Samsung Galaxy Glasses leak reveals AI-first wearable with no display and deep Galaxy integration

Samsung's Galaxy Glasses leak reveals an AI-first wearable with no display, deep Galaxy ecosystem integration, and a possible rival to Meta's Ray-Bans.

Samsung Galaxy Glasses leak reveals AI-first wearable with no display and deep Galaxy integration
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TL;DR: Leaked details reveal Samsung's Galaxy Glasses as AI-focused smart glasses without a display, deeply integrated into the Galaxy ecosystem. Features include hands-free photo capture, voice assistance, automatic media syncing, and companion apps for Galaxy Watch and Ring, positioning them as strong competitors to Meta's Ray-Ban smart glasses.
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Samsung is reportedly working on a wearable future that lives on your face, which many tech experts have pegged as being the format that will replace the smartphone.

Samsung Galaxy Glasses leak reveals AI-first wearable with no display and deep Galaxy integration 2

Leaked details of the Galaxy Glasses, including a companion app and integration with existing Galaxy wearables, suggest a seamless ecosystem designed to rival Meta's Ray-Ban smart glasses, which have become the most popular AI-infused smart glasses.

Leaker SammyGuru showcased the Galaxy Glasses Manager app, revealing a familiar setup process that includes enabling permissions and pairing devices. Once setup is complete, the app shows important status information such as battery levels, software updates, and AI assistance.

The glasses appear to support hands-free photo capture, voice-driven help, and automatic media syncing to Galaxy phones. So, users will be able to capture images/video with the new glasses and then automatically sync that media to a Galaxy smartphone.

Additional leaked details point to a Galaxy Watch companion app and gesture controls via the Galaxy Ring, reinforcing a tightly connected wearable ecosystem. Unlike most smart glasses, these appear to be designed with an AI-first, no-display approach - a bold move that aligns with Samsung's recent experiments with Android XR and Gemini integration.

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Question 01

Will the Galaxy Glasses manager app work with non-Galaxy Android phones or only Samsung devices?

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Question 02

How will automatic media syncing handle storage and transfer — will it upload directly to the phone or to cloud storage?

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Question 03

Can the Galaxy Ring gesture controls be used standalone to operate the glasses without a paired watch?

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Question 04

What kind of battery life or charging status details does the app display for the glasses during typical use?

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This approach of integrating smart glasses into an established ecosystem could make the Galaxy Glasses a much more attractive option, as native interoperability between apps, platforms, and services is something Meta currently can't offer customers. The next step for Samsung is likely a full UI leak or hardware render. If the Galaxy Glasses launch as expected, they could be the next big boost the smartglasses industry needs to push adoption even further.

Photo of the Meta Ray-Ban Smart AI Glasses Gen 2

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Tech and Science Editor

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Jak joined TweakTown in 2017 and has since reviewed 100s of new tech products and kept us informed daily on the latest science, space, and artificial intelligence news. Jak's love for science, space, and technology, and, more specifically, PC gaming, began at 10 years old. It was the day his dad showed him how to play Age of Empires on an old Compaq PC. Ever since that day, Jak fell in love with games and the progression of the technology industry in all its forms.

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