Three teenagers built affordable AI-powered glasses that read text aloud — beating Silicon Valley’s billion-dollar wearable ambitions with a prototype costing less than $100.
Tech giants are pouring billions into wearable AI products — but three 15-year-olds in Santa Clara just outpaced them with a prototype that costs under $100.
Their invention? AI-powered smart glasses that translate printed text to speech in real time — designed specifically for visually impaired students.
“Our main goal was to create an easy, cost-efficient way to transcribe text from any format,” said Akhil Nagori, one of the creators. “We didn’t want it to be expensive or complicated.”
They won $10,000 at the prestigious Thermo Fisher Scientific Junior Innovators Challenge — a competition where only 30 finalists present their research in Washington, D.C., after being selected from thousands of applicants.
How They Did It: From Idea to Prototype in Five Months
The trio started with a simple observation: Nagori’s great-uncle in India, a visually impaired cashier, struggled through stacks of braille receipts.
“He has all these boxes filled with braille receipts,” Nagori recalled. “He has to go through them line by line.”
That sparked their vision — build glasses that could instantly convert any text into audio.
Building the prototype took five months. They used Fusion 360 to design custom frames, printed them via 3D printer, and stuffed them with a camera, battery, tiny speakers, and a Raspberry Pi computer board.
For software, they trained a convolutional recurrent neural network (CRNN) on 800 images scraped from textbooks and educational materials — ensuring the model handled colorful fonts and varied lighting conditions.
Their accuracy hovered around 90% — impressive for a low-cost prototype — and load times averaged just 13 seconds.
Testing wasn’t easy. They ran dozens of rounds, feeding images into their model to generate MP3 files for manual review — constantly refining accuracy.
The Real Test: A Last-Minute Fix Before Presentation
Just hours before presenting at the national science competition, disaster struck.
“On the flight there, some of our soldering came off the Raspberry Pi,” Yen recounted. “Without the soldering, nothing worked.”
The boys were in panic mode. Their dad sprinted to a mechanic shop for a soldering iron. The three of them hunched over, wearing masks, and fixed the device manually.
“We were all tired,” Nagori admitted. “But we kept going. That’s what innovation looks like.”
They not only survived — they won first place and the Thermo Fisher Scientific Leadership Award.
Why This Matters More Than You Think
Silicon Valley is betting big on wearable AI — companies like Apple, Google, and Meta have spent billions developing smart glasses aimed at mainstream consumers.
Yet here’s the kicker: Three teenagers built something better — faster, cheaper, and more focused on real-world accessibility needs.
They didn’t need deep pockets or corporate backing. They needed curiosity, grit, and open-source tools — including Raspberry Pi, which costs less than $35.
“We’re currently working on implementing a lot of our glasses throughout California,” Nagori said. “We have a big 3D printer in my garage right now with 30 Raspberry Pis, 30 cameras, 30 batteries.”
They’re scaling up — and they’re doing it without venture capital. Just $5,000 in grants from their win.
This isn’t just a student project. It’s a blueprint for how innovation should work — fast, frugal, and focused on solving real problems.
For developers, this means AI doesn’t need to be expensive or complex to deliver real value. For users, it means accessible technology can come from anywhere — even a garage.
And for investors? It’s a reminder that sometimes, the most disruptive ideas aren’t born in boardrooms — but in high school science fairs.
Want more breaking tech analysis delivered fast? Subscribe to onlytrustedinfo.com — your go-to source for authoritative, no-fluff updates on what’s really moving the needle in tech.