A new pair of AI-powered earbuds, called Ordo, aims to be your invisible AI assistant by quietly hearing, seeing, remembering, and responding to the world around you. They come with a built-in camera and onboard AI processing, allowing you to talk to them naturally and get instant responses without pulling out your phone or staring at another display.
Smart glasses have always felt a little awkward to me. Sure, they can play music, take calls, snap photos, and even throw notifications in front of your eyes, but at the end of the day, they’re still just tiny screens sitting on your face.
Now imagine removing the screen entirely. That’s exactly what this new pair of AI-powered earbuds is trying to do. Instead of showing you information, these earbuds are designed to quietly hear, see, remember, and respond to the world around you. And honestly, this might be one of the more interesting directions wearable AI has taken so far.
Ordo wants to be your invisible AI assistant The earbuds, called Ordo, come with a built-in camera and onboard AI processing. That means you can simply talk to them naturally and get instant responses without pulling out your phone or staring at another display. The idea feels like having an invisible assistant constantly listening and helping in the background. And yes, the camera part sounds a little wild at first.
You can ask the earbuds to take photos completely hands-free, just by speaking. But the bigger feature here is memory. Ordo is designed to remember things for you — conversations, notes, reminders, ideas, grocery lists, and basically any random thought you’d normally forget five minutes later.
For example, if you tell the earbuds your grocery list while heading out, they can later repeat every item back to you without missing anything. It’s a simple example, but it also highlights where AI wearables are heading: reducing the number of times you need to look at a screen in the first place. The earbuds also connect with apps people already use daily, including Slack, Notion, and Gmail.
You can ask Ordo to save information directly into your notes, whether it’s work-related details, a quote from a book, or a quick idea that pops into your head during the day. Instead of manually typing things down, the AI handles the organizing for you. There’s one problem: you still can’t actually buy it Of course, there’s still a major catch: this product doesn’t exist yet.
Right now, Ordo is only available for pre-order at $99, with shipping expected sometime in Q4 2026. So, buyers who reserve one today will likely receive it between October and December this year. That timeline also means there are still plenty of unanswered questions. How well does the AI actually work in real-world situations?
How private is something that’s always listening and occasionally watching? And perhaps most importantly, are people truly ready to wear a device that remembers everything for them? Still, even with the skepticism, it’s hard not to see why this idea feels exciting. Smart wearables have spent years trying to put screens closer to our eyes.
Ordo seems to be asking a different question entirely: what if the future of AI wearables doesn’t need a screen at all?
AI-Powered Earbuds Invisible AI Assistant Built-In Camera Onboard AI Processing Conversations Memory Grocery Lists Apps Slack Notion Gmail Notes
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