Google's first shot at smart glasses flopped.
The word "glasshole" was made up to mock Glass users back then. The product never really caught on.
Now Google is back. This time it has Warby Parker on the frames, with Samsung helping design the rest.
The new line was shown Tuesday at Google I/O 2026. It is set to ship later this year.
Folks who care about tech stocks should pay close attention.
The Meta Catch-Up Move
Meta has quietly built smart glasses into a real thing. Its Ray-Ban Meta line has sold well for two years.
Google is now using that same play - pick a brand folks want to wear, put AI in the frames, and skip the visor look that killed Glass.
The new pair is called audio glasses. You talk to them and Google's AI helper Gemini does the rest.
In the demo, a Googler bought a coffee just by speaking to a pair.
We break down what moves like this mean for tech stocks in Market Briefs - sent each morning, with a free investing class when you sign up.
A Real Race For Your Face
Smart glasses are now one of the few new tech bets with real buyer pull.
Apple is rumored to be working on a pair, Meta is already selling them, and Samsung is in Google's corner on this one.
A small wave of startups is also chasing the space. The big bet is that smart glasses are the next big form of tech you wear.
For Google, this is also about reach. Each pair is one more screen running Gemini, and one less reason to open ChatGPT.
The bigger picture: Meta has a head start, but Google has the bigger software stack.
Whoever wins gets prime space in front of users.
The brand picks help too. Warby Parker brings trust with young buyers, while Gentle Monster brings the high-fashion crowd Meta has not yet won.
What To Watch
The glasses ship later this year. The two things to watch are price and how well they work on iPhones.
Meta's Ray-Bans start near $300. Anything much higher will shrink the market fast.
This is also Google's biggest swing at AI hardware so far. The AI helper is the real product, and the glasses are just how it gets to you.
Smart glasses tie back to a bigger fight in tech. Each big firm is racing to plant its AI on a new kind of screen.
The more screens you wear, the more your AI can do for you.
Wall Street will watch how much hype the launch pulls. A hit lifts both Warby Parker stock and Google's hardware story.
A miss could send the stock the other way.
Google has been here before. This time the partners are stronger and the AI is real.
The next big move is the launch itself.
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