Skip to main content

Did Google shoot too high with its Glass ‘moonshot,’ or not high enough?

Astro Teller
Astro Teller TechCrunch/flickr
Last week at SXSW Interactive, a Google director with the decidedly awesome (and strangely appropriate) name of Astro Teller delivered a closing keynote speech about his company’s moonshot philosophy. If you weren’t there, your familiarity with the talk likely came from clicking on a resulting story with a headline baring some variation of, “Google Exec Admits That Glass Was a Failure.”

The truth is, naturally, a far more nuanced thing. Teller did, indeed, address the technology and some missteps surrounding its implementation, but did it all through the frame of X Labs Moonshots.

“In retrospect, we made one good decision and one bad decision around the Glass Explorer program. The good decision was that we did it. The bad decision was that we allowed and sometimes even encouraged too much attention for the program.”

We’re left with an obscenely expensive, weird-looking, underperforming piece of hardware.

In other words, the mistake wasn’t in the program’s inception, but rather its, ahem, optics. It’s hardly the “we totally blew it” admission some wanted or expected. Rather it’s a “we did mostly the right thing, but we allowed you to think about it the wrong way.” The way Teller tells it, Project Glass looked bad from the outside because Google was trying to create a more futuristic future and we thought it was peddling a flawed present.

Google defines a moonshot, in part, with the number 10. “By saying we’re taking moonshots,” Teller explains, “we mean we’re going to go after something that’s 10 times better rather than incremental, 10-percent kind of progress.”

Think Wi-Fi weather balloons and self-driving cars. Projects like these are whimsical enough for most viewers to recognize immediately that Google isn’t expecting to deliver next quarter. Google’s focus on the sometimes far-off future is one of the things that make it such a delightful company to watch.

So, why couldn’t we afford Glass that same leeway? The answer’s simple: The wearable future Glass promised is pretty much here. Glass arrived alongside a sea of Pebble Watches and Oculus Rifts. Sure, the things looked pretty weird and carried a hefty price tag, but once those initial shocks wore off, Glass became yet another wearable.

What’s worse, as we acclimated to people walking around with computers on their faces, the familiarity seemed to quickly erase the notion of beta testing. Once the idea of “Voyagers” is removed from the equation, we’re left with an obscenely expensive, weird-looking, underperforming piece of hardware with little in the way of third-party app support.

Taken out of Google’s broader context, that sounds like a lot of failure to me. Those notions were no doubt only compounded by the perception that the company had abandoned the project in favor of the much broader and more consumer-focused Android Wear platform.

Teller is right: Glass stumbled in part due to the way Google positioned it. That first sky diver-filled press conference was awfully hard for most consumers to distinguish from a product launch. But I do wonder, if Google had quietly opened beta testing with less fanfare, would the conversation look all that different?

There’s a great irony to all of this: A company beloved for its forward thinking perceived a product as far more of a pipe dream than consumers did.

It might have, if the company had used every opportunity to shout from the rooftops that the hardware wasn’t the thing. Even still, Google is a consumer-focused company that creates consumer-focused products in a consumer-focused world. Of course that message got muddled in the process.

I’m certainly not advocating that the company should shut down its moonshot program. It’s one of the most enduringly charming things about Google — something that separates it from a sea of like-minded tech companies. Ditto for the focus on transparency in many projects.

On the off-chance that any Google execs are reading, here’s a little free advice: Save the real-world testing for projects that feel truly crazy, the ones that make us wonder what the heck you could possibly be thinking. The public loves those — and more to the point, they innately understand that there are plenty of obstacles standing in the way.

There’s a great irony to all of this: A company beloved for its forward thinking perceived a product as far more of a pipe dream than consumers did. Rather than going for broke, the company used the Voyager program as a baby step to test the water.

But if you’re going to shoot for the moon, you have to aim higher.

Editors' Recommendations

Brian Heater
Brian Heater has worked at number of tech pubs, including Engadget, PCMag and Laptop. His writing has appeared in Spin…
The Google Pixel 8a’s 6 biggest upgrades over the Pixel 7a
Pixel 7a back.

The Google Pixel 8a has just launched, and it comes with many upgrades that Pixel fans have been hoping for. These include some attractive new design flourishes, beefed-up hardware, a longer-lasting battery, and a higher-end display. You also get all the software features that make the Pixel series so appealing, including seven years of OS and security updates and Gemini Nano for more AI features.

But how does all of this compare to the already great Pixel 7a? Here’s a breakdown of the Google Pixel 8a’s six biggest upgrades over the Pixel 7a. For a closer look at all of the differences between the two phones, see our Pixel 8a vs. Pixel 7a comparison.
The Tensor G3 chip

Read more
How to make AirPods and AirPods Pro louder and adjust volume settings
On-screen volume adjustment for AirPods using Spotify.

AirPods have become the top choice for wireless earbuds among most people because of their unmatched sound quality and innovative features such as Spatial Audio, which provides an immersive audio experience. And, of course, Apple’s marketing has also played a significant role in promoting their popularity.

If you’re looking for ways to adjust the volume on your AirPods or AirPods Pro, there are several options available. You can use your favorite apps that support AirPods, ask Siri to do it, or use the buttons and features on your devices and the AirPods themselves. Any of the options will help to ensure you get the best out of your AirPods.

Read more
iPad Pro (2024) vs. iPad Air (2024): the difference is clear
Comparing the iPad Pro (2024) and iPad Air (2024)

The iPad Pro (left) and iPad Air Bryan M. Wolfe / Digital Trends

During its "Let Loose" event on May 7, Apple added four new iPad models to its tablet lineup. The latest models include an 11-inch and all-new 13-inch iPad Air and next-generation 11-inch and 13-inch iPad Pro models. Despite sharing similar dimensions, there's a significant price gap between the least expensive iPad Air and iPad Pro tablets, indicating notable differences between the two lineups.

Read more