Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Wearables
  4. Features

Apple reportedly slashes its Vision roadmap for smart glasses, and Meta’s lead matters more than ever

Apple is betting it can enter the smart glasses market late and still win on brand and ecosystem.

Add as a preferred source on Google
A woman wearing the Apple Vision Pro headset.
Apple

A year ago, Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo published a Vision product roadmap featuring seven devices. Now, he has published a new one with just two products remaining. 

The change in the product roadmap, Kuo claims, has been approved by John Ternus, Apple’s incoming CEO, who officially takes over on September 1, 2026.

What did Apple cut and what survived?

According to Kuo’s updated analysis (via X), only two of the seven products have survived, and Apple has cancelled five of them. 

Recommended Videos

Of the two, one is a pair of AI smart glasses that competes directly with the Meta Ray-Ban lineup, while the other is a display-equipped pair of AR glasses that uses optical waveguides (it layers virtual content over the real world). 

The AI glasses are expected in 2027, and the AR glasses won’t arrive until 2029 (at the earliest). Everything else, including plans for a successor to the Vision Pro, along with the lighter Vision Air, is gone. 

Apple’s decision, Kuo explains, prioritizes “smart glasses with greater mass-market potential,” and I couldn’t agree more, but the timing might not be right.

What makes smart glasses a better bet than mixed reality headsets?

According to a Counterpoint Research report published in February 2026, the global smart glasses shipments grew 139% year-over-year in the second half of 2025. 

Meta, the company behind the most popular AI smart glasses in the world, is leading the market with its strong lineup (including the Meta Ray-Ban Display) and consistent rollout of AI-based features. 

It held a market share of 82% in the same period, owing to its global presence, strong collaborations with established eyewear brands, and hardware backed by intuitive software features. 

The company has single-handedly demonstrated the potential of the market, and it’s only expected to grow further in the coming years. It’s clear that Apple wants a piece of the market, but Meta’s years of head start and experience may work against the Cupertino giant. 

Is Apple running out of time in the smart glasses race?

Every month Apple spends restructuring its roadmap is a month Meta spends selling, iterating, and building the retail infrastructure that makes smart glasses feel normal. 

What’s even more concerning is that the company’s smart glasses might not ship until the end of 2027, which gives Meta at least another year and a half to come up with new products, refine its features, and solidify its position. 

Apple believes that it can enter late and still win on brand, design, and seamless iPhone integration, the same playbook that worked against the smartwatch incumbents in 2015. However, that means that the company’s first AI glasses should be either as good or better than whatever Meta is shipping at that point. 

In my opinion, the Vision Pro was more of a platform bet than a consumer product, and Ternus’ decision to cancel its successor is an acknowledgment that the strategy didn’t pay off at the pace Apple had hoped. The question isn’t whether redirecting those resources toward smart glasses is the right move; it’s whether Apple is already too late.

Shikhar Mehrotra
For more than five years, Shikhar has consistently simplified developments in the field of consumer tech and presented them…
Google’s new AI app wants to replace endless scrolling with stories about your own life
Dreambeans is Google's most direct argument yet that the problem with social media isn't the content, it’s the infinite feed.
Adult, Female, Person

Most apps are designed to keep you on them as long as possible, especially content consumption apps where you scroll a never-ending feed of content. 

Dreambeans, a new experimental app from Google Labs, does the opposite. It gives you a small collection of AI-illustrated stories each morning and sends you off to live your actual life.

Read more
Got a missed call from an unknown number? Malwarebytes’ new free tool will tell you if it’s a scam
With $21 billion stolen from Americans last year through phone scams, a free no-friction reverse lookup removes the guesswork entirely.
Business Card, Paper, Text

Missed calls from unknown numbers used to be easy to ignore, but now they’re harder, especially since scammers spoof real local numbers and clone familiar voices with AI. Malwarebytes has launched a direct answer to that problem.

A free, standalone reverse phone lookup tool that tells you whether a number is safe, suspicious, or a known scam, so that you don’t call it back unnecessarily. It’s called Scam Number Check and it is available now at malwarebytes.com/scam-check/phone. The best part is that you don’t need an account or subscription to access it. 

Read more
Storage breakthrough promises safe data recovery even after hackers infect your computer
This new system keeps your deleted files recoverable for up to 126 days after a cyberattack
An SSD data port.

When hackers break into your computer, one of the first things they do is delete or lock your files and vanish. By the time you realize something is wrong, the damage is often permanent. A researcher at Florida International University has found a way to change that, and the solution is built right into your storage drive.

Understanding where your deleted files actually go

Read more