Apple’s Next AI Device Might Be a Pendant That Needs Your iPhone to Work

Apple explores wearable AI pendant that relies on iPhone processing power, targeting 2027 launch alongside smart glasses

Alex Barrientos Avatar
Alex Barrientos Avatar

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Image: Apple

Key Takeaways

Key Takeaways

  • Apple develops AirTag-sized AI pendant requiring iPhone connectivity for processing power
  • Always-on camera and microphone offload AI computations to paired iPhone devices
  • Pendant joins smart glasses and enhanced AirPods in 2027 wearable strategy

Your iPhone already does everything, but Apple reportedly wants you to wear another device that talks to it. This AirTag-sized AI pendant can’t function without your phone’s processing power, unlike the failed Humane AI Pin that promised standalone AI computing. Bloomberg and The Information report that Apple’s pendant relies entirely on iPhone connectivity for its AI features—making it less revolutionary breakthrough than expensive accessory.

Always-On Camera, Always-On Questions

The pendant watches everything but processes nothing.

The pendant packs an always-on camera and microphone into a form factor you’ll clip to clothing or wear as a necklace. Engineers are debating whether to include a speaker, though Siri responses would likely route through your paired iPhone anyway. The device contains its own chip but offloads heavy AI processing to your phone, positioning it as “eyes and ears” for enhanced Siri interactions coming in iOS 27.

Part of Apple’s Wearable Trio Strategy

Three devices, one AI assistant, endless connectivity requirements.

This pendant joins two other rumored AI wearables:

  • Smart glasses codenamed N50 with high-resolution cameras
  • Enhanced AirPods with AI features

All three integrate with upcoming Siri upgrades—iOS 26.5 adds personalized features while iOS 27 promises full chatbot capabilities. Apple’s betting you’ll want multiple ways to access the same AI assistant, though the company could cancel any of these projects before launch.

The iPhone Ecosystem Fatigue Factor

Your pockets are already full of Apple devices.

Unlike Humane’s $700 standalone device that flopped spectacularly, Apple’s approach acknowledges that your iPhone remains the computational center. The pendant potentially launches in 2027, assuming development continues past its current early stage. You’re already carrying AirPods, possibly an Apple Watch, and definitely your iPhone—this pendant asks whether you need a fourth device providing similar functionality through different hardware.

Whether Apple can convince you to wear yet another connected accessory depends on solving problems you didn’t know you had. The company excels at creating desire for products that seem unnecessary until they become indispensable. This pendant faces steeper odds in an increasingly crowded wearable market where even Apple’s own devices sometimes struggle to justify their existence beyond the initial novelty.

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