I had one mission today: try Google’s “intelligent eyewear” and get a better sense of how “Gemini Intelligence” works on screen-equipped smart glasses. I waited just over an hour at I/O’s “AI Sandbox” and had a demo that ran about seven minutes. I guess that’s better than the 90 seconds I had last year. The device I tried was another prototype device—not the audio glasses from Samsung and Gentle Monster or Warby Parker—and had a small screen in the right lens. I don’t know what’s going on, but it feels like Google doesn’t want people to try out the smart glasses long enough that they’ll see the screen’s limitations. Or maybe Google is trying to avoid any comparisons to Google Glass.

© Raymond Wong / Gizmodo Here’s how my demo went. I looked at an Ozzy Osbourne poster and asked Gemini (long press on the right arm’s touchpad) to play one of his songs. The AI assistant did as commanded. I sat down at a table with a Go board and stones and asked Gemini to tell me about the game. I was brought over to a corner of the booth to briefly look at the screen’s tiny widget showing the weather. Next, I experienced real-time translation. A staff member spoke Korean and the English translation promptly appeared on the screen after she had finished speaking. I wasn’t allowed to speak in English and see a Korean translation. There was no back-and-forth conversation. Finally, I was instructed to take a selfie in front of a mirror and ask Gemini to use Google’s Nano Banana image generator to “put me on the moon.” The result was embarrassing: I demoed Gemini Intelligence on Google's prototype, screen-equipped smart glasses. I was told to ask Google Nano Banana to take my selfie and then "put me on the moon" The AI put me on the moon and also made me look more white Just look at my face. It's completely different pic.twitter.com/ed4aPQrNrS — Ray Wong (@raywongy) May 20, 2026 Nano Banana put me on the moon… and also made me appear more Caucasian. I definitely didn’t ask Gemini to do that. I hate this photo. What is the point of having smart glasses slop-ify photos like this? What is the real-world utility? It’s a gimmicky party trick that doesn’t even work well. “Gemini Intelligence”—the ability to invoke the AI assistant to tell you about things the cameras “see”—could be very useful. The real-time translation seems really promising; identifying things and getting information is informative; and playing music from a poster is fun. Plus, Gemini was more responsive this year compared to last. But why isn’t Google showing more examples for the single screen?