New ask Hacker News story: Ask HN: Why hasn't anyone tried building an AI wearable wristband?
Ask HN: Why hasn't anyone tried building an AI wearable wristband?
3 by slymersonn | 3 comments on Hacker News.
Over the past few months, we've seen a couple of consumer hardware startups come out with their take on what an "AI wearable" will look like. For example, the Humane Pin, Rewind Pendant, Brilliant Labs Glasses, Avi's Tab (Necklace), etc. However, no one has tried making an AI wearable wrist device that isn't a smartwatch. I'm envisioning a wristband with no screen that is used as a device that passively listens to your conversations and gathers context (but doesn't store your recordings). I imagine this being paired with your phone so that the AI can proactively send you notifications regarding what you've talked about, almost like having a second companion always there, ready to help. This would be super cool to have as a student in a classroom because then I can have my personal AI help me study after! This sounds cool to me, but I'm not an engineer, so I don't know why no one has attempted this. What are the hardware or software blockers preventing this from happening? Has it not been done due to engineering constraints or is it because it's a stupid idea?
3 by slymersonn | 3 comments on Hacker News.
Over the past few months, we've seen a couple of consumer hardware startups come out with their take on what an "AI wearable" will look like. For example, the Humane Pin, Rewind Pendant, Brilliant Labs Glasses, Avi's Tab (Necklace), etc. However, no one has tried making an AI wearable wrist device that isn't a smartwatch. I'm envisioning a wristband with no screen that is used as a device that passively listens to your conversations and gathers context (but doesn't store your recordings). I imagine this being paired with your phone so that the AI can proactively send you notifications regarding what you've talked about, almost like having a second companion always there, ready to help. This would be super cool to have as a student in a classroom because then I can have my personal AI help me study after! This sounds cool to me, but I'm not an engineer, so I don't know why no one has attempted this. What are the hardware or software blockers preventing this from happening? Has it not been done due to engineering constraints or is it because it's a stupid idea?
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