On July 22, Samsung takes Galaxy Unpacked to London. While everyone will surely fixate on the new foldables, my eyes are on the pair of Android XR smartglasses.
A recent leak of Samsung’s internal Galaxy Glasses Manager app exposed the hardware and the companion software.
There’s a detail in the leak worth circling. The battery comes in at 155mAh. That’s a small cell.
It also happens to be the most consequential spec on the product, because it decides what these glasses can do before physics turns up to collect.
Fifty grams, and everything that fights for space
Putting a computer on a human face demands sacrifices. The frames have to look sleek to sell to the mainstream.
Samsung is reportedly aiming for about 50 grams on the baseline model.
For reference, the Galaxy XR mixed reality head unit weighs 545 grams, and has a separate 302-gram external battery pack.
Fifty grams doesn’t leave much room for a battery when you add in the chip, camera, directional speakers, microphone arrays, and photochromic lenses.
The battery needs to fit inside the temple arms, and a larger one means thicker frames and more load on the nose bridge.
And then heat enters the picture. Sustained computing on a face-worn device must stay capped, or else it might burn your skin.
Gemini wants a home that this battery can barely afford
Samsung and Google want these frames to be Gemini’s new home. The problem is that running a voice assistant off a live camera feed burns power fast.
On top of that, the glasses have to power a front-facing privacy LED, so bystanders know when recording is on, which regulators have come to expect thanks to Meta’s privacy problems.
Thankfully, Qualcomm’s AR1 chip is efficient, which buys these frames a bit of breathing room.
Even so, a full multimodal Gemini query has to wake the 12-megapixel sensor, process the image, hand it to your phone to reach Google’s servers, and get an answer back.
Doing all that computing on the frame would flatten a 155mAh cell quickly, which is why Samsung is expected to transfer the load to a paired phone.
How long the frames realistically last, broken down by task
Milliamp-hours alone tell you almost nothing about the daily experience.
A modern Android phone holds around 4,000mAh, the Galaxy Watch 9 packs 425mAh, and a typical wireless earbud sits near 50mAh.
Smartglasses land between an earbud and a watch, but with more demanding sensors.
Based on the power profile of comparable hardware, like Ray-Ban Meta, here’s how the frames are likely to behave.
Use case | Estimated endurance | Main drain |
Standby and notifications | 6 to 8 hours | Bluetooth polling, low-power wake-word detection |
Music and podcast playback | 3 to 4 hours | Speaker amplification at outdoor volumes |
Short voice queries | 4 to 6 hours | Mic array processing, Wi-Fi offload |
Continuous video recording | 30 to 45 min | 12MP sensor, continuous writes |
Live translation and visual AI | 45 min to 1 hour | Camera, mic, and radios running together |
Only half the endurance story sits in the frame’s 155mAh. The charging case carries the rest, and that’s where the all-day claims come from.
Earbuds get away with this because you pocket them anyway. Glasses you want on.
Each charge means the glasses come off and go back in the case for a bit, so forget how many hours it holds and ask how many times a day it interrupts you.
The case comes with strings too. Going bigger buys extra refills at the price of another gadget to carry and keep topped up. It’s also one more thing you might lose.
Your Unpacked day fact-checking list
Fitting a working device around a 155mAh cell is impressive. But it’s still 155mAh at the end of the day.
So when Samsung’s Meta Ray-Ban rival comes to the market, ignore Gemini marketing and look for these figures:
- The claimed “typical use” hours, and whether that number falls below five.
- The continuous video recording limit, which tells you where the thermal ceiling sits.
- Warnings about heat during long live translation sessions.
- The charging case capacity and how many full recharges it delivers.
The numbers Samsung is least proud of usually sit in small grayed-out text at the bottom of the slide, and “measured under specific conditions” asterisks almost always hide down there.
We’ll be covering it, so come back for more.
