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Home » Nothing Technology Is Building AI Glasses — and the Design Could Beat Meta at Its Own Game
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Nothing Technology Is Building AI Glasses — and the Design Could Beat Meta at Its Own Game

Melissa HoganBy Melissa HoganApril 11, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
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Every tech company has a point in its history when it outgrows its initial concept. That moment appears to be coming at precisely the right time for nothing. The London-based startup is reportedly working covertly on a pair of AI-powered smart glasses that will be released sometime in the first half of 2027, according to a Bloomberg report.

Nothing refused to say anything. For the time being, this falls somewhere between rumor and roadmap, which is actually a very intriguing place to start.

FieldDetail
Company nameNothing Technology Limited
Founded2020
Founder & CEOCarl Pei (co-founder of OnePlus)
HeadquartersLondon, United Kingdom
Valuation$1.3 billion (unicorn status, 2024)
Latest funding$200 million Series C round
Key productsNothing Phone (1), Phone (2), Phone (3a), Ear (buds), CMF sub-brand
Signature designTransparent back panels, Glyph LED interface
Upcoming productsAI-powered earbuds (2026), AI Smart Glasses (H1 2027, rumored)
Primary competitorsMeta (Ray-Ban), Apple, Google/Samsung, Even Realities, Rokid
Market positionNiche — strong brand, small market share in global smartphones
More infoBloomberg Technology

According to reports, the glasses would have cameras, microphones, and speakers. Instead of performing any significant computation on the frame itself, they would rely on a paired smartphone and cloud processing to handle AI queries. That’s not a novel idea. The Ray-Ban smart glasses from Meta perform essentially the same function.

Here’s what matters, though: Nothing has developed a whole brand identity based on the notion that a product’s appearance and feel are just as important as its functionality. The analogy to Meta becomes less clear if that philosophy extends to eyewear.

Nothing Technology Is Building AI Glasses
Nothing Technology Is Building AI Glasses

If Bloomberg’s sources are correct, Carl Pei was initially opposed to the glasses concept. That reluctance makes sense. For more than ten years, smart glasses have attempted to gain widespread acceptance; however, the majority of these attempts, starting with Google Glass, have fallen somewhere between awkward and forgotten.

Eventually, Pei changed his mind, allegedly informing staff that Nothing’s future is in a multi-device strategy that goes far beyond the phones and earbuds that gave the company its name. It’s difficult to determine whether that’s a result of competitive pressure from a market that won’t stand still or sincere conviction.

It’s simpler to state that nothing has earned the right to be taken seriously in terms of design. When the Phone (1) first came out, it was a true surprise—not because it outperformed its rivals in terms of benchmarking, but rather because no one else was equipping a mid-range Android with a glowing LED grid. People took notice.

That’s a significant accomplishment in a product category where the majority of phones are identical glass rectangles. Money can’t buy the kind of brand equity you get when you walk into a room and someone across the table recognizes your phone.

Therefore, it’s possible that smart glasses represent the most natural expansion that nothing could match. One of the few everyday items that is still regarded as a true fashion statement is eyewear. Frames reveal something about your identity. Nothing’s transparent aesthetic, such as intentional negative space, exposed circuitry, or that slightly retro-futurist sensibility, could be applied to glasses in a way that feels natural rather than forced.

Charlie Smith, the chief brand officer of Nothing and a former employee of the high-end fashion house Loewe, describes the company’s use of nostalgia and “retrofuturism” in a way that doesn’t sound like advertising. It sounds like someone who truly knows what makes an item appealing outside of its specification sheet.

The market for smart glasses has changed significantly. In the second half of 2025, Counterpoint Research observed a 139 percent year-over-year increase in the segment. Thanks to affordable prices and a partnership with a company that already had decades of wearability credibility, Meta’s Ray-Ban lineup has significantly entered the mainstream.

However, despite their best efforts, Meta remains Meta—a massive corporation producing goods that feel like they were made by a massive corporation. The degree to which a Meta device can realistically feel independent or edgy is limited.

Nothing could find space to move in that gap. In a market dominated by giants like Apple, Samsung, and the vast Chinese OEMs, the company has always positioned itself as something of an indie darling. It’s reasonable to wonder if that identity will endure as the business approaches a $1.3 billion valuation. Being the tenacious outsider and a business that recently raised $200 million are at odds. Although they need to be handled carefully, those two issues are not insurmountable. And the design decisions have held up, at least thus far.

Nothing’s ability to deliver on the hardware side of glasses in a way that warrants the anticipation that will unavoidably grow as 2027 draws near is still up in the air. Building eyewear requires different disciplines than making phones, such as manufacturing relationships, optical precision, and an understanding of how people wear things on their faces all day.

Additionally, the company is reportedly planning AI earbuds for 2026, which means that before the glasses even reach a production schedule, it will need to ship one ambitious product.

As I watch this play out, I get the impression that nothing is particularly fascinating when the result is unclear. Many observers believed that a small startup could not compete in a market dominated by trillion-dollar corporations prior to the release of the Phone (1). They were sufficiently mistaken to warrant reading the next chapter.

Nothing Technology Is Building AI Glasses
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Melissa Hogan
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Melissa Hogan is the Senior Editor at Temporaer, and quite possibly the person on the internet who has thought the most about what happens to your data when a hard disk drive fails. She is a self-described storage hardware obsessive — the kind of person who reads NVMe specification documents for fun, tracks NAND flash fab yield rates with genuine emotional investment, and has strong, considered opinions about why QLC cells are misunderstood by mainstream tech media. She came to technology writing the way many of the best specialists do: not through a newsroom, but through an obsession that simply refused to stay quiet.Melissa, a stay-at-home mother, is an example of what the technology industry frequently undervalues: the serious, self-made expert who exists entirely outside of the institutional pipeline. She developed her technological expertise solely through self-directed learning, practical hardware experimentation, and an extraordinary appetite for technical documentation. She doesn't have a degree in journalism or experience in corporate technology, but what she brings to her editorial work at Temporaer is something more uncommon: a sincere, unfulfilled passion for how computers store, retrieve, and safeguard data, along with the patience to fully comprehend it and the ability to articulate it.

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