
Snap unveiled its $2,195 standalone Specs AR glasses. Google rolled out Android 17 and Wear OS 7. Trump officials mulled equity stakes in AI firms, Apple's camera AirPods slipped to 2027, and TikTok was drowning in AI slop.
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Welcome to the Tech We Write home for Wednesday, June 17, 2026. I'm Brian McCullough. Today Snap unveiled its standalone specs AR Glasses Google rolled out Android 17 and Wear OS 7. Trump officials mauled equity stakes in AI firms once again. Apple's camera AirPods slipped to 2027 and TikTok is drowning in AI slop. Here's what you missed today in the world of tech. Think you have to build your own search engine scraping infrastructure? Think again folks. SERP API can take care of all your search engine scraping needs. It lets AI products access real time web search data programmatically, no scraping infrastructure required. Their APIs offer structured JSON data from all the top search engines, including Google, Amazon and YouTube. Top tech companies already use SERP API to power their AI API agents, their market intelligence tools and their automated research workflows. See how it can help you and your team. Serp API provides 250 free searches per month. Go check it out at serpapi.com that's Serp serpapi.com Snap has unveiled specs its first fully standalone AR glasses, which have a 51 degree field of view set to ship for this fall in the us, the UK and France. Quoting the Verge, specs, which Snap describes as a wearable computer built into see through augmented reality glasses will cost $2,195. You can pre order a pair of specs now@specs.com with a $200 refundable deposit and Snap says they're expected to ship this fall in the us, UK and France. This is a big moment for Snap. The company made a big entry into Smart glasses with its original spectacles in 20. The company has been toiling away on non public AR versions of Spectacles over the past few years. CEO Evan Spiegel promised the company would launch consumer ar glasses in 2026 and even turned its Smart Glasses team into a separate business. The company says that specs are fully standalone with no puck and no tether, which is perhaps a jab at Apple's Vision Pro, which is tethered to a separate battery pack. They'll be offered in two sizes, a 47 millimeter model weighing 132 grams and a 52 millimeter model weighing 136 gram and will have removable inserts that Snap says will support a wide range of prescriptions. You probably won't mistake specs with their wide, bold frames for any of Meta's smart glasses. Snap clearly picked a design that it wants to stand out. They're not my style. I don't think I can pull off the snow goggles but fashionable look though maybe Jony I've might like them. They have visible light and infrared cameras and while the specs are recording, a little LED bar will glow in the middle of the glasses. Both of the lenses will be able to show you content, and Snap says that its display system is powered by a proprietary liquid crystal on silicon technology that offers a 51 degree field of view and can show 16 million colors. The lenses can also go from clear to tinted in 10 seconds, Snap says the specs have two Snapdragon processors on board, and while Snap isn't specifying exactly which ones they are, the company says that one is focused on computer vision while the other is focused on running AR lenses. Together they enable fast hand tracking, low latency and responsive interactions that help digital content feel anchored in the real world, Snap says. You can also expect up to four hours of battery life on a charge, which Snap says accounts for things like audio and video playback, AI assistance, Bluetooth notifications and more. The specs come with a charging case that Snap says will offer four more charges for a total of 20 hours of battery. During his keynote at the AWE 2026 conference, CEO Evan Spiegel noted that you can charge the specs with a cable that snaps magnetically to the side of the glasses, and if you plug in the other side of that cable to something like a phone, computer or gaming device, you can stream content from those devices and display it in your specs. Specs could be interesting, but we haven't tried them ourselves yet, so we can't vouch for what it's like to actually use them day to day. And we don't know how specs actually hold up as a product that sits in between something like Meta's Ray Ban smart glasses, which have been a hit, and the Vision Pro, which has not. Google has launched Android 17 and Wear OS 7, available first on Pixel devices, with support for the latest AI models, a bubble bar UI and live Updates on Wear OS, quoting TechCrunch. In today's Pixel Drop, Android Quick Share's file sharing feature will become compatible with Apple's AirDrop on older Pixel 8a and 9a devices. Plus, Gemini Omni will let you edit videos in a conversation, while Lyria 3 lets users create music tracks with text prompts and or images in the Gemini app. Pixel 10a devices will also get better speech to speech translation tools with Audio lm. Other phone features are arriving too, such as the ability to record a personalized outgoing audio message for callers when you can't answer. Plus, the Take a message feature will arrive in more global markets. The Pixel drop brings emergency detection features to the Google Pixel Watch as well, meaning that if the watch detects a car crash, fall or lack of pulse, it will automatically contact emergency services and your selected emergency contacts. Beyond AI, Android 17's larger update allows users to take advantage of features like a bubble bar, which is a new user interface element that lets you organize, move and then quickly access recent apps that appear as bubbles at the bottom of your screen. The feature is designed to help speed up app interactions and aid in multi app workflows. Social media users may like Android 17's new feature that lets them record them with the selfie camera and phone screen simultaneously for screen reaction videos that can be shared on platforms like TikTok, YouTube, Instagram and others. Meanwhile, watch owners can now receive live updates from phone apps that mirror to the Pixel Watch. Smartwatches will also work better with Google's upcoming AI glasses and other hardware such as headphones. This summer, Wear OS will introduce more Gemini intelligence features like tools for making personalized widgets just by describing them, and it will be able to offer personal intelligence by connecting your Google apps and chat history with Gemini, end quote. According to Semaphore, Trump officials have discussed how to structure government equity stakes in AI companies again quote Two top cabinet members had discussed different ideas, people familiar with the talks told Semaphore. Treasury Secretary Scott Besant favored using equity in AI firms to seed Trump accounts, while Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick's preference was that any equity be directed to a type of sovereign wealth fund. The talks about possible AI stakes ceded to the government are still in the early stages, with no decision made yet, and a meeting with industry CEOs that President Donald Trump previewed earlier this month has yet to emerge. Given that, it's still unclear where the Trump administration could ultimately land on an idea that remains an extremely tough sell for most of the industry. Beyond OpenAI, which first pitched it last year. Executives at firms like Microsoft and Meta have turned a cold shoulder in the last week alone. Both secretaries preferences have also been floated at various times by OpenAI and Anthropic. Sam Altman initially envisioned funneling AI returns to Americans via a hybrid of the Alaska Permanent Fund and Trump accounts, a person familiar with the talks told Semaphore. And Anthropic flicked at sovereign wealth funds and pre distributive capital accounts like Trump accounts in a new policy framework released last week. Yet any AI seeded sovereign wealth fund would require significant work to flesh out, given that administration officials abandoned the broader concept last year amid concerns over the national debt. Lutnick, who's since negotiated other government stakes in companies in a coordinated effort to secure critical mineral supply chains, has also discussed a national and economic security fund, housing investments made by Japan and South Korea as part of trade deals with the US While firms like intel have accepted grants from the US Government in exchange for stakes, experts question whether a similar arrangement could fly in the the AI industry. Its higher valuations mean the government would have to spend more to make an equity stake a potential play. The American Enterprise Institute's Will Reinert said an alternative like a one time tax would need to be enacted by a largely skeptical Congress. There's also the question of how the firms, many of which spend their profits rather than pay them to shareholders, would even be able to pay returns to Americans via a government stake. My expectation is that we're not going to have dividends in any normal sense for a very long time, reinhart said. So if you're taking some sort of equity share, what does that even mean? End quote? You know how after a meeting you end up spending too much time trying to piece everything together, going back through notes, trying to remember what was actually said? It adds up fast. But that's where Plod Note Pro comes in. It's a small AI powered device about as thin as a credit card that captures discussions, meetings and calls and turns them into searchable notes and summaries automatically. So instead of doing the work twice, you can stay focused in the moment while Plaud handles organization afterwards. This means less time reconstructing conversations later and more time moving things forward. Plod's also designed with privacy in mind, meaning enterprise grade standards including SoC2, HIPAA and GDPR compliance. Check it out at Plaud AI TBRH that's P L A U D A I TBRH and use code TBRH for 10% off. You want to meet your customers in the most relevant moments, not after their attention is elsewhere. That's why with Twilio, you can transform fragmented campaigns into orchestrated customer journeys, helping ensure every promotion reaches the right person on their preferred channel, whether that's SMS, RCS, WhatsApp or others. Twilio helps brands reach customers on the channels they love right when it matters most, and all from a single platform. Twilio's API first approach also gives developers and marketers the flexibility to build custom promotional workflows, triggered campaigns, and dynamic messaging logic tailored to their business needs real time behavioral signals like browsing cart activity and in store activations activate timely, relevant offers to customers so your brand is always on and always personal. Get started@Twilio.com tb1 that's Twilio.com tb1 Gurman says that Apple's AirPods with cameras for AI are scheduled to launch in 2027 alongside the 20th Anniversary Pro iPhones and a second generation foldable iPhone. Quoting Bloomberg. The offerings will be part of what Apple intends to be its biggest wave of new products yet, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the plans are private. The devices should help provide a tailwind to the company during its first full year under Chief Executive Officer John Ternus, who takes the reins September 1st. All three products reached advanced stages of development in recent months. Bloomberg News reported in May that work on the new AirPods had accelerated, with prototypes now featuring near final hardware and Software. The new AirPods are designed to be Apple's first AI focused, wearable product. The device's computer vision cameras be intended to capture photos and video. Instead, they'll act as sensors that feed visual context into Siri. The goal is to let users ask Siri questions about objects and the surrounding environment. Someone looking at a collection of ingredients, for example, could ask what to make for dinner. The AirPods, codenamed B798, were originally slated for release in 2026, according to the people. The deadline slipped in part because of Apple's prolonged struggles with artificial intelligence software. The company also had to develop visual AI models capable of identifying objects in a user's surroundings. The camera AirPods will help solidify Apple's push into what it calls visual intelligence technology that can analyze images and provide instant context. The company has already made visual intelligence a focal point of its new Siri and iOS 27, bringing the function into its camera app. The new earbuds will closely resemble current AirPods Pro models. Apart from the cameras embedded in the stems, there are also external lights to indicate to people around the wearer when data is being sent from the earbuds to the cloud for processing. Apple has also explored using the cameras to provide contextual reminders and improve navigation during turn by turn walking directions. The AirPods are part of a broader push into AI devices, with Apple planning to release its first smart glasses as early as the tail end of next year. That product, codenamed N50, is designed to rival offerings from Meta and will include more advanced cameras that can take photos and video. Work on the AirPods remains further along, though the company is also considering making an AI focused pendant with a camera that can be worn on clothes or as a necklace. Apple's push into foldable phones, meanwhile, will kick off in September with its first model in that market, Bloomberg News has reported. End quote. According to a WordPress survey, 60% of U.S. consumers say AI in a brand's messaging is a turnoff 86% of Americans or I guess consumers always or sometimes check the original source after seeing an AI summary, quoting TechCrunch. Per the report, 60% of consumers in the US say that brands that use AI in their messaging are a turnoff, and 86% don't fully trust AI and still want to explore original sources. Notably, 42% of consumers said that AI generated answers without clear attribution are trusted less than airline fees, confusing privacy policies or medical bills. Nearly three in four respondents said the Internet feels less human than it did 10 years ago. Together, the findings paint a picture of a rapidly evolving digital landscape where brands are trying to adapt to a world beyond Google search and traditional SEO, while also balancing the need to appear human authored or risk losing their audience. As companies invest more in making their brand visible to AI search engines, consumers are placing greater value on transparency and attribution. People used to build websites for other people, said Brian Alvey, CTO of WordPress VIP, in a statement shared alongside the new report. Now you have to build websites for AI agents acting on behalf of those people. If your site's content isn't legible to AI, you are invisible to a growing share of how people search. You don't exist. And if your content doesn't feel human and trustworthy for the tiny percentage of people who actually click past the AI answer engines, they won't come back a second time. The report is based on a survey of 2000 respondents conducted in April, comprising 800 enterprise decision makers and CMOs and 1200 US adults. Despite consumers wariness about AI, the report also found that AI referrals to sites were growing. 60% of enterprise respondents said that traffic from AI search engines and answer platforms increased over the past year, and 74% of enterprise decision makers said AI discoverability and an attribution are a main or significant priority. WordPress VIP says the findings point to a future where brands will have to navigate both AI visibility and human trust simultaneously. The report found that 33% of consumers said clicking through to see an original source is still their top trust signal, and 80% said information on the web should remain openly accessible rather than controlled by a small number of large organizations. End quote. Finally today, a bit of a shot and chaser with that last segment and this one. What if there is three times more AI slop on TikTok as there is on, say, YouTube? Quoting Search Engine Journal about 59% of TikTok videos served to a new account's for your feed are now AI slap, according to a report from Kapwing, the video creation tool company. That's roughly three times the rate Kapwing found on YouTube. The company manually reviewed over 10,000 TikTok videos across 20 categories and ran a separate fresh account test counting AI generated content in the first 500 for you videos. Kapwing ran the same fresh account tests on YouTube and found that only 104 of the first 500 shorts, or only 21% were AI slop there. On TikTok, 294 of the 500 for you videos hit that threshold. Of the 2,000 videos Kapwing reviewed in TikTok's kids category, 57% were AI slop. That was the highest rate of any category in the analysis. The highest rate tag was Cartoon Kids, where 97 of 100 featured videos that were AI generated. Tags like cartoons or babysong both reached 83% and four kids came in at 79%. After kids, the highest AI slap rates were in science and education at 35%, health at 33% and history at 33%. All three are categories where visual illustration and voiceover narration make up much of the content. On the other end, categories where on camera presence or physical demonstration are central, had the lowest rates. Fashion came in at a mere 1.3%, music at 1.5% and fitness at 1.6%. TikTok has added user controls for AI content, but data suggests that what new users see by default still leans heavily toward AI generated videos. End quote. I was in the city last evening and I kept running into Scotland. Fans wearing the kit, wearing their kilts. It was great. I kept asking the least inebriated ones of them for pictures. It was fun stuff. Talk to you tomorrow.
Episode Theme: “Snap Specs” and a Day’s Key Tech News
This episode, hosted by Brian McCullough, covers a fast-paced roundup of the day's major tech headlines. Highlights include Snap’s standalone AR specs, major Google launches (Android 17 & Wear OS 7), developments from the Trump administration regarding government stakes in AI, Apple’s delayed camera AirPods, and consumer trust issues with AI content—wrapping with a revealing look at AI-generated content flooding TikTok.
This episode delivers a thorough overview of the latest in consumer tech hardware, government/AI policy, and the evolving challenges around trust, authenticity, and AI-generated content in today's digital world. Snap’s bet on standout AR hardware, Google’s AI-rich OS rollouts, and Apple’s patient march into AI wearables all point to an increasingly immersive and AI-integrated future—while user skepticism and content authenticity concerns remain front and center.