Apple could enter the AI ​​Pin race in 2027 – but convincing people they need one is another story

Apple could enter the AI ​​Pin race in 2027 – but convincing people they need one is another story

The Humane AI pin on a shirt
The human AI pin (Image credit: Human)

According to the latest report from The Information, Apple is developing its own wearable AI Pin. The Apple product could potentially compete with the next AI hardware device designed by Jony Ive, of which OpenAI has planned a 2026 release.

The information states that, “according to people with direct knowledge of the project,” Apple’s AI Pin is about the size of an AirTag and is equipped with multiple cameras, a speaker, microphones, and wireless charging. The device could be commercially available as early as 2027, the report claims.

A future beyond smartphones

The real question isn’t about the specs, but how you would actually use the device. Interest in wearable AI devices was reignited last year when OpenAI announced it was acquiring Jony Ive’s IO company so it could work on a wearable AI device designed by Ive.

Since then, we have heard all kinds of rumors. OpenAI’s mysterious gadget could take the form of an AI-powered pen, or it could be AirPods-like headphones placed behind your ear rather than inside it.

The only thing we know for sure is that it will arrive in 2026, which means we will soon know what it is, and it will. could or the beginning of an era where we go beyond smartphones.

What we don’t know about the device Ive designed is how it will actually work. All we know so far is that it is an AI-powered hardware product.

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The most famous wearable AI product to date, the Humane AI Pin, turned out to be a failure, largely because it couldn’t truly stand alone as a product without a constant connection to a smartphone. While I haven’t had a chance to use the Humane AI Pin myself, I have used the Rabbit R1, an AI device designed to be controlled by voice commands, and I struggled to find a use for it that my smartphone can’t do better.

For a wearable AI product to succeed, it must overcome this hurdle, and so far none have.

Apple Vision Pro launched the tech titan into a new market. (Image credit: Future)

Achilles heel

If Apple has undeniable and proven skills in hardware development, AI constitutes something of an Achilles heel for the Cupertino giant. So far, it hasn’t delivered on its promises of a fully AI-powered Siri.

Earlier this month, Apple announced its partnership with Google to use Gemini as the base model for its improved version of Siri. Having access to a large, reliable language model in the form of Gemini could give Apple the software foundation it needs to create a new wearable AI product.

Still, the device would represent something of a gamble. Whatever AI pin Apple works on will have to overcome the shortcomings of these early devices, and that’s a real risk.

Apple is best known for its careful, iterative approach to product development. The last time it launched into an entirely new category, it produced the Vision Pro, an expensive AR headset that few people really asked for, and few ultimately wanted. Although the Vision Pro is still in development and sales, it’s fair to say that it hasn’t been a success so far.

That said, the fact that someone as serious as iPhone designer Jony Ive is involved in OpenAI’s wearable AI ambitions suggests that a market might exist for devices like this in the future, but Apple will have to do a lot to convince me that I want it.

Apple might be able to create a better AI Pin than anyone else, but that doesn’t automatically mean people will want one. Until wearable AI can clearly replace something we already rely on, rather than sit awkwardly aside, devices like this risk feeling like solutions in search of a problem. And after Vision Pro, Apple may find that consumers are less willing to take that leap of faith.


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Graham is AI Editor at TechRadar. With more than 25 years of experience in online and print journalism, Graham has worked for a variety of market-leading technology brands, including Computeractive, PC Pro, iMore, MacFormat, Mac|Life, Maximum PC, and many more. He specializes in reporting on all things AI and has appeared on BBC TV shows like BBC One Breakfast and on Radio 4 to comment on the latest technology trends. Graham has an honors degree in computer science and spends his free time creating podcasts and blogging.