TechVRGoogle won’t be rivalling Apple Vision Pro as it scraps plans for Iris AR glassesGoogle has decided to focus on the software side insteadWhen you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.

TechVRGoogle won’t be rivalling Apple Vision Pro as it scraps plans for Iris AR glassesGoogle has decided to focus on the software side insteadWhen you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.

Google has decided to focus on the software side instead

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.

(Image credit: Apple)

Apple Vision Pro

(Image credit: Apple)

If you’re moreAndroidthanAppleand hoping to seeGoogletake on Apple’sVision ProAR/VR headset, it looks like you’re out of luck. According to a report, Google’s next-generation glasses project, codenamed Iris, was shelved earlier this year.

The report comes via Hugh Langley at Business Insider (paywall) and is based on inside information from multiple Google employees. Although Iris went through several different versions, Google has decided to focus instead on software for headset manufacturers such asSamsunginstead.

What were Google’s AR/VR plans, and what is it doing now?

Project Iris first leaked in January 2022, when The Verge described an AR/VR device resembling a pair of ski goggles – sound familiar, Apple watchers? Google demoed a version of Iris late last year with translation features and what looked like a heads-up display rather than full augmented reality.

It’s interesting that the company apparently decided to kill off Iris earlier this year, because in February,Samsung just happened to announce an AR/VR headsetthat would use Google software to power it. The headset may be revealed soon, but probably not launched later this year, and the operating system is believed to be based on Android.

That fits with Samsung’s wider strategy, which is to reduce its own input into the software and let Google do the heavy lifting. For example, after experimenting with its own wearable OS for theGalaxy Watch, Samsung is back on the Wear OS bus again. It’s likely that, as with Android and Wear OS, Google isn’t going to keep its XR (extended reality - a mix of AR and VR) software exclusive to any manufacturer neither.

According to Business Insider, Google is working on two XR operating systems: a big one for Samsung’s headset, and a “micro XR” platform for smart glasses. That latter product is likely to arrive much later: Apple was working on something similar and has shelved its plans indefinitely, presumably because the tech is still too tricky, bulky and expensive to make a compelling product.

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