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Apple’s AI glasses, pendant and AirPods will all tap Visual Intelligence

Visual Intelligence, introduced under Apple Intelligence on newer iPhones, is now expected to become the core feature of Apple’s upcoming AI wearables, from premium glasses to simpler pins.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
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ByShubham Sawarkar
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I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Feb 28, 2026, 9:13 AM EST
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If Apple gets its way, your next “AI device” won’t be a chatbot on a screen – it’ll be something you wear on your face, in your ears, or literally around your neck. And the secret sauce across all of them is something Apple calls Visual Intelligence, an AI layer that tries to understand whatever you’re looking at or surrounded by, then quietly acts on it for you.

So instead of pulling out your iPhone, opening an app, and typing a prompt, imagine just…existing in the world while a tiny camera and Siri do the busywork in the background. That’s the vision Apple is now racing toward with three new AI wearables: smart glasses, a pendant, and AirPods with built‑in cameras.

At the center of all this is Visual Intelligence, which started life on recent iPhones as a way to point your camera at something and ask, “What is this?” or “Find this online.” On iPhone 15 Pro and newer, it already recognizes places and objects, can summarize or translate text on your screen, read that text aloud, and even hand what it sees off to ChatGPT or a Google search without you juggling apps. Tim Cook has been unusually vocal about this feature, calling it one of Apple Intelligence’s most popular tricks and highlighting how it lets people “learn and do more” directly from whatever’s on their display. Internally, he’s reportedly singled it out in all‑hands AI meetings too – which is usually Apple‑speak for “this is going to show up in future hardware.”

That future hardware is now coming into focus. According to multiple reports, Apple is “ramping up” work on three AI‑centric wearables: a pair of smart glasses, an AI pendant, and a new generation of AirPods that quietly hide cameras in the stems. All three would be tightly linked to your iPhone and built around Siri, but the real brain would be this Visual Intelligence layer taking in visual context – what’s in front of you, what’s on a sign, what you’re reading – and turning it into actions.

The glasses are clearly the flagship. Gurman’s reporting says Apple is working on a high‑end pair with an advanced camera system: one high‑resolution camera for photos and videos, plus a second camera that’s basically just there to feed the AI with environmental context. Production could start as soon as December 2026, with a launch targeted for 2027 if everything stays on track. Think of them as a lighter, more everyday cousin to Vision Pro – but instead of immersive visuals, the focus here is on perception and assistance. You walk into a museum, glance at a painting, and quietly ask, “Who painted this?”; the glasses already have the frame, text, and context captured and can respond instantly without you fumbling for your phone.

The more controversial idea is the pendant. This is a small device you pin to your shirt or wear as a necklace, with a low‑resolution, always‑on camera that doesn’t take proper photos or videos but constantly streams visual cues to the AI. It’s Apple’s answer to the AI pins we’ve seen from startups – but with the company’s ecosystem and Siri at the center instead of a separate platform. The point is ambient intelligence: reading menus, catching street names, recognizing people you’ve met, maybe even noticing that you’ve walked past the same “for rent” sign three times and asking if you want to save the number.

Then there are the AirPods with cameras, which sounds bizarre at first but makes more sense the longer you think about it. Apple is reportedly working on AirPods that include low‑resolution cameras not for selfies, but purely as sensors to give AI visual context. You’re already wearing AirPods everywhere – walking, commuting, working out – so adding a camera turns them into a kind of “invisible” AI interface that sees what you see while your hands stay free. A 9to5Mac analysis even argues that AirPods are the most logical first AI wearable Apple could ship: they’re popular, socially acceptable, and already packed with sensors and microphones. If Apple can layer Visual Intelligence on top, suddenly Siri can answer questions about the world around you, not just the world inside your phone.

What ties all of this together is Apple Intelligence as a platform. Beyond Visual Intelligence, Apple Intelligence brings Live Translation, smarter Siri, and on‑device plus private‑cloud models that run across iPhone, iPad, Mac, Watch, and Vision Pro. Visual Intelligence is the part that actually “looks” – using the camera or onscreen content to identify objects, extract text, translate languages, and trigger actions like adding events to Calendar with one tap. Move that capability from a handheld device into glasses, earbuds, or a pendant, and you get something closer to real‑time augmented reality, even if Apple never calls it that.

None of this exists in a vacuum, of course. Meta has been pushing its own AI glasses with Ray‑Ban for years, and the latest generation combines cameras, microphones, speakers, and Meta AI into frames that look like regular sunglasses. They can already answer questions about what you’re seeing, translate text, and stream video directly to social media – and they’ve also attracted heavy criticism for privacy concerns, especially around covert recording and bystander consent. Apple’s rumored glasses and pendant will walk into that same debate on day one, and how aggressively the company leans on privacy safeguards, indicator lights, on‑device processing, and opt‑in policies will make or break public trust.

There’s also a question of usefulness versus gimmick. Even today, some users find Visual Intelligence handy for travel or quick lookups, but complain that the interface is clunky, with results disappearing and no obvious history to revisit what you scanned. If Apple wants to build an entire hardware category around this idea, it has to make the experience feel less like a demo and more like a dependable daily tool – something you miss when you don’t have it, the way you miss AirPods or Apple Watch once you’re used to them.

Tim Cook has a pattern: he quietly primes the audience for the next big thing by talking about its core pillar years in advance. He did it with health before Apple Watch, with augmented reality before Vision Pro, and now he’s doing it with AI and Visual Intelligence as “standout” features. With smart glasses planned for around 2027, camera‑equipped AirPods potentially coming as early as this year, and the pendant somewhere in between if it isn’t cancelled, Apple seems to be setting up its next decade of hardware around a simple idea: your devices should see the world with you, not wait for you to aim a camera at it.

Whether that ends up feeling magical or invasive will depend less on the silicon and more on the small details – how visible recording is, how much stays on‑device, how clearly you can control what’s kept, and whether the AI actually makes your life easier or just adds more noise. But if these wearables ship anything like the reports suggest, Visual Intelligence won’t just be a feature buried in Settings anymore. It’ll be the lens – literally – through which Apple wants you to experience the world.


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Topic:AirPods ProApple IntelligenceHeadphonesSiriWearable
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