Xgimi’s New AI-First Smart Glasses Will Come in Three Tiers

5 days ago 7

Xgimi has announced it’s getting into the AI smart glasses game this year, and isn’t shy about it. The company is launching three new glasses under the MemoMind family, the projector maker’s new AI hardware brand.

In a press release during CES 2026, Xgimi posits that many AI wearables “feel experimental or obtrusive,” and that its MemoMind glasses are “designed to blend seamlessly into daily life.” Following that thread, the company says it focused on smart glasses that are comfortable to wear all day, intuitive to use, and feature AI that “works quietly in the background” and only shows up when it’s needed. The AI system involves multiple LLMs in a “hybrid operating system” that will choose the proper model for a given task, be it translation, summarization, note-taking, or more.

Two people wearing the Memo One, one facing away so the ear tips are visible, the other facing toward the camera, showing the frame and left temple. A simulation of the display the person facing away can see floats in front of their face.© Xgimi

Memo One is the premium pair, with speakers and displays for both eyes. The company doesn’t go into specifics about its makeup in the press release, but an animation at the top of the MemoMind site reveals a bit more about the makeup of the Memo One. It shows displays featuring a simplistic monochromatic operating system in green and Harman-Kardon-branded speakers in the earpieces, along with a touch point or button near the front of the temples, where they meet the frame.

Then there’s the Memo Air Display, which, at 28.9 grams, are lighter than the Memo One (Xgimi doesn’t say by how much) but only have one display. Xgimi doesn’t mention speakers in these smart glasses, but does say that they’re “fully customizable across frames and temples.” They’ve also got all-day battery and a charging case that can get them up to a week, according to the release.

Closeup shot of the Xgimi Memo One temple and righthand lens, showing the button on the underside of the temple.© Xgimi

Xgimi also says it will officially announce the third pair, which is “designed to feel even closer to normal glasses,” sometime later. The company plans to take preorders “soon,” but only offered an approximate price of $599 for the MemoMind One—I guess we’ll just have to wait on pricing for the Air Display.

Gizmodo is on the ground in Las Vegas all week bringing you everything you need to know about the tech unveiled at CES 2026. You can follow our CES live blog here and find all our coverage here.

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