The Humane Ai Pin may not have enough doting admirers ... Make sure you do the same for the other accessories that came in the box, though you can easily repurpose Humane's nifty charging adapter ...
Humane, which marketed its Ai Pin as the next big thing after smartphones, had raised $240 million from investors, including OpenAI’s Sam Altman. The pin will be discontinued. By Erin Griffith ...
After launching its AI Pin in April 2024 and reportedly seeking a buyout by May 2024, Humane is shutting down. Most of the people who bought an AI Pin will not get refunds for the devices, which ...
The Humane AI Pin promised to be the future of devices ... at least function like accessories to our already-lived lives, rather than trying to force us down another product path.
Humane has ended sales of the AI Pin, one of the most poorly received gadgets of recent years. It’s also ending AI Pin connectivity and services in just 10 days’ time, effectively bricking it ...
Humane today informed customers that it is discontinuing its $700 Ai Pin at the end of February, with the device set to be taken offline less than a year after it launched in April 2024.
Humane is selling most of its company to HP for $116 million and will stop selling AI Pin, the company announced today. AI Pins that have already been purchased will continue to function normally ...
Previously, at Protocol, The Wall Street Journal, and Wired. Ten days from now, the Humane AI Pin will be able to tell you how much battery it has left, and essentially nothing else. To be fair ...
The Humane AI Pin company is being shut down and its much-vaunted, badly-received device is being switched off. It could have been so much better. It was controversially expensive, it had many ...
HP bought up Humane’s CosmOS operating system and IP, including the tech for the AI Pin, for $116 million. The sale means the end for Humane. Unfortunately, for any lingering AI Pin owners ...
The Humane Ai Pin promised to be the next big thing in wearable tech but the device failed to attract users, becoming instead a poster child for AI's contribution to the global e-waste problem.