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The next step in personal computing is in your line of sight

A man and a woman wearing the MemoMind One smart glasses
(Image credit: MemoMind)

The problem with computing today is that it requires you to lose momentum. The answer to your question is somewhere on a device, but getting to it means breaking eye contact, breaking concentration, and breaking the flow. To stay present, you need information in your line of sight.

Enter MemoMind’s flagship, Memo One, a pair of dual-eye display glasses help you stay present. No typing. No searching. No interruption. Just a real, finished, wearable device that earned multiple recognitions at CES 2026 and MWC 2026, including TechRadar’s “one to watch” for its innovation and modular design.

AI-powered eyewear’s biggest challenges and what’s changed

For years, smart glasses have felt like a glimpse of the future; interesting in demos, but not quite ready for everyday life. After years of false starts, from the early days of Google Glass to more recent attempts like Humane’s AI Pin, the category is gaining momentum again, driven by rapid advances in multimodal artificial intelligence. Major technology companies, including Meta, Google, Apple, and Samsung, are all investing heavily in AI-powered eyewear, betting that glasses could become the most natural interface. At the same time, the category grapples with questions around privacy, wearability, and everyday usability, challenges that will shape how the next generation of smart glasses evolves.

MemoMind One

(Image credit: MemoMind)

For your eyes only

Memo One moves beyond prototypes into something genuinely practical. The privacy-protected display uses a high-transparency grating and downward-angled light to keep what’s on screen only visible to you. The person sitting next to you, or directly across from you, will have no idea you’re wearing AI glasses.

No camera means no recording. It respects people’s privacy and minimizes social friction that arises when people think they are being filmed. In a category still earning public trust, that restraint is not a limitation. It is a differentiator. You can wear these glasses anywhere without a second thought.

MemoMind One

(Image credit: MemoMind)

A wearable you will want to wear

AI glasses didn’t break into the mainstream, largely because of hardware design challenges. Previous iterations were heavy, bulky, and conspicuous, and regardless of how capable the software was, people didn’t want to wear them. MemoMind instead prioritized making something people would actually want to wear, then added intelligence.

Three materials (including Titanium), nine frames, and multiple interchangeable temple designs reflect your personal style. There’s also full prescription support, including transitional lenses, so one pair can serve as both corrective eyewear and smart glasses. They look and feel like normal glasses — only you will know the difference.

Heads-up display that works the way it should

Memo One’s display sits in your line of sight, activates when you need it, and stays invisible the rest of the time. Powered by a decade of XGIMI’s optical display engineering, the binocular waveguide display is a meaningful hardware differentiator. Single-eye displays on competing glasses can force people to cross their eyes slightly to read the lens, where Memo One’s dual-eye setup removes that pain point entirely.

Memo One uses a green monochrome display, a deliberate engineering choice that delivers strong outdoor readability where color displays can wash out in direct sunlight. Information appears in small, glanceable pieces, like a quiet prompt rather than a persistent screen. Dashboards adapt to your context and aesthetic with a subtle, customized view, and features like Conversant listen to ambient conversation and quietly surface relevant answers on the lens. Visible when needed, invisible when not — exactly how wearable AI technology should behave.

The intelligence behind the lens

Memo One delivers up to 16 hours of battery life in mixed use, making all-day wear realistic. The charging case extends the total runtime to approximately one week. Thanks to the power-efficient monochrome display and the display-off-when-idle architecture, 16 hours is real use, not lab conditions.

Memo One runs on a hybrid multi-model system that automatically selects the best AI engine for each task, whether that’s OpenAI, Azure, or Qwen. The system adapts dynamically for faster, more accurate results. The look of glasses. The intelligence of a computer. Your phone stays in your pocket. Your answers don't.

The next platform is in your line of sight. It just needed the right engineering to get there.

MemoMind is an XGIMI company. Memo One delivers a complete, customizable, and immersive experience with a dual-eye display and Harman Kardon integrated speakers. Memo One is expected to launch on Kickstarter at approximately $599. Visit www.memo-mind.com for more information.

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