Artificial Intelligence

Rokid Glasses Get Smarter: Gemini ChatGPT Brings AI to AR Eyewear Worldwide

AI meets AR: How Rokid Glasses bring multilingual, real-time intelligence to smart eyewear globally

Updated

March 3, 2026 3:50 PM

Rokid's smart glasses. PHOTO: ROKID

Rokid, a Chinese company specializing in AI-powered smart eyewear and human–computer interaction, has rolled out a major software update for the international version of its Rokid Glasses. This update makes it the first smart glasses manufacturer to natively support Google’s Gemini, alongside three other leading large language models: OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Alibaba’s Qwen and DeepSeek.

The integration is powered by Rokid’s device-to-cloud architecture, which enables users to switch between AI models on the fly. In practice, this means a traveler can receive a real-time translation in Japanese using one AI model, then quickly switch to ChatGPT to answer a technical query—without noticeable delay. The system also supports multi-modal inputs like voice and gestures, making interactions more intuitive for everyday use.

This is more than a routine software update. By combining AI models from both U.S. and Chinese developers, Rokid is making its smart glasses relevant to global users, with features that adapt to local languages and preferences while maintaining high performance.  

These technological advancements have directly fueled Rokid’s international growth. Between November 2024 and October 2025, Shangpu Group data shows Rokid Glasses ranked No.1 in global sales for AI glasses with display functionality. Crowdfunding milestones further reflect this momentum: the product became the fastest smart glasses to raise over 100 million Japanese Yen on Japan’s MAKUAKE platform and broke Kickstarter records for smart eyewear.

Taken together, Rokid’s update highlights a shift in the smart glasses space: success increasingly comes from openness, flexibility and localized AI experiences rather than closed, single-platform ecosystems. By giving users choice, integrating global AI capabilities and bridging cultural and linguistic gaps, Rokid is positioning itself as a serious contender in the international AR and AI wearable market.

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Artificial Intelligence

How Analog Devices Is Turning Hardware Into Intelligence?

The upgraded CodeFusion Studio 2.0 simplifies how developers design, test and deploy AI on embedded systems.

Updated

January 8, 2026 6:34 PM

Illustration of CodeFusion Studio™ 2.0 showing AI, code and chip icons. PHOTO: ANALOG DEVICES, INC.

Analog Devices (ADI), a global semiconductor company, launched CodeFusion Studio™ 2.0 on November 3, 2025. The new version of its open-source development platform is designed to make it easier and faster for developers to build AI-powered embedded systems that run on ADI’s processors and microcontrollers.

“The next era of embedded intelligence requires removing friction from AI development”, said Rob Oshana, Senior Vice President of the Software and Digital Platforms group at ADI. “CodeFusion Studio 2.0 transforms the developer experience by unifying fragmented AI workflows into a seamless process, empowering developers to leverage the full potential of ADI's cutting-edge products with ease so they can focus on innovating and accelerating time to market”.

The upgraded platform introduces new tools for hardware abstraction, AI integration and automation. These help developers move more easily from early design to deployment.

CodeFusion Studio 2.0 enables complete AI workflows, allowing teams to use their own models and deploy them on everything from low-power edge devices to advanced digital signal processors (DSPs).

Built on Microsoft Visual Studio Code, the new CodeFusion Studio offers built-in checks for model compatibility, along with performance testing and optimization tools that help reduce development time. Building on these capabilities, a new modular framework based on Zephyr OS lets developers test and monitor how AI and machine learning models perform in real time. This gives clearer insight into how each part of a model behaves during operation and helps fine-tune performance across different hardware setups.

Additionally, the CodeFusion Studio System Planner has also been redesigned to handle more device types and complex, multi-core applications. With new built-in diagnostic and debugging features — like integrated memory analysis and visual error tracking — developers can now troubleshoot problems faster and keep their systems running more efficiently.

This launch marks a deeper pivot for ADI. Long known for high-precision analog chips and converters, the company is expanding its edge-AI and software capabilities to enable what it calls Physical Intelligence — systems that can perceive, reason, and act locally.  

“Companies that deliver physically aware AI solutions are poised to transform industries and create new, industry-leading opportunities. That's why we're creating an ecosystem that enables developers to optimize, deploy and evaluate AI models seamlessly on ADI hardware, even without physical access to a board”, said Paul Golding, Vice President of Edge AI and Robotics at ADI. “CodeFusion Studio 2.0 is just one step we're taking to deliver Physical Intelligence to our customers, ultimately enabling them to create systems that perceive, reason and act locally, all within the constraints of real-world physics”.