Smart glasses are having their time in the sun. Besides the fashion industry, there is a swing in the air to make things easier and interesting for the workforce with the use of AI. Primary evidence was the Innovative Eyewear’s Lucyd Armor, a smart safety eyewear designed to meet all prerequisite standards for workplace safety. Now, at the ongoing Augmented World Expo (AWE) 2026, Viture has introduced Helix, the first pair of AI safety glasses built on Nvidia’s XR AI solution.
The safety eyewear powered by AI is engineered in accordance with industrial safety standards. After its certification, which is in progress at the time of writing, the eyewear will be safe to use in labs, factories, and other regulated workflows. With the use of Nvidia’s XR AI, Helix will stream a first-person perspective of the wearer – what they see or hear – and feed it to a multimodal AI in real time, enabling “AI-assisted coaching, compliance, and full-provenance capture of every shift worn.”
Designer: Viture
In industrial, scientific, and clinical use cases – that Viture is targeting with its Nvidia collaboration – the workforce has to ensure a lot more than their regular tasks. For instance, it’s imperative to note that the machine is locked before maintenance or the correct setting of the pressure gauge in the oxygen tank. Using the Helix smart glasses, the extras could be taken care of. The AI-powered glasses can watch what a worker sees and, in real time, provide live guidance and safety warnings. It can automatically record everything that happens during the job and provide AI-assisted input to help the wearer manage the workflow better.
Helix is Viture’s entry into AI. It is a pair of fully transparent industrial-grade glasses without a display. Only input in live recording and voice. The glasses arrive with a 12MP first-person camera and an array of four microphones. Alongside the prerequisites for seeing and listening, the eyewear also features stereo speakers for sound, Wi-Fi, and Bluetooth 5.3 for connectivity. The glasses rely on a small battery that runs for slightly above 60 minutes on a full charge.
Viture ensures that Helix is completely independent of connectivity points and cables. It runs standalone without pairing to a companion phone to get the job done, furthering its useful capabilities for workers. Its field lenses are swappable without tools. According to press information, Viture and Nvidia worked closely over the past year, improving AI-assisted workflows to offer purposeful assistance in real-life applications.
Helix will be unveiled via a live demonstration held at the NVIDIA/Dell meeting room at AWE 2026, but the eyewear is likely to debut earliest at the beginning of next year. Viture is confident of meeting the timeline and is therefore taking early reservations for the device on its website for a $599 reservation price.
