← All hardware
Open-source AI glasses with a multimodal assistant
Pros
- Affordable for AI glasses
- Fully open/hackable
- Multimodal visual AI
- Developer-friendly
Cons
- Limited display real estate
- Smaller polish than big brands
- Battery modest
- Niche app support
✓ Where it shines / best for
- Developers and hackers building custom AI-glasses apps
- Open-source enthusiasts who want full hardware/software control
- Researchers prototyping multimodal wearable AI
✕ Not the best fit for
- Mainstream users wanting a polished consumer product
- People needing long battery life or robust everyday durability
- Those who don't want to tinker with code
Features
- ✓ On-device / offline
- ✓ Free tier
- ✓ Real-time
- ✓ Voice Assistant
- ✓ AI Glasses
- ✓ Camera
- ✓ Heads Up Display
- ✓ Open source
- ✓ Developer SDK
- ✓ Visual AI
Pricing
| Plan | Price | Billing | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Frame (one-time) | $349 | one-time | Open-source AI glasses; prescription lens options available at extra cost. |
| Noa AI (companion app) | $0 | free | Basic Noa AI assistant usage included free; open-source so users can also run their own models/keys. |
Pricing verified from the official source. Prices change often — confirm on the vendor's site before buying.
Specifications
| use | Open-source AI glasses |
| power | Few hours, charging case |
| memory | N/A |
| performance | Cloud multimodal AI (Noa) |
| architecture | Micro-OLED display + camera, phone-paired AI |
Sponsored
A full review is being generated for this product and will appear here shortly.