Wearable AI: will it put our smartphones out of fashion?
Imagine it: you’re on the bus or walking in the park, when you remember some important task has slipped your mind. You were meant to send an email, catch up on a meeting, or arrange to grab lunch with a friend. Without missing a beat, you simply say aloud what you’ve forgotten and the small device that’s pinned to your chest, or resting on the bridge of your nose, sends the message, summarises the meeting, or pings your buddy a lunch invitation. The work has been taken care of, without you ever having to prod the screen of your smartphone.
It’s the sort of utopian
convenience that a growing wave of tech companies are hoping to realise through
artificial intelligence. Generative AI chatbots such as ChatGPT exploded in
popularity last year, as search engines like Google, messaging apps such as
Slack and social media services like Snapchat raced to integrate the tech into
their systems. Yet while AI add-ons have become a familiar sight across apps
and software, the same generative tech is now making an attempt to join the
realm of hardware, as the first AI-powered consumer devices rear their heads
and jostle for space with our smartphones.
One of the first out of
the gate will be the Ai Pin from
California startup Humane. Only a little bigger than a tin of Vaseline, it’s a
wearable device that attaches to your shirt via a magnet. It can send texts,
make calls, take pictures and play music. But it doesn’t support apps or have a
screen. Instead, it uses a laser to project a simple interface on to your
outstretched palm, and its inbuilt AI chatbot can be instructed through voice
commands to search the web or answer queries in much the same way you would
expect of ChatGPT.
The Ai Pin. Photograph: Humane
“I am planning to train
Ai Pin to be my personal assistant and facilitate my writing and creative
work,” says Virginia-based consultant Tiffany Jana, who’s pre-ordered the
device before its initial US launch in April (Humane hasn’t yet announced a
full global release schedule). She travels frequently and hopes it will be able
to take the place of an accompanying photographer and translator. “I don’t have
all the assistants and the massive team that once supported me. I’ve always
been a technophile and I enjoy ChatGPT.”
Facebook parent company
Meta, meanwhile, has already put out a pair of AI-powered smart glasses in
partnership with Ray-Ban, and Chinese companies TCL and Oppo have
followed suit with AI spectacles of their own. They all do much the same thing
as the Ai Pin, and are being marketed for the way they connect to an AI chatbot
that responds to voice commands.
It is a way of curbing
the overuse of smartphones by offering the same essential functions without the
addictive apps
If all of this sounds
remarkably similar to what the voice assistant on your smartphone or the Alexa
in your living room is already capable of, that’s because it essentially is.
“Using AI in new devices is standard even nowadays,” says David Lindlbauer, assistant
professor at the Human-Computer Interaction Institute at Carnegie Mellon
University in Pennsylvania. “Everyone uses Google’s suggestions, Apple Siri for
interacting with their phone, or smart suggestions for apps on their phones.”
The difference, he says, is that these new and forthcoming devices try to embed
their AI capabilities in “a less obtrusive and more ubiquitous manner”.
That design intention is
most obvious in the forthcoming Pendant from
US startup Rewind and the Tab AI from software developer Avi Schiffmann.
These small devices are designed to dangle around your neck and passively
record everything you hear and say during the day, before transcribing and
summarising the most important bits for you to read back at your convenience
later. They’re productivity tools, essentially, that bundle the sort of
generative AI features seen elsewhere into a standalone device.
A problem of purpose?
But why would you want a
device that does little more than what your smartphone is already capable of?
In part, to free yourself from its less welcome elements. Humane is pitching
the Ai Pin as a way of curbing the overuse of smartphones by offering the same
essential functions without the addictive apps that keep us compulsively
scrolling.
“An alcoholic is not
addicted to the bottle, but to the contents,” says Christian Montag, head of
molecular psychology at Ulm University in Germany, by way of analogy. Social
media platforms in particular, he says, often have an interest in deliberately prolonging
screen time to present more adverts to us or harvest our personal data. And
while experiments have shown that using a smartphone in greyscale mode reduces user retention,
getting rid of its screen altogether could have an even more profound effect.
It’s a paring down that
may seem counterintuitive to the tech world’s ever-growing appetite for new
features and gadgets, but is perhaps not as alien as it would first appear. “A
lot of people wear headphones throughout their day,” says Lindlbauer, “so it is
perfectly feasible to move away from the temptation to doom-scroll towards
technology that provides access to the digital world constantly but
unobtrusively.”
Yet wearable tech has a
patchy history. Google tried to popularise the idea of smart glasses back in
2013 with the launch of Google
Glass. Although lacking an AI chatbot, it was similarly designed as
a smartphone replacement that would provide information to users through a lens
display and could respond to voice commands.
Google co-founder Sergey Brin at the 2012 public announcement of Google
Glass. Photograph: Stephen Lam/Reuters
Indeed, the Ai Pin is
all minimalist design and rounded corners, while Meta’s partnership with
Ray-Ban is indicative of the kind of sartorial credibility it hopes to earn.
Even with wearable tech, though, looks aren’t everything. “While hype, novelty
and fashion are important drivers in the wearables market, the industry’s
failure to consistently provide consumers with an experience of practical value
seems to be a serious barrier,” says Sommer. “And this speaks to the still
quite immature state of the technology.”
Nowhere was this
demonstrated better than during the Ai Pin’s debut reveal video. Asked to
estimate the amount of protein in a handful of almonds, it confidently
misstated the nuts’ nutritional content. Then, later in the reveal, it wrongly
advised the best place from which to view a forthcoming solar eclipse. These
“hallucinations” – in which an AI model gives false information or fabricates
details – are common to all chatbots and similarly derailed the launch of
Google’s AI chatbot, Bard, last year.
But even were these
problems to be ironed out, wearable AI devices still face issues of purpose.
Samsung, Google and other manufacturers have already rolled out AI-powered
features in their latest models of smartphones, equipping them with the same
productivity tools – namely, message drafting, translation and instant querying
– that these wearable AI devices boast. And just last month, German telecoms
company Deutsche Telekom
showcased a smartphone concept that relies solely on AI and
supports no apps at all.
“Most effort in the
foreseeable future will be focused on integrating generative AI into existing
form factors, as this will offer more obvious commercial opportunities,” says
Reece Hayden, senior analyst at global technology intelligence company ABI Research.
As such, it’s perhaps telling that Humane’s own chief executive, Imran
Chaudhri, has conspicuously refused to
break down the time he spends using his Ai Pin versus his
regular phone. Until we see an application of AI that necessitates a new form
of device, our smartphones, laptops and desktops will probably continue to be
the primary way we interact with the tech.
Thinking bigger
Yet discussions about
those wider applications are starting to be had. For some, the tech’s future
lies not in how it can be integrated into existing platforms, but how it may
fundamentally change the way we access them. “You won’t have to use different apps
for different tasks,” said former Microsoft chief executive Bill Gates in
a blogpost that outlines his vision.
“You’ll simply tell your device, in everyday language, what you want to do,”
then leave it up to the device to work out what apps, platforms and information
are needed to complete the task you’ve set it.
It’s an idea that will
be put into preliminary practice by the R1. Produced by
California AI startup Rabbit, the R1 is a handheld device that looks a little
like a portable games console and operates much like a powerful voice
assistant. But rather than simply connecting to an AI chatbot that generates
passive responses to your commands (as other wearable gadgets do), it’s
designed to interact directly with the apps on your phone on your behalf. The
idea, then, is for the R1 to act as an all-in-one interface for your devices –
a sort of central app through which you can control everything else.
Rabbit Inc’s R1 device.
“We’re not building
products for new use cases; we are creating what we feel are better and more
intuitive ways to address existing use cases,” says Rabbit chief executive
Jesse Lyu. He describes the R1 as a “digital companion” that won’t replace your
smartphone, but make it easier to use.
The value of that
approach will be seen when the R1 launches later this year. Although we can
expect similarly experimental devices to follow. Sam Altman, chief executive of
OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, is already reportedly in talks with former Apple chief
designer Jony Ive to explore hardware ideas. And a troupe of
startups and Silicon Valley heavyweights are now competing to create the chips
and processors these new devices will need to power their AI models.
Whatever form these AI
devices eventually take, they’ll have a tough job competing with the globally
connected, hyperfunctional, intuitively controlled glass rectangles in most of
our pockets– although, as ubiquitous as smartphones may seem, even they have a
shelf life. “The smartphone has only been with us for about 15 years,” says
Lindlbauer. “I don’t want to believe that the smartphone is the pinnacle of
technology, or that we will be using smartphones the same way we are now in another
15 years.”
source:THE GUARDIAN
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