Skip to main content

Filed under:

Humane AI Pin launch: the reviews are in, and they’re not good

It’s possible the Humane AI Pin will go down as one of the — if not theworst-reviewed product launches in modern tech history. Humane, the company started by former Apple executives and designers, first announced its generative-AI powered, screenless wearable in 2023, hyped up to the point where runway models wore them at Paris Fashion Week.

But then reviewers got their hands on them, with results reminiscent of the dumpster fire that was Google’s Nexus Q.

David Pierce said in our own review that absolutely no one should buy it. Marques Brownlee said the AI Pin is “The Worst Product I’ve Ever Reviewed... For Now.” Engadget called it “the solution to none of technology’s problems.” The Washington Post called it “a promising mess you don’t need yet.” Cooling issues, latency issues, and many missing features are only some of the gripes with this $699 plus $24 monthly subscription fee AI pin.

Humane AI claims it will get better with time, but how much time is there for a company that laid off 4 percent of its employees just a few months before the launch? Will it ever be considered worth the asking price? We’ll be keeping tabs, and in the meantime, here’s everything that has happened post-launch.

  • The Humane AI Pin is lost in translation

    A photo of a person tapping on a Humane AI Pin.
    As funny as it was when the AI Pin utterly failed at translating Korean and Japanese, it also broke my heart.
    Photo by Amelia Holowaty Krales / The Verge

    Of all the things the Humane AI Pin promised, I was most intrigued by translation. In a demo, a man speaks to Humane co-founder Imran Chaudhri in Spanish. The AI Pin automatically translates it to English. Chaudhri replies in English. Again, the AI Pin translates his words back into Spanish. There are notable pauses when the AI is processing, but it’s a powerful concept. Unlike with Google Translate, there was solid eye contact between both people. The AI voice sounded more natural and less robotic. And crucially, there were no screens. The language barrier was still there, but it was much more permeable. 

    That’s not what happened when I tried it myself.

    Read Article >
  • “I only regret that I cannot stare at my phone more hours of the day.”

    Katie Notopoulos’ take on the Humane AI pin’s screen-free proposition is a delightful read that’s slightly tongue-in-cheek (she’s the former Editor in Chief of Threads, after all) and completely relatable. I, for one, am thrilled that she’s on team Screens are Good.


  • MKBHD calls the Humane AI pin “the worst product I’ve ever reviewed.”

    If you thought David Pierce’s review for us was scathing, just wait till you watch Marques Brownlee’s review that just dropped. Yikes.


  • The good, the bad, and the Humane Pin

    An illustration of the Humane AI Pin over a Vergecast screenshot.
    Image: Alex Parkin / The Verge

    Seven. Hundred. Dollars. After a year of asking questions about this much-hyped AI wearable, the Humane AI Pin is here, and, well, we still have lots of questions. We’re also still trying to figure out how it all works — and where it goes from here.

    On this episode of The Vergecast, we dive deep into our review of the AI Pin and try to figure out what went wrong with this device and whether there’s a real future for it or any other AI-powered gadget. The trouble, we discover, is that these devices are stacking new technology on top of new technology, and until it all works perfectly, none of it will work very well. Also, did we mention the AI Pin is seven hundred dollars?

    Read Article >
  • I tried asking the Humane AI Pin if it had lunch in Japanese.

    I tried getting the pin to translate lyrics to children’s songs in Japanese and Korean. Emphasis on tried.

    For the record, the Google Translate app on my phone had zero problems.


  • Humane AI Pin review: not even close

    The idea behind the Humane AI Pin is a simple one: it’s a phone without a screen. Instead of asking you to open apps and tap on a keyboard, this little wearable abstracts everything away behind an AI assistant and an operating system Humane calls CosmOS. Want to make a phone call, send a text message, calculate the tip, write something down, or learn the population of Copenhagen? Just ask the AI Pin. It uses a cellular connection (only through T-Mobile and, annoyingly, not connected to your existing number) to be online all the time and a network of AI models to try to answer your questions and execute your commands. It’s not just an app; it’s all the apps.

    Humane has spent the last year making the case that the AI Pin is the beginning of a post-smartphone future in which we spend less time with our heads and minds buried in the screens of our phones and more time back in the real world. How that might work, whether that’s something we want, and whether it’s even possible feel like fundamental questions for the future of our relationship with technology.

    Read Article >
  • David Pierce

    Nov 9, 2023

    David Pierce

    Humane officially launches the AI Pin, its OpenAI-powered wearable

    An image of the Humane AI Pin on a light colored sweatshirt
    The AI Pin does a lot of smartphone things — but it looks nothing like a smartphone.
    Image: Humane

    On Thursday, after months of demos and hints about what the AI-powered future of gadgets might look like, Humane finally took the wraps off of its first device: the AI Pin.

    The device, as we revealed yesterday, is a $699 wearable in two parts: a square device and a battery pack that magnetically attaches to your clothes or other surfaces. In addition to that price, there’s also the $24 monthly fee for a Humane subscription, which gets you a phone number and data coverage through T-Mobile’s network. The company told Wired the device will start shipping in early 2024 and that preorders begin November 16th.

    Read Article >