The $700 Humane AI Pin didnât have the best launch, mainly because reviewers got their hands on the pint-size wearable chatbot and realized a lot of features didnât work as well as advertised. Now, the company that made the device, headed up by two ex-Apple developers, is reportedly looking to sell the company for somewhere close to $1 billion.
According to anonymous sources who talked to Bloomberg, Humane is working with a financial advisor to sell the company. The asking price is between $750 million and $1 billion, though itâs reportedly still very early in selling.
Humane launched its AI Pin in April with promises that it would have quick and easy AI-based vision and voice capabilities. It would allow you to call and text friends, learn about your surroundings, and do more without ever having to scroll on your phone.
A PR representative for Humane did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The company was previously valued at $850 million (before the launch of the AI Pin), according to the site The Information. Thatâs thanks to quite a lot of outside investment from venture capitalists drawn in by the promise that the Pin would lead us to the post-smartphone future. It secured support from the likes of OpenAI CEO Sam Altman.
The company is headed up by Imran Chaudhri and Bethany Bongiorno, a married couple who previously worked at Apple and claimed they were partly behind features like âswipe to unlock.â The pair had worked on many prototypes over the last few years, but after the big AI boom in 2022, people started to notice that the AI pin had become more compact and, supposedly, more capable.
it took us a while to get to today.
now that weâre here, we canât wait to show you what the next few years will be like @Humane âexciting times! pic.twitter.com/PlAaJxb8Nn
— Imran Chaudhri (@imranchaudhri) April 11, 2024
The device was supposed to be controllable via voice and had a laser interface that would project onto the userâs hand. Once reviewers started using AI Pin, they found it was very slow to respond, and its hologram controls were finicky and nearly invisible in direct sunlight.
As for the AIâs responsiveness, users noted it was prone to getting facts wrong or mistaking objects in its field of view before confidently lying about what it saw. Those who reviewed it for a long enough time also found it was prone to overheating and running out of juice rather quickly for something that was supposed to be worn all day.
Humane promised users it was working on updates into the summer that would add a connection with calendars, timers, and clocks, all of which didnât ship with the device to start. The company also promised some far-future features like visual shopping, where users could put items in their digital shopping carts just by seeing them in the world. Most recently, Humane added OpenAIâs GPT-4o to the current CosmoOS.
But better LLMs donât necessarily defeat all the problems with the Pin, which comes down to pricing. Already, $700 is a big asking price, considering a quality phone already goes for that much. Then, a data plan costs an extra $24 a month.
Fellow AI device maker Rabbit came out with its R1, a $200 AI companion that was even more widely panned than the Humane Pin. Gizmodo found the device lacked basicfunctionality and could not deliver on nearly all of its original promises. Eventually, somebody might figure out the use case for a true AI doohickey, though right now, it doesnât seem like anybody has truly cracked the code.