A revolution in wearable technology is now on the horizon. Soon we’ll see a legion of smart glasses that combine on-demand and on-need AI-backed audio and visual information, delivered with or without your nearby smartphone, and all without the imposition of oddball looks or physical discomfort. However, the revolution is yet to be built on “aha!” moments (and maybe some FOMO).
That’s the conclusion I drew after speaking with Juston Payne, Google’s Senior Director of Product Management for XR. We were chatting moments after I had my own “aha!” moments with dev-kit-level monocular and dual-screen Android XR smart glasses. You can read more about that impressive first look here.
Getting to the tipping point
There is, though, still quite a distance to travel from the Payne Family’s “aha!” moment to true Fear of Missing Out (“FOMO”), that moment when the Android XR smartglasses’ availability and ubiquity generate FOMO among other consumers and drive adoption.
Payne acknowledged that the vision is far broader availability.
“So the idea is that over time, we want to get to the vision that you said – which is that anybody can walk into a store and make a choice to get a smart version, which is powered by Android XR and Gemini. And that’ll be a really exciting future to get to.”
The key, he told me, is ensuring the industry delivers the right form factors, and especially the price points. The lens options, he added, should be “inclusive of people’s different vision needs.”
A big moment for Android XR
Payne and I spoke as Google and its partners were preparing to kick off an Android Day: XR Edition (Dec. 8), the moment when everyone would see its vision for Android XR-powered smart glasses.
The glasses, while not entirely ready for primetime, are the clearest indication of Android’s plans and full-blown aspirations for Android XR, which Payne reminds me is “the next computing platform. So, it’s a major new category that will come into existence over the coming years, and it’s going to be a major part of people’s lives going forward.”
The single and dual display glasses, along with the Xreal Aura (revealed at the same event) and Samsung Galaxy XR mixed reality headset I recently reviewed, now represent the full spectrum of Google’s current Android XR ambitions.
While all of them are built on a foundation of Gemini intelligence, there are differences that I experienced in my hands-on demos. I was curious if Google is dictating, for instance, the display style, which ranges from the Sony Micro OLED screens and prisms found on the Xreal Aura (which actually tethers to a pocketable compute pack) to the high-resolution wide FoV of the Galaxy XR, and then to the thin and and transparent waveguide technology found in the two self-contained Android XR prototype smart glasses.
Turns out that while Google isn’t dictating the display experiences, it is “opinionated” on this topic. There are, Payne explained, reasons for all these differences.
“It’s actually useful to think here in terms of the type of usage that we expect from the products, and then we work with the partner companies on the right solutions in there,” he said.
Use cases define displays
Products used “episodically”, like the Aura or the Galaxy XR, want optical systems that prioritize a wide field of view. For these products, partial or even full occlusion of your real-world field of view is okay because you’re often sitting down and, say, playing a game or watching a video.
Obviously, the requirements are different for glasses where you can’t afford for the lenses to be off or occluded in any significant way. “For those, you do need a fully clear lens. Like a beautiful, crystal clear lens where you have a display that’s built directly into the lens. Those will be waveguide solutions.”
We actually think that the same person will likely have multiple XR products in their lives
Juston Payne, Google’s Senior Director of Product Management for XR
Not only is the Android XR idea not “one size fits all”, Payne envisions a future where people own more than one XR device. “We actually think that the same person will likely have multiple XR products in their lives. Sort of in much the same way that somebody doesn’t have a laptop or a phone; they have a laptop and a phone.”
Of course, that means even lighter and thinner glasses and, in general, cheaper and more easily accessible smart frames, and there will be an ecosystem and apps to support the smart glasses. Payne is excited about the future and sees a parallel to at least one other tech epoch.
“We think that this is actually a very early space, and the history is not yet written for it. So it’s great to see that there’s momentum, it’s great to see that there’s some traction out there. But, you know, contextualizing it: there’s no glasses out there that have an app ecosystem attached to them yet. So in that way, it’s almost like the iPhone launch, and there was no App Store; there was like that little period of time. We’re still in that era.”
Follow TechRadar on Google News and add us as a preferred source to get our expert news, reviews, and opinion in your feeds. Make sure to click the Follow button!
And of course you can also Follow TechRadar on TikTok for news, reviews, unboxings in video form, and get regular updates from us on WhatsApp too.

