At Paris Fashion Week in September 2023, start-up Humane stunned the tech press with a tiny, screen-less gadget clipped to a jacket lapel: the Ai Pin. The wearable promised voice-first controls, a laser projector that turned any hand into a display, and enough on-device intelligence to live without a phone.
When the finished product finally shipped in April 2024 – at roughly 700$ plus a monthly fee – reviewers found it slow, hot and unreliable. Basic tasks mis-fired, battery life was short, and big claims from Humane’s earlier TED demo simply did not work. Daily customer returns soon outnumbered new sales.
Things worsened that summer: Humane urged owners to stop using the Pin’s charging case because a third-party battery could overheat, then issued a formal recall in October.
Facing poor demand, the company lowered the Pin’s price and tried to license its CosmOS software to other firms, showing concept videos of the OS running in cars, TVs and speakers. But no partners were announced, and news leaked that Humane was looking to sell itself.
On 18 February 2025, Humane agreed to sell most of its assets, including CosmOS, 300-plus patents and key staff, to HP. The Pin’s cloud servers went dark on 28 February, leaving owners with a badge that can show its own battery level but little else. HP folded the team into a new “HP IQ” lab to explore AI features for future PCs and printers.
The wider industry took note. In May 2025, legendary Apple designer Jony Ive called both the Ai Pin and rival Rabbit R1 “very poor products,” arguing that real innovation demands deeper thinking than voice plus a neural network.
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