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Google has published design guidelines for brands that plan to make Android XR-based smart glasses. It has also advised best practices for designing the UI and apps for such glasses.
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Samsung has already announced that it is working with fashion brands to develop AI glasses, a term Google uses for smart glasses powered by Android XR. Now, Google’s design documentation for AI glasses offers an early look (via 9To5Google) at how users could potentially control Samsung’s upcoming Galaxy Glasses.
Android XR currently supports two types of smart glasses: AI Glasses and Display AI Glasses. AI Glasses include microphones, speakers, and a camera. Display AI Glasses add an augmented reality heads-up display, which can be monocular or binocular, along with microphones, speakers, and a camera. Samsung could launch AI Glasses later this year and Display AI Glasses in 2027.
All models feature a camera button, a power button, and a touchpad. Versions with a display also include an additional touchpad on the temple to control on-screen interface elements.
Google has also published user interface design guidelines for developers building apps for Display AI Glasses. Because different colors can vary in power consumption and heat generation on AR displays, developers are encouraged to choose colors and fills carefully. The guidelines also define recommended shapes for icons and interface components such as buttons, cards, lists, stacks, and title chips.
At the bottom of the interface is an always-visible System Bar that displays alerts, quick-access chips, the Gemini assistant, notifications, time, and weather. Above it sits glanceable information that requires no input, along with suggested actions and multitasking controls.
Notifications typically appear as compact, pill-shaped chips that expand when selected. You can then take a quick action, such as replying to a message.
Asif is a computer engineer turned technology journalist. He has been using Samsung phones since 2004, and his current smartphone is the Galaxy S23 Ultra. He loves headphones, mechanical keyboards, and PC hardware. When not writing about technology, he likes watching crime and science fiction movies and TV shows.