MemoMind One turns the most familiar object on your face into something far stranger: a screen only you can see. There’s no camera in the frame, yet the glasses place a dual Micro-LED display in front of your eyes, with a bright 2000-nit image designed to stay readable in daylight.
The illusion is the point
From a distance, MemoMind One reads like everyday eyewear. Up close, the design is built around privacy and discretion — a display that floats in your view, not a bulky headset that announces itself from across the room.
- Dual Micro-LED display with 2000 nits of brightness
- Camera-free frame focused on privacy
- 46.6 g wearable form factor
- Open-ear audio powered by Harman AudioEFX
Built for long wear, not short demos
The headline here is not just the display — it’s the shape of the product. MemoMind One is pitched as all-day glasses, with a lightweight frame, balanced temples, and prescription lens compatibility. The idea is simple: wear it like normal eyewear, then glance up when you need a private prompt, translation, note, or reminder.
What stands out
Hidden screen: the display sits inside the glasses instead of on your face as a bulky visor.
Open-ear sound: audio comes through the temples without sealing you off from the room.
Daily use: the design aims to blend into meetings, walks, and commuting.
Now available to order
MemoMind One is available to reserve through MemoMind, putting this unusual “screen-in-glasses” concept into the real shopping cart stage. The appeal is visual first: a near-invisible display, inside a frame that still looks like eyewear you might actually keep on all day.
That’s the wow moment: a private screen, floating in front of your eyes, without the usual headset silhouette.
Open the official page to learn more.