OpenAI is building its first consumer gadget—a $200-$300 AI speaker slated for 2027—signaling the company’s bid to leap from screen-based chat into ambient, camera-powered hardware and directly challenge Meta and Apple for the next computing platform.
Inside OpenAI’s 200-Person Hardware Sprint
More than 200 OpenAI engineers are quietly designing an entire family of AI-native devices, Reuters confirms, with a smart speaker as the opening salvo. Priced between $200 and $300—half the cost of Apple’s HomePod—the speaker will ship no earlier than February 2027 and ships with an onboard camera capable of visually mapping users and their surroundings.
Why a Speaker? Why Now?
Hardware is the moat Sam Altman needs. Cloud rivals from Google to Anthropic can replicate GPT-4-class models; owning the microphone and camera that feed the model real-time data is harder to clone. A speaker also gives OpenAI a recurring revenue pipe—subscriptions, app store kickbacks, and premium developer skills—without sharing 30 percent with Apple or Google.
The Hardware Playbook: From Acquistion to Mass Production
OpenAI’s hardware ambitions crystallized after its $6.5 billion purchase of io Products, the startup founded by ex-Apple design chief Jony Ive. Ive’s team, credited with the original iMac, iPod, and iPhone silhouettes, now steers ergonomics, thermal design, and signature aesthetics for every OpenAI device.
Smart Glasses and Smart Lamp: The 2028 Wave
While the speaker reaches consumers first, two follow-ups are already in prototype:
- AI-powered smart glasses (mass-production targeted for 2028)—a direct shot at Meta’s Ray-Ban success story.
- An un-named smart lamp that doubles as a spatial projector, able to throw GPT-generated visuals onto walls or desks.
Together, the trio forms Altman’s vision of “computing that disappears”—chatbots you speak to, wear, or simply illuminate a room with.
The Competitive Line-Up
OpenAI enters a ring already crowded with trillion-dollar heavyweights.
Meta has the clearest lead. Ray-Ban smart glasses now integrate Llama models, letting users live-stream, translate menus, or identify landmarks by voice. Apple’s Vision Pro may cost $3,499 today, but supply-chain leaks point to a sub-$1,500 “Apple Glass” for 2028. Meanwhile Google, burned by the original Glass, is retooling Android XR for partners including Samsung.
Security vs. Convenience: The Camera Question
OpenAI swears raw camera data will stay on-device for “most” tasks, but the mere presence of a lens in living rooms revives memories of Amazon’s Echo microphone-recording scandals. Expect Europe’s GDPR and at least five U.S. state privacy statutes to scrutinize default settings, data-retention periods, and opt-out flows before a single unit ships.
What It Means for Consumers
If OpenAI keeps its sub-$300 promise, 2027 could mark the moment AI graduates from phone apps to omnipresent household utilities—ordering groceries via casual banter, tutoring kids by projecting worked equations onto the kitchen table, or auto-summarizing a chaotic family meeting.
Yet the same technology deepens tech dependence: every verbal hesitation, glance at a product, or argument with a partner becomes potential training data. The winners will be consumers who master the new bargain—ambient convenience in exchange for unprecedented personal telemetry.
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