Google Revives AI Smart Glasses for 2026
Google plans to release AI-enabled smart glasses in 2026, according to CNBC. The report said the device will run on Android XR and incorporate Google’s Gemini model to deliver real-time answers, translation tools and optional augmented displays.
The glasses mark Google’s return to wearables after earlier efforts with Glass. This version focuses on hands-free access to information rather than novelty features. By placing AI in a format that handles simple, in-the-moment tasks, Google extends its platform into a physical product category that could sit alongside smartphones rather than replace them. That same theme of integration carries into developments happening inside the federal government.
Pentagon Selects Google’s AI
Bloomberg reported that the U.S. Department of Defense chose Google’s AI platform to support roughly three million civilian and military employees. The selection allows staff across the department to use AI tools for research, internal documentation and information processing.
The decision places Google’s system inside one of the country’s largest workforces and shows how AI tools are being adopted not only for specialized defense applications but also for routine administrative work. These systems help employees process large volumes of material quickly. The trend also appears in private-sector investment as companies fund the next layer of AI capabilities.
SoftBank and Nvidia to Invest in Skild AI
Reuters reported that SoftBank and Nvidia are in discussions to invest in Skild AI at a valuation of about $14 billion, nearly tripling its earlier valuation of $4.7 billion.
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Skild AI develops foundation models for robotics, training systems that help robots interpret physical environments and perform tasks. While the field faces significant technical challenges, the rapid increase in valuation indicates that investors see AI-driven robotics as a category poised for broader experimentation. The need for large-scale compute resources in this area connects directly to the expansion of cloud infrastructure elsewhere in the market.
Meta Signs Multiple News Licensing Deals
Meta reached agreements with several major publishers, including CNN, USA Today and Fox News, to license news content for its AI assistant, according to CNBC. The company said the licensed material will help the assistant provide answers grounded in current and verified reporting.
These agreements shift how platforms work with publishers. Instead of supplying content for social feeds, the licensed material supports AI systems that respond directly to user queries. The arrangements reflect a broader trend toward grounding AI tools in professionally produced information as companies adjust to questions about accuracy and source quality in generative systems. The focus on reliable data mirrors the infrastructure investment happening at national scale.
Microsoft Commits to AI infrastructure in Canada and India
Microsoft announced $19 billion in AI and cloud infrastructure investments in Canada, which include new data centers and expanded cloud regions across the country. Reuters reported that more than five billion dollars of that amount will be deployed over the next two years.
Microsoft will also invest $17.5 billion in India over four years to build hyperscale data centers and cloud infrastructure to support rising AI workloads. The plan centered on building a new hyperscale cloud region in Hyderabad that comes online in 2026, expanding existing data-center regions in Chennai and Pune, and supporting nationwide AI adoption.
Amazon Pours $35 Billion More Into India
Amazon has announced a plan to invest an additional $35 billion in India by 2030. This investment is strategically aimed at furthering its business expansion, promoting artificial intelligence (AI) digitization, boosting export growth, and generating new jobs within the country.
The new financial commitment will increase Amazon’s total investment in India, which already stands at $40 billion allocated for infrastructure development and employee compensation, according to the company. To date, Amazon’s efforts have digitized 12 million small businesses, facilitated $20 billion in cumulative eCommerce exports, and supported a total of 2.8 million jobs. These previous investments funded crucial infrastructure, including fulfillment centers, data centers, digital payments systems, and robust transportation and technology networks.
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