
Apple's Camera AirPods Are Coming. But What's the Point for the Rest of Us?
Apple wants to put cameras in your earbuds by 2027. Bob Macintosh isn't sure who this is actually for.
Bildnachweis: Image via The Verge — AI. Used under fair use for news commentary. · source
Is this a product anyone actually asked for?
Apple is planning camera-equipped AirPods for a late 2027 launch, according to Bloomberg and confirmed by The Verge. The cameras would sit in the stems, little lights would blink when data gets uploaded to the cloud, and the whole setup would feed Siri something called "visual context" about your surroundings. Upgraded Siri. Right.
I'll be honest, my first reaction was somewhere between amused and baffled.
The numbers
There aren't many, which is part of the problem. Bloomberg says late 2027. Apple is apparently testing the hardware against iOS 28, which is next year's software update. Mark Gurman at Bloomberg has been tracking this for a while and says the project is currently on schedule. The company didn't disclose pricing, battery specs, or exactly what the cameras can actually see and process. So we're working with limited information here, and it's too early to say whether this lands as a genuinely useful product or a very expensive conversation starter.
What we do know: Apple wants this to be their entry point into the AI wearable device market. That's the stated ambition. Whether earbuds with stem-mounted cameras get them there is a different question entirely.
So what
Look, here's the thing. I spent twelve years at Kuka working on industrial vision systems, and getting cameras to understand spatial context reliably is genuinely hard. We're not talking about snapping a photo. You're asking a small processor (or a cloud backend, which is what those blinking upload lights suggest) to interpret a dynamic, unpredictable physical environment and return something useful in real time. In a factory setting, with controlled lighting and known object geometries, that's still a serious engineering challenge. In the wild, on someone's commute, in a dim restaurant, in the rain? That's a sort of different problem altogether.
Verwandte Beiträge
More in Consumer
Snap launched AR glasses priced higher than a MacBook Air. The hardware is real, but so is the graveyard of smart glasses that came before it.
James Chen · 7 hours ago · 3 min
The AI note-taking startup is chasing big numbers with a new wearable. The fundamentals deserve more scrutiny than the hype is getting.
Mark Kowalski · 21 hours ago · 5 min
While everyone's chasing AI records, a quieter wave of startups wants to get you off your phone and into the same room as other humans.
Sarah Williams · 7 Jun · 3 min
Siri's been coasting for years while the HomePod gathers dust. I've seen this pattern before, and it rarely ends well for the hardware.


