
Microsoft's Project Solara Puts an AI Assistant in Your Employee Badge
The company wants AI agents to follow workers around the office, not just live in their laptops.
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Picture this: you're walking into a meeting room, badge clipped to your lanyard, and the AI assistant you've been using on your laptop is already there, listening, ready to take notes and schedule follow-ups. That's the pitch behind Microsoft's Project Solara, announced this week.
The company is betting that workplace AI needs to escape the browser tab. Bloomberg reports that Solara is a suite of software tools designed to embed AI agents into mobile devices and, eventually, hardware like smart badges and wearables. Microsoft also launched what it's calling an "always-active executive assistant," essentially an AI that doesn't wait for you to open an app but instead monitors your calendar, emails, and meetings continuously.
The technical details remain sparse. Microsoft hasn't disclosed what hardware partners, if any, are involved. The company didn't share specifics on processing requirements, battery life for badge-based implementations, or how audio capture would work in practice. From my time building hardware, I can tell you that cramming useful compute into a badge form factor while maintaining reasonable battery life is, well, hard. The press materials focus on software capabilities, which suggests the hardware side is either early-stage or being left to third parties.
Look, the concept isn't new. Amazon tried something similar with the Echo Frames, and we've seen various attempts at always-on AI assistants in earbuds and smartwatches. What Microsoft is adding is the enterprise integration layer. If your company already runs on Microsoft 365, the pitch is that Solara can tap into your Outlook calendar, Teams messages, and SharePoint documents without requiring a separate setup. That's the value proposition, at least on paper.
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