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Home » Smart glasses have a charging problem, and wireless power is coming for it
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Smart glasses have a charging problem, and wireless power is coming for it

By technologistmag.com17 June 20263 Mins Read
Smart glasses have a charging problem, and wireless power is coming for it
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Smart glasses still have a charging problem, and it’s sitting in plain sight. Charging hardware can break the illusion that AI eyewear is still eyewear, especially when exposed metal pins or bulky docks shape the frame.

NuCurrent is using AWE to show a cleaner version of smart glasses charging. Its Fast Frames system uses NFC wireless power, runs on Snapdragon XR platforms, and fits into a Ray-Ban Meta style form factor without changing the outside of the frames.

Speed gives the demo teeth. NuCurrent says Fast Frames reaches 50% in 20 minutes, matching exposed pin charging while keeping the device sealed for daily wear.

How does charging disappear

Fast Frames removes the exposed charging contacts that make smart glasses feel unfinished. On eyewear, every hardware compromise is public. The battery problem doesn’t live in a pocket or on a nightstand. It sits on someone’s face.

By moving power into the frame, NuCurrent gives designers more freedom to chase normal-looking glasses instead of carving the shape around a charging surface. That’s the real consumer benefit, a pair of AI glasses that doesn’t advertise its charging system every time someone wears it.

Why does one power layer help

NuCurrent is also aiming beyond a single demo frame. The company says the same wireless power layer can work across multiple Snapdragon XR platforms, which gives manufacturers a repeatable charging design for different frame styles.

For a category still figuring out shapes, sizes, and identities, repeatability is valuable. Eyewear brands can test more designs without treating power as a fresh engineering problem every time.

Ray-Ban Meta Glasses worn by Prakhar Khanna.

The same logic extends to other personal AI devices, including pendants, earbuds, rings, and wrist-worn hardware. The catch is adoption. A reference design still needs device makers to build around it.

When does this become standard

Standards work is the strongest signal that wireless smart glasses charging is moving toward real products. NuCurrent has a board seat at the NFC Forum, contributes to Qi2 work, and says its technology already ships through NXP, Infineon, Renesas, and STMicroelectronics.

That ecosystem gives the approach more credibility than a one-off booth demo. It also explains why wireless charging is becoming part of the broader personal AI device conversation, from eyewear to rings and wearables.

No one should treat NFC charging as guaranteed for the next wave of AI glasses. Still, the direction is clear. The smart glasses category needs designs that look normal, survive daily use, and charge without visible hardware getting in the way. That’s what to watch as these devices move from demos to shelves.

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