Meta Reportedly Has a Slew of New Smart Glasses Planned for This Year Meta has reportedly planned a slate of new smart glasses for 2025, including a December release codenamed "Mojito VIP" and two prototypes called "Artemis" and "SSG" for fall testing, according to a report from The Information. The "supersensing" SSG model would feature always-on cameras to provide ambient visual assistance, such as remembering where users left their keys, without requiring voice commands or button activation. The push reflects Meta's broader pivot from metaverse hardware to real-world tracking devices, as the company seeks to expand its data collection capabilities beyond virtual environments. James Pero, summarizing for Gizmodo this paywalled report by Jyoti Mann https://www.theinformation.com/articles/meta-memo-outlines-ambitious-hardware-plans-including-new-ai-pendant for The Information: But, wait, there’s more: in addition to the fall releases, The Information reports that Meta also has a pair slated for December, codenamed “Mojito VIP.” There are also two prototypes being tested in the fall, according to the report, including one called “Artemis” and another called “SSG,” which is short for “supersensing glasses.” The Information previously reported that the “supersensing” pair would have always-on cameras capable of looking at your surroundings without you having to prompt the voice assistant or activate the camera with a button. The idea here is that, with a constant stream of visual information, the smart glasses could be a kind of ambient virtual assistant that remembers where you left your keys or other vision-based reminders. Spitball: Meta’s entire business is predicated on knowing as much about people as possible. Their interest in building out a virtual “metaverse” world was motivated by the fact they could track everything people do, see, say, and hear there. That didn’t play out https://daringfireball.net/linked/2026/06/01/the-metaverse-fever-dream so they’re pivoting to building out devices that will let them track everything people do, see, say, and hear in the real world.