We have the first few specs on Xreal's Project Aura, the first AR glasses built for Android XR.
Is nothing sacred?
Follow along with the Gizmodo crew as we unpack everything Google announces at its annual developer conference in Mountain View, Calif.
The AI industry's business model is once again being put under a legal microscope.
What even is anything anymore?
It's not just YouTube—your games might also be cooked.
Did someone order AI slop?
Google has made something really impressive, but it's not exactly perfect—yet.
Google has its work cut out if it's going to make the smart glasses we've been waiting for.
I was promised 5 minutes with Google's AR glasses prototype, but only got 90 seconds to use them.
Good news: Project Starline has a new name called Google Beam. Bad news: you won't have one in your home any time soon.
We're all going to become botters, apparently.
Everybody is gunning to beat Meta to true AR glasses.
Android XR glasses can record video and play audio, but you'll really want them for hands-free Google Maps.
And we'll likely find out a lot more at Google I/O next week.
The organization claims any concern over human rights is "a thinly disguised ploy to weaken Israel’s national security."
But don't imagine you'll use Gemini in Android Auto to rehearse talking to your boss.
With Material 3 Expressive, Android is getting a more graphic design-y interface—the complete opposite of what is rumored for iOS 19.
Google's mobile OS is getting a bolder and more in-your-face visual refresh.
Big tech has an image problem. It's going to the people who make the images for help.