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Friday, Jul 17, 2026

Tech Companies Want to Move Computing Off Your Screen and Onto Your Body

Snap, Meta and Apple are pursuing wearable devices that could reduce the need to look at a phone, but their vision of ambient computing also raises questions about privacy, social acceptance and whether technology will become less intrusive or simply harder to escape.
Ambient computing—the effort to make digital services available through devices that see, hear and respond without requiring constant attention to a screen—is becoming a central hardware ambition for the technology industry.

Smart glasses, camera-equipped earbuds and other artificial intelligence wearables promise to let people use computers while keeping their eyes on the physical world.

The same products could also extend digital surveillance and technological engagement into moments that phones cannot currently reach.

Snap brought that contest into sharper focus in June with Specs, a pair of standalone augmented-reality glasses priced at £1,995 in Britain and $2,195 in the United States.

Preorders are open in the United States, Britain and France, with deliveries scheduled to begin in autumn 2026.

Unlike most smart glasses, Specs do not need to be paired continuously with a phone or tethered to a separate computing unit.

Their transparent waveguide display can place digital material over the wearer's view without fully obscuring the surroundings.

The glasses offer a 51-degree field of view, reproduce 16 million colors and use two Snapdragon processors for functions including environmental understanding and hand tracking.

Users can control them through speech and gestures.

Snap presents Specs as a wearable computer for working, learning, browsing, navigation and entertainment.

The product can display web pages and applications, provide open-ear audio and support augmented-reality experiences while allowing the wearer to remain aware of the surrounding environment.

Its high price, conspicuous frame and limited battery life, however, make it an early-market device rather than an obvious replacement for the smartphone.

Meta is pursuing a more affordable route.

More than seven million pairs of its smart glasses were sold during 2025, giving the company the strongest commercial position in the category.

In June 2026, Meta introduced additional models starting at $299, broadening a range that combines cameras, microphones and artificial intelligence assistance with frames designed to resemble conventional eyewear.

Apple is developing another approach: AirPods fitted with cameras that function as visual sensors rather than conventional photography equipment.

The unannounced product is expected in late 2027, although Apple has neither confirmed the device nor disclosed its design, capabilities or release timetable.

The cameras are intended to provide Siri with information about the wearer's surroundings, potentially enabling object recognition, contextual questions, navigation assistance and gesture-based control.

Such a device could allow someone to inspect ingredients and request meal suggestions, receive directions informed by what lies ahead or ask about an object without photographing it or typing a description.

Combined with conversational artificial intelligence, visual sensing could turn a virtual assistant into an interface capable of understanding both spoken instructions and physical context.

The practical appeal is straightforward.

Phones demand that users stop, look down and operate a glass surface.

Wearable systems can deliver instructions, answer questions or perform simple tasks while a person walks, works or speaks with someone else.

For users concerned about screen time, this could replace part of the visual attention currently consumed by smartphones.

It does not necessarily follow that people would spend less time using technology.

Smartphones remain deeply embedded in communication, commerce, navigation, entertainment and work.

Wearables may supplement them rather than displace them, filling periods when users cannot conveniently look at a screen.

The result could be less screen exposure but more continuous interaction with digital services.

Privacy is the most immediate obstacle.

Camera-equipped glasses can record people who may not realize that filming is taking place or have no meaningful opportunity to consent.

Meta and Snap use visible lights intended to indicate recording, but critics argue that these signals can be difficult to notice, particularly outdoors or at a distance.

Meta recently strengthened its safeguards so that blocking, damaging or tampering with the recording indicator disables camera operation.

That measure addresses deliberate concealment but does not resolve broader questions about bystander consent, data retention or the social acceptability of body-worn cameras.

Apple could reduce some concerns if its cameras cannot record ordinary photographs or video and if visual analysis occurs locally without images being retained or transmitted to remote servers.

Those protections remain hypothetical because the company has not announced the product or explained how it would process environmental information.

The industry is therefore testing more than a new class of hardware.

It is asking consumers to accept computers that remain present in their field of vision, on their faces or in their ears throughout the day.

Specs will provide an early test when shipments begin in autumn 2026, while lower-priced Meta models will show whether mainstream buyers regard smart glasses as useful everyday tools rather than intrusive additions to the smartphone.
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