Google's first Android XR smart glasses pair Gentle Monster and Warby Parker frames with Gemini in your ear

Google's first Android XR smart glasses pair Gentle Monster and Warby Parker frames with Gemini in your ear
Google has finally shown what its intelligent eyewear actually looks like—or smart glasses, if you are not buying the rebrand. Two designs showed up at Google I/O 2026, one from Gentle Monster and one from Warby Parker.The glasses run on Android XR, the platform Google has been building with Samsung and Qualcomm. They are not trying to replace your phone. They sit next to it, pair with Android and iOS, and wake up the moment you say "Hey Google" or tap the temple. Gemini takes it from there.

No display this time, just cameras, speakers, and Gemini doing the talking

The first batch skips the screen entirely, which is a real shift from the Google Glass era when the floating prism was the whole point. What you get instead is a pair of cameras up front and speakers tucked into the temples, so the assistant lives in your ear rather than your eyeline.Most of what Gemini does on the glasses flows from that. Point your face at a building and ask what it is. Squint at a parking sign and let it decode the fine print before you get towed. Walking directions track which way you are facing, so the turns actually line up with the street in front of you. You can drop a coffee stop into the route without breaking pace, or have Gemini read out the texts you have been ignoring.Photos take a tap or a sentence. Nano Banana handles edits on the spot, and Google's own demo line is asking it to put everyone in a group shot in funny hats—which tells you exactly who the pitch is aimed at.
The more useful trick is translation. Menus and street signs get read aloud in your line of sight, and spoken translations try to hold on to the speaker's tone instead of flattening it into the usual assistant monotone.Gemini also runs small errands in the background. Google's pitch includes prepping a DoorDash coffee order while your phone stays in your pocket, leaving you to tap confirm.

Gentle Monster goes loud, Warby Parker keeps quiet

Gentle Monster has leaned into the sculptural, slightly architectural shapes the brand has built its following on. Warby Parker has gone the other way—thin, clean, the kind of frame that disappears on your face. The contrast feels engineered. One pair is for the people who want their glasses noticed from across a room. The other is for people who would rather nobody clocked them at all.The frames shown ship this fall in select markets. What they cost, what runs them, and when they actually go on sale are all still unanswered.Display glasses are definitely next on the Android XR roadmap, Google is staying quiet on the specifics.

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