
By KIM BELLARD
You had to know I’d write about the new Humane AI Pin, right?
After all, I’d been pleading for the next big thing to take the place of the smartphone, as recently as last month and as long ago as six years, so when a start-up like Humane suggests it is going to do just that, it has my attention. Even more intriguing, it is billed as an AI device, redefining “how we interact with AI.” It’s like catnip for me.
For anyone who has missed the hype – and there has been a lot of hype, for several months now – Humane is a Silicon Valley start-up founded by two former Apple employees, Imran Chaudhri and Bethany Bongiorno (who are married). They left Apple in 2016, had the idea for the AI Pin by 2018, and are ready to launch the actual device early next year. It is intended to be worn as a pin on the lapel, starts at $699, and requires a monthly $24 subscription (which includes wireless connectivity). Orders start November 16.
Partners include OpenAI, Microsoft, T-Mobile, Tidal, and Qualcomm.
Mr. Chaudhri told The New York Times that artificial intelligence “can create an experience that allows the computer to essentially take a back seat.” He also told TechCrunch that the AI Pin represented “a new way of thinking, a new sense of opportunity,” and that it would “productize AI” (hmm, what are all those other people in AI doing?).
Humane’s press release elaborates:
Ai Pin redefines how we interact with AI. Speak to it naturally, use the intuitive touchpad, hold up objects, use gestures, or interact via the pioneering Laser Ink Display projected onto your palm. The unique, screenless user interface is designed to blend into the background, while bringing the power of AI to you in multi-modal and seamless ways.
Basically, you wear a pin that is connected with an AI, which – upon request – will listen and respond to your requests. It can respond verbally, or it can project a laser display into the palm of your hand, which you can control with a variety of gestures that I am probably too old to learn but which younger people will no doubt pick up quickly. It can take photos or videos, which the laser display apparently does not, at this point, do a great job projecting.
Here’s Humane’s introductory video:
Some cool features worth noting:
- It can summarize your messages/emails;
- It can make phone calls or send messages;
- It can search the web for you to answer questions/find information;
- It can act as a translator;
- It has trust features that include not always listening and a “Trust Light” that indicates when it is.


