48 hours with the MemoMind One XR glasses — a slow AI, lack of a camera, and disappointing audio left me desperate for more


A new pair of smart glasses just launched on Kickstarter that you might not have heard much about yet: they’re the MemoMind One specs, and after taking them for a whirl over the past few days I can see the appeal, but I’m not convinced they’re useful enough for a couple of key reasons.

Smart glasses are coming in all shapes and sizes, and I don’t just mean their literal design — I mean that calling something “a pair of smart glasses” can tell you basically nothing about what it is apart from where on your body you’ll wear it. Many focus on AI functionality, others on XR video as a private display for your favorite tech, and some offer a blend of both with a display that delivers AI assistance through audio and visual elements.

The MemoMind glasses fall mostly into that last category, but instead of interactive AR pieces you can manipulate like you’re Tony Stark designing a new Iron Man suit, you’ll get a read-out in green text (and sometimes basic diagrams) that are simple but effective for the tasks the glasses can help with.

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MemoMind One

Their design is solid (Image credit: MemoMind)

This includes notification popups from your connected phone apps, a teleprompter you can load up with scripts, a calendar readout of your day’s upcoming events, a basic map with navigation instructions, and translation subtitles that tell you what someone else has said in a foreign language.

https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/9UAbHsMPW8ZFprx5vnWnZN-2560-80.jpg



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hamish.hector@futurenet.com (Hamish Hector)

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