Gentle Monster & Warby Parker Are Working On Google Gemini Smart Glasses
Gentle Monster and Warby Parker are working on smart glasses with Gemini AI, Google's plan to directly compete with Ray-Ban Meta.


Gentle Monster and Warby Parker are working on smart glasses with Gemini AI, Google's plan to directly compete with Ray-Ban Meta.
EssilorLuxottica, Meta's partner which owns the Ray-Ban and Oakley brands, is the largest eyewear company in the world by far. Google reportedly wanted to steal the partnership, a move which Meta fought off by taking a 5% stake in the Franco-Italian company last year. Later this year the companies reportedly plan to launch Oakley Meta glasses.
Gentle Monster and Warby Parker are rising competitors to EssilorLuxottica. While far smaller in scale, they offer similar stylish designs. The US-based Warby Parker has over 270 physical stores in North America, while glasses from the South Korean Gentle Monster brand have become popular with younger people in the US and are worn by celebrities like Beyoncé, Rihanna, Kendrick Lamar, and Billie Eilish.
The company says it will also work with Kering Eyewear, one of EssilorLuxottica's largest competitors, in the future.
Google is thus taking the same approach as Meta, partnering with existing stylish glasses brands to reach consumers with appealing smart glasses they'll actually want to wear in daily life - a drastically different approach to last decade's Google Glass.
The HUD Is "Optional"
Google confirmed that all Android XR smart glasses will have a camera, microphones and speakers. But the company says that the in-lens display that enables the small HUD it has been showing off will be "optional". The Android XR HUD, optional for smart glasses makers.
There's no word yet on whether the Gentle Monster and Warby Parker smart glasses will include the HUD, nor whether the future Kering Eyewear will.
Google says it's also working with Samsung to create "a software and reference hardware platform that will enable the ecosystem to make great glasses". It's unclear whether this means Samsung isn't yet making its own glasses, as The Information reported in October.