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Intel reportedly considering launching smart glasses this year

Intel reportedly considering launching smart glasses this year

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Photo by Dieter Bohn / The Verge

Intel is reportedly looking to sell a majority stake in an augmented reality spinoff company, with plans to potentially launch consumer smart glasses this year, according to Bloomberg Technology. Bloomberg writes that the company will probably be called Vaunt; the smart glasses are reportedly known internally as “Superlite,” and will be made by Taiwanese manufacturer Quanta Computer. They’ll pair with a phone via Bluetooth, and use a laser projector to display information in the wearer’s field of view.

The new company reportedly includes some former employees from Recon Instruments, the AR wearables company that Intel acquired in 2015 and shut down last year. If Bloomberg’s report is accurate, this will be far from Intel’s first move into augmented reality. The company has worked with industrial AR headset company Daqri, and attempted to launch a VR-like “merged reality” headset design known as Project Alloy, although that was scrapped last year.

Despite how little we know here, the idea of commercial smart glasses backed by a major player like Intel (which would maintain a stake in the enterprise) is an exciting one, since most companies that have expressed interest in glasses-based AR have also downplayed its short-term importance. Amazon is reportedly working on Alexa-powered glasses, but Apple, Facebook, and Google are all publicly focusing on phone-based AR for now. Smaller companies like Vuzix, however, are moving into the space. And based on Bloomberg’s description, it’s hard to say how ambitious Intel’s plans really are.