During the coming months, the technology sector will witness a busy phase of presentations from Samsung. The company is preparing to unveil a wide range of new devices, spanning from smartphones to tablets, up to the latest iterations of its own smartwatches.
However, attention is quickly turning to an unprecedented product for the brand: a new generation of smart glasses. The entry into the facial-wearables sector represents a move of great significance, suggesting extremely serious intentions.
The initial leaks sketch an ambitious picture, capable of alarming the direct competitors and carving out a space of primary importance.
The first real detail to emerge concerns the device’s battery, currently identified with model number EB-O200. According to unofficially leaked information, the future Galaxy Glasses will be equipped with a 245 mAh battery, catalogued under the specific code EB-BO200CAY.
This takes a deeper meaning if we compare it with the architectures of products already on the market. For example, the Meta Ray-Ban version with a display uses a battery of 248 mAh, while the variant without visual support stops at a capacity of around 160 mAh.
The amperage chosen by Samsung thus suggests, quite evidently, the presence of a real integrated display.
In addition to this fundamental element, the expected specifications include a 12 MP camera sensor positioned at eye level, accompanied by speakers, ambient microphones and touch controls hidden in the temple arms of the frame.
The processing of information and data management will not occur entirely locally: the glasses will maintain a constant wireless connection with the user’s smartphone, delegating the heavier computational work to the latter.
To avoid releasing an aesthetically unattractive product onto the market, the South Korean company has chosen the route of collaborations with fashion brands. The company has struck deals with names such as Gentle Monster and Warby Parker, thus ensuring a design capable of competing with traditional frames in terms of elegance, proportions and comfort.
From the software perspective, the infrastructure will be based on Android XR, an operating system developed specifically for extended reality.
The processing of advanced features will instead be entrusted to Gemini, Google’s artificial intelligence system. This architecture guarantees a mature ecosystem, designed to understand the surrounding environment and provide immediate and contextualized responses to the visual and vocal requests of the wearer.
Competition, in any case, is already moving: Google would be preparing its own launch in this category by the end of the current year, while Apple appears to have postponed its plans on this until 2027.
Despite the excellence of the hardware and prestigious partnerships, Galaxy Glasses will have to face a complex obstacle: the public perception related to privacy.
Wearing an active camera on the face and interfaced with artificial intelligence raises inevitable and deep concerns about the protection of personal data.
As soon as such devices become commonplace and widely distributed, it is highly likely they will trigger decisive reactions from institutions and ordinary citizens. There is a real risk that numerous public spaces, museums, restaurants, or offices will impose strict usage bans to protect the privacy of non-consenting individuals.
Such restrictions could hamper mass adoption of these technologies, drastically slowing the dream of some enthusiasts to see them replace smartphones.
The real challenge for manufacturers will not simply be extreme miniaturization of components or code optimization, but will require a total commitment to building a trust-based relationship with consumers and demonstrating that innovation can coexist peacefully with the right to personal privacy.
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