These AR Smart Glasses Tested My Patience in a Way I didn't Think Was Possible
Briefly

These AR Smart Glasses Tested My Patience in a Way I didn't Think Was Possible
"Guys, I'm trying. Right now, as I type these words, I am trying on multiple levels. Trying to understand, trying to be fair, and I'm trying really, really hard to breathe through my nostrils, given the enormous weight of our AR glasses future resting uncomfortably on my nose. The thing is, you shouldn't need to try hard to justify wearing AR smart glasses. Any pair that doesn't just work is dead on arrival. I want the future, and the AR glasses that come with it."
"Inmo is a Chinese purveyor of smart glasses that recently launched its Inmo Air 3 via Kickstarter, a pair of Android-powered AR glasses that tout a few enticing ideas and features. One of those selling points is a full-color screen that is 1080p, and the other is a novel input method for navigating UI inside the glasses using a smart ring. Both of those ideas caught my attention during IFA 2025, which is why I chose to write about them in September."
Inmo Air 3 is a $900 Android-powered AR smart glasses launched via Kickstarter with a 1080p full-color display and a smart ring input method. The glasses can install Android apps from Google Play and present 2D apps in the headset. The design includes promising ideas but suffers immediate functional problems. Poor fit can make the screen hard to see. The smart ring often fails to work as promised. Build quality is weak and parts began to break. The device delivers frustrating user experience and high cost without reliable performance, making it a poor purchase choice.
Read at gizmodo.com
Unable to calculate read time
[
|
]