 articles · Updated · Engadget · Jun 18

Summary

  • $399 MemoMind One pre-orders won praise from Engadget for useful phone-linked displays, solid audio and comfortable 47-gram hardware, but the review said the product is undermined by clumsy controls and an intrusive AI feature set.
  • One button handles multiple commands, leading to frequent misclicks, while captions and translation work with some delay; the reviewer said the glasses were still genuinely helpful for triaging notifications, checking calendars and taking calls.
  • The harshest criticism targeted "Moments" and "Wishes"—an always-listening microphone system that builds AI summaries of the user's day and logs expressed desires—despite XGIMI stressing the glasses have no camera for privacy reasons.
  • That journaling service costs $19.99 a month, though buyers who place a $30 deposit get a year free; retail pricing is set at $599, or $749 with prescription lenses.
  • Engadget concluded XGIMI has a strong smart-glasses concept and competitive pricing versus rivals such as Even Realities, but said the product needs refinement and a rethink of its AI logging before launch.

Insights

XGIMI's glasses offer a second screen but listen constantly. Is this helpful AI or a paid surveillance service?
As smart glasses record our lives, who really owns our AI-generated memories?
With Meta pushing face recognition, is 'always-on' audio the next privacy battleground for wearables?