Humane’s Ai Pin up close

A few hours after this morning’s big unveil, Humane opened its doors to a handful of press. Located in a nondescript building in San Francisco’s SoMa neighborhood, the office is home to the startup’s hardware design teams.

An office next door houses Humane’s product engineers, while the electrical engineering team operates out of a third space directly across the street. The company also operates an office in New York, though the lion's share of the 250-person staff are located here in San Francisco.

Today, much of the space is occupied by a series of demo stations (with a strict no filming policy), where different Ai Pins are laid out in various state of undress, exposing their external machinations. Prior to attending these, however, Humane’s co-founders stand in front of a small group of chairs, flanking a flat screen that lays out the company’s vision.

CEO Bethany Bongiorno gives a brief history of the company, beginning with how she met co-founder and president Imran Chaudhri on her first day at Apple. The company's entire history ties back to their former employer. It was there they poached CTO Patrick Gates, along with a reported 90 or so other former Applers.

Image Credits: Brian Heater

For his part, Chaudhri frames the company’s story as one of S-curves – 15-year cycles of technology that form the foundation for, and ultimately give way to, what’s next. “The last era has plateaued,” he tells the room, stating that the smartphone is “16 years old” — though this, too, appears to be a winking dig at his former employers, whose first iPhone arrived in 2007.

He frames Humane’s first product as “a new way of thinking, a new sense of opportunity.” It’s an effort, he adds, to “productize AI.” The in-person presentation is decidedly more grounded than earlier videos would lead you to believe. It’s true that the statements are still grandiose and sweeping, contextualizing the lapel-worn device as the next step in a computing journey that began with room-size mainframes, but the conversation becomes a touch more pragmatic when the device is laid out before us.

The matchbook-sized device features a Snapdragon processor and 32GB of local storage. The camera is a 12-megapixel sensor designed for a smartphone but integrated into Humane’s own module. There’s an accelerometer and gyroscope and a depth and time of flight sensor. Like Apple’s products, it’s designed in California and primarily manufactured in Asia.

The majority of the device’s exterior is monopolized by a touch panel that houses the majority of the on-board components and a battery that should get four or five hours on a charge. Above this, a kind of camera bar houses the above sensors, along with the laser projection system — far and away the most visually arresting aspect of the whole affair. The camera bar is tilted at a downward angle. Humane says they tested the pin on a variety of different body types and settled on a design that accommodates users with larger chests.