Humane AI Pins promises to give users a way to use generative AI in the physical world. Clip the pin to your shirt, speak to it, and the chatbot's answers can be projected onto any surface, most often the palm of your hand. We know a thing or two about what powers the little square pin, but thanks to a new report, we now have a better understanding of what's going on inside.
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) included a disassembled photo of the AI ​​pin in a new report. These photos provide the clearest yet close-up view of the components of the Humane AI pin and the Snapdragon processor it uses.
The FCC must certify devices that use wireless communications to ensure compliance with regulations before release. To the masses. The product is then given a nifty FCC mark. This review process often involves disassembling the gadget so the committee can inspect what's inside.
We already knew that AI Pin would work with Snapdragon, but the company didn't reveal the version. Looking at the photo, this Pin appears to use a Snapdragon 720G processor. Qualcomm says on its website that it can run on-device AI on mobile devices with low power. The Snapdragon 720G is one of the smaller chips available that can also handle AI compute loads.
Admittedly, there are still questions as to why the Humane AI pin exists, but at least we know it uses a chip powerful enough to project ChatGPT results into the palm of your hand.