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Google has apparently killed its AR glasses – and that’s good news for Apple
Google isn’t averse to killing off its products, with the now-shuttered Stadia and the slow demise of Fitbit being the latest candidates for cremation – and now we can sadly add its AR translation glasses to the list, according to a new report.
According to Insider, Google has shelved its plans – codenamed Project Iris – to make augmented-reality glasses. If that’s the case, we can wave goodbye to the live-translation spectacles that we first saw at Google IO 2022.
While the latter will likely be more of an Apple Vision Pro rival, with a ski-goggle design, this newly-canned AR project was apparently “a series of devices more closely resembling eyeglasses”. Like those exciting, prototype Google Translate glasses that we saw in the video below last year.
It now seems that Google has backtracked on making AR hardware itself, instead focus on making software and operating systems. The Insider source claims that Google is making an Android XR platform for Samsung’s forthcoming headset, which leaks suggest will be a standalone device that works independently of a computer or phone.
According to an employee that Insider interviewed, Google now instead wants to be an “Android for AR” rather than a hardware player like it is in phones with the Pixel series. The search giant said at Google IO 2023 that it would “share more later this year” about its AR partnership with Samsung. But it looks like we’ll sadly hear no more about its plans to make glasses specifically for Translate or Maps.
Analysis: The AR path is clear for Apple and Meta
TCL RayNeo X2s (above) are another example of AR translation glasses. (Image credit: TCL)
What we particularly liked about the live-translation glasses concept was their unobtrusive design and singular focus – neither of which apply to Apple’s larger Vision Pro, which is apparently uncomfortable to use for long periods.
But otherwise the path is now clear for Apple, Meta and potentially Samsung to own the AR space. The Vision Pro isn’t technically ‘augmented reality’, but Apple is rumored to be already working on two successors that might ultimately lead to some Apple Glasses.
But it’s Meta that could ultimately fill the hole left by Google for some babel fish-style translation glasses. In February 2022, it announced its ambitious plans to make a ‘Universal Speech Translator’. And at the time Mark Zuckerberg said that “with improved efficiency and a simpler architecture, direct speech-to-speech could unlock near human-quality real-time translation for future devices, like AR glasses”.
With more news on Samsung’s XR headset expected later this year, there’s certainly no shortage of hardware players who are trying to put transparent computers on our faces – but given the suitably of services like Google Translate and Google Maps for some AR glasses, it’s a shame that the search giant is no longer in that mix.
Author: . [Source Link (*), TechRadar – All the latest technology news]