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Samsung is developing Gemini AI-powered XR glasses, and we might’ve already seen them

Remember when Samsung invited Google and Qualcomm to announce the “next XR experience“? I know I do because it happened in early February 2023, during the Galaxy S23 event. At the time, the web was filled with rumors about Apple’s mixed reality device, which would launch as the Vision Pro. Apple’s spatial computer dropped a few months after that teaser from Samsung, Google, and Qualcomm. It was immediately clear that the Vision Pro was so sophisticated that Samsung couldn’t possibly launch a rival anytime soon. 

Nearly two years later, that Samsung XR headset still doesn’t exist. But Samsung has been teasing it again recently, saying the device should be unveiled at some point next year.

While Samsung never detailed the specs and features of the XR device, a new leak may give us an idea of what Samsung is working on. Unsurprisingly, Samsung isn’t building a Vision Pro rival. Instead, it’s doing something that might be more useful to most people. The first Samsung XR device will apparently be a pair of glasses with Gemini AI at the core. And it turns out that we might have seen it already during Google’s Project Astra demo at I/O 2024.

Samsung had this to say about the unnamed XR headset a few weeks ago during its most recent quarterly earnings report:

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We plan to contribute to the expansion of the Samsung Health ecosystem through the Galaxy Ring launched this year and to strengthen the connectivity experience between our products, such as the XR (eXtended Reality) device scheduled to be launched in the future.

I wouldn’t be surprised if Samsung brought the XR headset to the Galaxy S25 Unpacked launch event that’s supposed to happen in mid-January. Samsung could then keep teasing the XR glasses before giving them a summer 2025 launch. That’s what Samsung did with the Galaxy Ring last year.

A report from the Korean site Maeil Business Newspaper said a few days ago that Samsung will release smart glasses with built-in AI in the third quarter of 2025. Google and Qualcomm are named as Samsung’s partners. That means this is the “next XR experience” that Samsung teased nearly two years ago.

Meta Rayban SunglassesRay-Ban Meta smart glasses. Image source: Jonathan S. Geller

Samsung will manufacture some 500,000 units, according to a report from Chinese research company Wellsen XR.

In terms of specs, the Samsung XR headset will rely on Qualcomm’s AR1 chip as the main CPU and an auxiliary NXP chip. The headset will feature a 12-megapixel camera sporting a Sony IMX681 CMOS image sensor. The wearable will feature a 155 mAh battery and weigh 50 grams.

Gemini will be preinstalled, which is hardly a surprise. If Google is involved, that’s what Google can bring to the table. We’ve already seen Meta make great use of smart glasses for Meta AI features. Apple is also looking into creating smart glasses of its own.

The Samsung product will also support mobile payments via a QR code scanning feature. It’ll also recognize hand gestures.

As 9to5Google points out, the Samsung XR glasses feature an almost identical battery to the Ray-Ban Meta glasses, and they are almost similar in weight. This suggests that the Samsung XR device can’t possibly incorporate a screen. The reports from Asia make no mention of one.

All this suggests Samsung’s “next XR experience” device is more of a Ray-Ban Meta clone than a Vision Pro rival. That’s enough to give you an idea of what the glasses would look like. But I’ll also remind you of Google’s impressive Project Astra demo from I/O 2024.

OpenAI hosted an unexpected ChatGPT event in early May to introduce GPT-4o and Advanced Voice Mode. OpenAI’s demos showed the chatbot’s ability to handle multimodal inputs, including a new conversational voice mode that sounded like a real conversation between people.

Google used the smart glasses on the right to demo Project Astra (Gemini Live) at I/O 2024.Google used the smart glasses on the right to demo Project Astra (Gemini Live) at I/O 2024. Image source: Google

OpenAI stole Google’s thunder by a few days. Google’s Project Astra showed the same AI abilities for Gemini that OpenAI had just demoed for ChatGPT. Google used two devices to demo Project Astra: an unnamed Pixel device and an unnamed XR headset. The person talking to Gemini switched between them halfway through the demo.

The glasses are visible above, by the red apple. The clip at the end of this post will give you an even better look.

There’s no way to prove those are Samsung XR smart glasses. But I’d speculate that’s what it is. We’re looking at a prototype unit with Gemini preloaded.

Part of Project Astra became a reality rather quickly. That’s the Gemini Live conversational AI experience available on Pixel phones and other places. That’s all the more reason to indicate the smart glasses by the red apple are happening. Samsung is the likely partner in this endeavor.

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ChatGPT’s search engine might end your dependence on Google

I’ve been a ChatGPT Plus user for about a year, and I think the $20/month subscription is worth it to access some of OpenAI’s best ChatGPT features. One of them is the newly released ChatGPT Search product that competes directly against Google Search. It’s probably the AI product some people at Google have been dreading all along when ChatGPT went viral in late 2022.

I can’t say that I needed ChatGPT Search that much since ChatGPT Plus already searches the web during prompts. Also, I haven’t turned ChatGPT Search into my default search engine, and I say that as someone who has ditched Google Search long before generative AI chatbots were all the rage.

But I appreciate what OpenAI has done with the ChatGPT interface now that ChatGPT Search is an actual product. Whenever ChatGPT has to search the web to answer my prompts, it now displays sources by default. Not only that, but the UI gets a new tab where I see multiple sources that I can visit to double check the chatbot’s accuracy.

Remember that I’ve been telling you for nearly two years that ChatGPT and its kind are prone to hallucinations. That is inventing things that aren’t factually correct. Google’s big Search fumble with AI Overviews will always come to mind. That genAI product thought putting glue on pizza was safe because it couldn’t discern irony in things it read on Reddit during training.

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From the early days of Custom Instructions on ChatGPT, I instructed the chatbot to give me sources for all the claims it makes in its answer. That experience has been mostly good. That’s because ChatGPT would routinely serve links that would not work. Those pages were no longer available for me to read.

By moving forward with the ChatGPT Search project, OpenAI also had to improve that aspect of the user experience. The user would have to get links to search results, similar to how Google Search works.

If you use ChatGPT Search to search the web, you’ll always get sources at the end of the answer. Here’s one such example: I searched for “Spider-Man 4 release date.” Notice the Sources button at the end of the prompt and the links after each paragraph:

A ChatGPT Search will always display a Sources button at the end.A ChatGPT Search will always display a Sources button at the end. Image source: Chris Smith, BGR

Click that button, and a vertical Citations menu opens on the right-hand side containing multiple links that tackle the topic:

Press the Sources button, and you get a new menu with links on the right side.Press the Sources button, and you get a new menu with links on the right side. Image source: Chris Smith, BGR

But I just said that I don’t use ChatGPT Search that much. That is, I don’t press that Search button (seen in blue above).

Instead, I use ChatGPT GPT-4o most of the time to find answers to my questions. This is actually what made me realize the ChatGPT Plus experience has improved so much thanks to ChatGPT Search.

I looked at recent rumors about Spider-Man 4 earlier today and wanted to refresh some information. I went to ChatGPT with some questions. The chatbot answered them by performing an online search, though I didn’t go through ChatGPT Search specifically. Notice there’s no blue button active in the prompt bar:

A regular chat with ChatGPT Plus will also show the same Sources button and the menu on the right.A regular chat with ChatGPT Plus will also show the same Sources button and the menu on the right. Image source: Chris Smith, BGR

However, OpenAI gives me the same Sources tab at the end of the response. A click on it opens the same new Search Results menu on the right, giving me access to plenty of search answers.

This will make fact-checking ChatGPT answers even easier than before. ChatGPT Plus users would have access to sources for the claims ChatGPT makes. The chatbot will probably continue to hallucinate. But you’ll be able to verify the information without providing Custom Instructions that make ChatGPT show links to sources. ChatGPT does it all by default.

OpenAI rolled out these UI updates only a few days ago, but I haven’t really paid attention to them. I would click on links from ChatGPT Plus, which would open in other browser tabs before the new menu appeared. In fact, I performed the “Spider-Man 4 release date” ChatGPT Search I first showed you only after noticing the Search Results menu in a regular chat with ChatGPT GPT-4o.

If I were still using Google Search, these new ChatGPT Plus and ChatGPT Search features would be enough to have me consider ditching it. While I still use DuckDuckGo for other searches and Google Maps for specific store and business information, I might actually give ChatGPT Search more screen time than before.

I’ll also note that ChatGPT users on the Free tier will not get access to internet search features inside prompts and will not have ChatGPT Search available separately. All of the above applies to paid ChatGPT tiers for now.

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