Microsoft has unveiled a prototype AI-powered wearable badge for workplace use, offering a glimpse into how employees may interact with artificial intelligence in the future. Microsoft is testing an AI-powered badge as part of its internal Project Solara. Despite looking like any ordinary ID card, this gadget has a camera, mic, speaker, touch screen, and even fingerprint reading. It can also connect wirelessly.
Designed to provide easy access to AI tools, the system won’t require employees to use their phones or computers. This means work tasks could become quicker and more convenient right from the start.
According to the company, the badge can record and transcribe meetings, capture visual information, retrieve data, and respond to voice commands. Employees can interact with AI assistants directly on their devices as they move around the workplace.
Microsoft demonstrated the badge handling tasks such as summarising conversations, accessing workplace information, and providing contextual assistance in real time.
The company sees potential applications across offices, healthcare facilities, retail stores, and warehouses, where workers often need information on the move.
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The wearable is one of the first devices linked to Project Solara, Microsoft’s initiative to build what it describes as an ‘agent-first’ computing platform. Instead of opening separate applications, users interact with AI agents that can complete tasks across multiple services.
Microsoft won’t be selling the badge directly. They’ll give the design to hardware partners, who’ll make commercial versions for different industries.
This comes as big tech firms look into new AI-focused gadgets beyond phones and computers.
The badge’s ability to record conversations and snap pics means it’ll likely get a lot of flak from privacy groups and workplace gurus. Expect tons of questions about data handling and consent if Microsoft moves forward with this.
The company claims the gadget has safety features such as fingerprint verification and management controls. Yet, they haven’t shared when or if it’ll go beyond the test phase.
Right now, it’s still just a prototype. Still, it shows Microsoft is really into making AI helpers an everyday part of work life, not just apps on devices.