Chinese AI voice-recognition leader iFlytek unveiled its latest AI smart glasses at BEYOND Expo 2026 in Macau, aiming to answer a long-standing industry question: why do smart glasses truly matter? The lightweight wearable packs an on-device AI agent, real-time translation across 122 languages, and a novel lip-motion recognition noise cancellation system.
- What iFlytek Announced
- The Technology Behind the Glasses
- Why This Matters for the Smart Glasses Category
- Pricing and Availability
- What This Means for the Industry
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Conclusion
What iFlytek Announced
On Thursday at BEYOND Expo 2026 in Macau, iFlytek General Manager of Wearable Devices Lin Huijie introduced the company’s new AI glasses under the theme Communication Without Boundaries, the World Before Your Eyes. Lin acknowledged that smart glasses have struggled for a decade to find mainstream traction, with earlier attempts either emphasizing futuristic aesthetics or trying to cram smartphone functions onto a wearable frame.
“Many products resembled smartphones worn on the head or limited-function accessories,” Lin said, rather than devices with independent, high-frequency use cases. iFlytek believes rapid advances in multimodal large language models have finally opened a new window of opportunity. The company positions its AI glasses as a “super AI assistant before your eyes” and even a “second brain” for users.
The glasses focus on four core areas: translation, interaction, office productivity, and wearing comfort.
The Technology Behind the Glasses

The device supports real-time translation across 122 languages, accents, and dialects, covering face-to-face conversations, phone calls, online meetings, and AR visual translation for menus, road signs, and presentation slides. A standout feature is iFlytek’s self-developed lip-motion recognition multimodal noise reduction system. It combines a 5+1 microphone array, cameras, and bone-conduction technology to identify a target speaker based on the user’s line of sight and the speaker’s lip movements – enabling a “hear who you look at” experience.
This system is designed for noisy environments like exhibitions, high-speed rail stations, and airports, which have long posed challenges for speech recognition in multi-speaker scenarios.

The glasses also feature the GlassClaw AI agent, which handles meeting transcription, information organization, email sending, and complex workflow execution. During the demonstration, Lin issued voice commands to automatically generate partnership proposals, organize travel plans, and send emails – all without touching a smartphone or computer. An intelligent teleprompter scrolls content based on speaking pace, aiding natural speech delivery during presentations and interviews.
Hardware-wise, the glasses use an aerospace-grade magnesium-aluminum alloy frame, a resin waveguide display, and a custom micro-optical module. Total weight is around 40 grams – roughly 20% lighter than comparable products. The device passes a 1.7-meter drop test, supports up to eight hours of battery life, and underwent ergonomic adjustments tailored to Asian facial structures for long-term wearing comfort.
Why This Matters for the Smart Glasses Category
The smart glasses market has seen numerous false starts. Google Glass failed to gain consumer traction. Snap’s Spectacles remained a niche camera accessory. Meta’s collaboration with Ray-Ban has shown more promise but still leans mostly on camera and audio features. iFlytek’s bet is that on-device AI – particularly agent-driven workflows and real-time translation – can transform glasses from a quirky gadget into a genuine productivity tool.
The emphasis on noise cancellation via lip-motion recognition is notable because it solves a practical problem that smartphones cannot: listening to a specific speaker in a noisy room without holding anything. Similarly, the GlassClaw agent’s ability to execute multi-step tasks (proposals, emails, travel plans) purely through voice taps into the vision of ambient computing, where the device recedes into the background while the AI does the work.
According to TechNode, iFlytek also held an ecosystem partner forum alongside the launch with Sunny Optical, Wanxin Optical, and Conant Optics to discuss industry standards around weight, comfort, and intelligence – signaling that iFlytek is thinking beyond a single product to a broader platform play.
Pricing and Availability

The iFlytek AI glasses are priced at 4,299 yuan (about $635) and will go on presale starting June 15. At that price point, the glasses compete more with premium smart glasses like the Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses (starting at $299) but offer significantly more AI and translation features. The price also undercuts many enterprise-focused AR headsets while aiming for a consumer-plus-professional hybrid audience.
What This Means for the Industry
For investors: iFlytek, a publicly traded company on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange (stock code 002230), is betting that AI wearables will become a meaningful growth driver beyond its core voice-recognition licensing business. The glasses represent a direct hardware play that could command higher margins than software-only offerings, especially with recurring services like translation subscriptions.
For competitors: Meta’s Ray-Ban smart glasses have established the form factor, but iFlytek is differentiating through AI capabilities, particularly translation and noise cancellation. Apple, long rumored to be working on smart glasses, faces increasing pressure to deliver a product that competes not on specs alone but on real-world utility. Chinese rivals like Baidu and Xiaomi also have smart glasses efforts, though none has yet achieved mass-market success.
For the broader tech industry: The iFlytek glasses demonstrate that AI agents are moving from chatbots to ambient devices. The GlassClaw agent can perform multi-step tasks without a screen interface, which challenges the smartphone-centric model of computing. If adoption gains traction, it could accelerate the shift toward voice-first, screen-less interaction paradigms that many companies have promised but few have delivered.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do the iFlytek AI glasses compare to the Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses? The Ray-Ban Meta glasses focus on camera, audio, and basic AI queries through Meta’s assistant. iFlytek’s offering adds real-time translation across 122 languages, a lip-motion noise cancellation system, and an on-device agent (GlassClaw) that can execute complex workflows like drafting proposals and sending emails. The Ray-Ban Meta glasses start at $299, while iFlytek’s glasses are priced at about $635.
What languages does the translation feature support? The glasses support 122 languages, accents, and dialects, including both spoken and text-based translation for menus, signs, and slides. The system handles face-to-face conversations, phone calls, and online meetings.
How does the lip-motion noise cancellation work? A 5+1 microphone array, camera, and bone-conduction sensor work together. The camera tracks both the user’s line of sight and the speaker’s lip movements. The AI uses this visual input to isolate the target speaker’s voice from background noise, enabling clear speech recognition even in crowded environments.
What is the GlassClaw AI agent capable of? GlassClaw can transcribe meetings, organize information, compose and send emails, and execute multi-step workflows like generating partnership proposals or organizing travel plans – all through voice commands without needing a smartphone or computer.
How comfortable are the glasses for all-day wear? The glasses weigh approximately 40 grams – about 20% lighter than comparable products – and use an aerospace-grade magnesium-aluminum alloy frame. iFlytek conducted ergonomic adjustments specifically for Asian facial structures. The battery lasts up to eight hours.
When and where can I buy them? Presales begin June 15 at a price of 4,299 yuan (~$635). Availability outside China has not been announced, though the language support suggests international potential.
Conclusion
iFlytek’s AI glasses represent a serious attempt to answer why smart glasses matter in everyday life. By combining on-device translation, agent-driven workflows, and innovative noise cancellation in a lightweight form, the company is targeting both productivity users and frequent travelers. Whether the $635 price point and the need for a compelling ecosystem will drive mass adoption remains to be seen, but the technology direction is clear: AI wearables are getting smarter, lighter, and far more useful.









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