These AR smart glasses do more than just live translation

INMO’s GO3 smart glasses look like another step toward the whole “always-on AI assistant in your field of view” idea – but this time, the pitch goes way beyond simple live translation.

The GO3 is built around a binocular monochrome micro-LED waveguide display, offering a 30° field of view and up to 1,500 nits of brightness. It runs on a dual-chip architecture designed to cut power use when the glasses are on standby. The frame itself weighs just 58g and is made from aluminium alloy and PA, so it’s light enough for all-day wear while still packing a surprisingly dense feature set.

Translation is still the big headline feature. You get support for 78 languages, translation output in 98 languages, and nine languages available offline when you’re not connected. But the GO3 stretches this into something closer to a real-time communication layer.

Bidirectional live translation means you can see what someone else is saying, translated on the fly, while your own replies are converted in real time too. It turns conversations into rolling subtitles in both directions.

Where the GO3 really starts to differ from earlier AR glasses is in how much it tries to plug into day-to-day workflows. There’s AR navigation powered by HERE Maps, real-time subtitles for meetings and lectures, and an AI teleprompter mode that scrolls scripts in sync with your speaking pace. An “AI note” feature can record, transcribe, and summarise conversations, and it also picks out key action points – all helped by a four-microphone array that boosts voice clarity.

Advertisement

The way you interact with the glasses is just as layered. You can control them using voice commands, taps on the temple, your smartphone, or even a companion smart ring for gesture-based navigation. That range of options makes it clear INMO wants the GO3 to be a general-purpose input device rather than a single-purpose translation tool.

Battery life is another area where INMO is trying to stand out. Instead of relying solely on an internal battery, the GO3 uses a swappable dual-battery setup and a charging case that keeps spare cells topped up. INMO says you can swap each battery in about five seconds, which is meant to deliver genuinely all-day use without the usual charging breaks.

On paper, the GO3 is trying to do a lot: translation, navigation, productivity, communication, and note-taking, all built into a lightweight AR frame with a relatively modest 640×480 display resolution. It’s less a dedicated translation gadget and more an attempt at a wearable interface for AI-assisted daily tasks.

Whether all of that actually feels smooth and natural in everyday use will depend heavily on the software and long-term comfort. Still, the direction is pretty clear: translation is just the starting point here, not the main event.

The post These AR smart glasses do more than just live translation appeared first on Trusted Reviews.

Scroll to Top