Apple Air Pin to capture audio and video of surroundings

Eric

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To be used in tandem with the iPhone. Are we ready for another Apple wearable?

Camera​

Apple plans to add a camera to the AI pin, but rumors are mixed on what the camera will do.

Bloomberg says the pin will have a low-resolution camera that gives it info about its surroundings rather than a camera for capturing photos and videos. The camera will be always-on and always recording, but users will not be able to use it for images.

The Information believes there will be two front cameras, one with a standard lens and one with a wide-angle lens for capturing photos and videos.

Apple's AI device will rely heavily on Visual Intelligence, which is currently an iPhone feature that uses the camera to provide users with more information about places and objects around them.

Speaker and Microphone​

The AI pin has at least one microphone for speaking to Siri and picking up sounds around the wearer, but Apple has not decided whether to add a speaker for back-and-forth ‌Siri‌ conversations and audio playback.

Siri​

The AI pin will run the updated version of ‌Siri‌ that Apple plans to unveil in iOS 27. Apple is working on a chatbot upgrade for ‌Siri‌, putting it on par with Claude, Gemini, and OpenAI.
‌Siri‌ will be powered by a version of Gemini thanks to Apple's partnership with Google. All of the intelligence features promised in iOS 18 are expected in iOS 27, plus more.

iPhone Reliance​

The AI pin will have a dedicated chip inside, but it will be similar to the H2 chip in the AirPods. It's not going to be a high-powered chip, and most processing will be done on the iPhone.
Apple is not designing the AI pin to be a standalone device, and it will instead be marketed as an iPhone accessory. Bloomberg said some Apple employees see it as the "eyes and ears" of the iPhone.
 
I think they're doing their best to find an angle for wearable tech, something they haven't really been able to do since the Apple Watch/AirPods. The inherent problem is getting the public to trust and adopt tech whose primary purpose is using outward facing cameras, feels like a line has been drawn in the sand here.
 
I think they're doing their best to find an angle for wearable tech, something they haven't really been able to do since the Apple Watch/AirPods. The inherent problem is getting the public to trust and adopt tech whose primary purpose is using outward facing cameras, feels like a line has been drawn in the sand here.
I am sure they are exploring all sorts of things. But before apple watch, people wore watches. Before the inevitable apple glasses, people wear glasses. Apple is well aware of the challenge of getting people to wear some new article that nobody currently wears (i mean, when was the last time you saw some lady wear a broach?), even if you ignore the cameras, etc. To the extent there is anything useful or desirable to consumers about whatever functionality they are envisioning, they’re smart enough to make it part of glasses or something. More likely they will realize it doesn’t serve any truly useful purpose and they give up on it after watching Samsung, OpenAI, Meta and everyone else fail at making these things.
 
I am sure they are exploring all sorts of things. But before apple watch, people wore watches. Before the inevitable apple glasses, people wear glasses. Apple is well aware of the challenge of getting people to wear some new article that nobody currently wears (i mean, when was the last time you saw some lady wear a broach?), even if you ignore the cameras, etc. To the extent there is anything useful or desirable to consumers about whatever functionality they are envisioning, they’re smart enough to make it part of glasses or something. More likely they will realize it doesn’t serve any truly useful purpose and they give up on it after watching Samsung, OpenAI, Meta and everyone else fail at making these things.
Do you think glasses will ever takeoff as long as they have built-in cameras? I could see the benefits of it being used with a HUD of some sort but it really needs to be practical for people to adopt it.
 
Do you think glasses will ever takeoff as long as they have built-in cameras? I could see the benefits of it being used with a HUD of some sort but it really needs to be practical for people to adopt it.
I think as long as it’s clear that there’s no way to capture or transmit the images from the camera, it could work. Maybe the camera only takes IR, or has low resolution or whatever, so that it can only be used by AI to identify objects and not for any insidious purpose, especially since there’s no way for anyone to ever see any of the images captured.

I mean, there are rumored to be cameras on the airpod pros coming later this year, presumably for hand gesture recognition or something, and I assume it’s a trojan horse to get people used to the idea.
 
Most of us are already accustomed to having smartphones pointed our way when we're in public spaces, and it's impossible to tell if the owner is capturing video or taking a picture. Wearables like this device or glasses would just make it easier to do this surreptitiously, but that could be mitigated by not allowing any recording. Regardless, if there's value in providing real-time information as one passes though an environment, as I think there is, it can't be done without some sort of front-facing camera. It'll come down to whether people will be OK with the visual input being evaluated by AI, even if there's no permanent, user-accessible record.
 
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