Meta has acquired Limitless, an AI wearable startup best known for its pendant-like recording device, in a deal that deepens the company’s bet on AI-powered consumer hardware and “personal superintelligence” experiences. The move folds Limitless’s team and technology into Meta’s fast-expanding smart glasses and wearable ecosystem, positioning the social media and metaverse giant to shape the emerging market for AI wearables.
Meta Buys Limitless: A New Bet on AI Wearables
Meta confirmed the acquisition of Limitless, a startup that develops a small AI-powered pendant capable of recording real-world conversations and turning them into searchable, summarized notes via a companion app. The companies did not disclose financial terms, but the deal was publicly announced by Limitless CEO Dan Siroker and later confirmed by Meta, framing the merger as a strategic alignment around AI-enabled wearables and “personal superintelligence.”
Limitless, originally known as Rewind, pivoted from desktop software to hardware in 2023–2024 with the launch of its $99 Limitless Pendant, a wearable that clips to clothing or hangs on a lanyard and continuously listens to conversations to generate transcripts and AI-powered summaries. By joining Meta, Limitless will stop selling new hardware but will support existing customers for a limited transition period while its team shifts focus to Meta’s own device roadmap.
Who Is Limitless and What Does It Build?
Limitless sits at the intersection of AI, productivity tools, and wearable computing, positioning its products as “second brains” that help users remember, search, and act on their daily interactions. Its core device is a discreet, lightweight pendant that captures audio from in‑person meetings and spontaneous conversations, then sends it to an AI system that produces notes, summaries, action lists, and searchable archives.
The company’s origins trace back to Rewind, a desktop app that recorded a user’s on-screen activity and audio to create a personal timeline that could be searched later with natural language queries. As privacy concerns and hardware momentum shifted the market, Rewind rebranded as Limitless and moved heavily into a dedicated wearable, marketing it as a way to stay fully present in meetings while still getting perfect AI-generated notes afterward.
Meta’s Vision: “Personal Superintelligence” on Your Face and Body
Meta has been increasingly explicit about its ambition to deliver “personal superintelligence” to consumers, describing a future where AI assistants are always with users through glasses, wearables, and other subtle devices. That vision is already visible in the company’s AI glasses lineup: Ray-Ban Meta glasses, Oakley Meta sports glasses, and the newer Meta Ray-Ban Display model that adds an in-lens color screen and neural wristband control.
These devices combine cameras, microphones, and Meta’s voice-based assistant to let users capture photos and videos, dictate messages, get information, and even see live captions and translations in their field of view on the Display model. Bringing Limitless into this ecosystem gives Meta a team that has spent years thinking about continuous audio capture, transcription accuracy, and turning raw conversation into useful, contextualized memory—all elements that fit naturally into Meta’s AI glasses strategy.
Why Meta Wants Limitless
There are several strategic reasons why this acquisition matters to Meta:
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AI note‑taking and memory as core features
Limitless specializes in transforming ambient audio into structured knowledge—summaries, key points, and tasks—which can make AI glasses and wearables far more compelling for work and everyday productivity. By absorbing this technology, Meta can give its glasses the ability not just to record or respond, but to remember and organize a user’s day in the background. -
Expertise in always-on capture and UX
Building a device that listens continuously, manages battery and connectivity, and surfaces relevant snippets without overwhelming users requires careful hardware–software integration and interface design. Limitless already tackled many of these challenges with its pendant and app, giving Meta a ready-made team experienced in subtle, always-on interfaces that could port well to glasses and bands. -
Staying ahead in the AI wearables race
The market for AI wearables is filling up with pendants, badges, and wrist devices that promise AI assistance, but no single product has yet become dominant. Meta’s smart glasses have been a relative bright spot in the category, and adding Limitless strengthens its position against rivals in Big Tech and startups competing for the same “AI companion” space.
What Changes for Limitless Customers
In the short term, the acquisition means the standalone Limitless hardware business will wind down even as Meta takes over its technology and team. The company has announced it will stop selling new Limitless devices and will focus on transitioning existing users. Customers who already own the pendant will receive up to a year of support, including an upgrade to an “Unlimited” plan that waives subscription fees during the transition period.
However, other parts of the original Rewind/Limitless product line are being phased out. The desktop‑centric Rewind software, which recorded and indexed on-screen and audio activity, is planned for shutdown, signaling that Meta is more interested in the wearable capabilities than in maintaining a standalone productivity app. Over time, users can expect Limitless features to reappear in Meta-branded experiences rather than as an independent product.
The Emerging AI Wearables Market
The acquisition comes as AI wearables are evolving from futuristic concept to crowded product category, even if mainstream adoption remains uncertain. Devices like Limitless’s pendant, along with similar gadgets from startups such as Friend, Plaud, and Bee, all promise to augment human memory, capture spontaneous moments, and provide hands-free AI assistance. Some take the form of badges clipped to clothing, while others resemble small cards or wristbands designed to be worn all day.
At the same time, Meta is betting heavily on glasses as the lead hardware for AI assistance, building on the unexpectedly strong traction of its Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses. These have succeeded partly because they look and feel like normal eyewear while quietly integrating cameras, microphones, and Meta’s AI, setting them apart from more conspicuous or experimental-looking devices.
How Limitless Tech Could Show Up in Meta Products
Even though Meta is unlikely to sell a rebadged Limitless pendant, the know‑how behind the device could significantly shape future Meta wearables. Several obvious integration paths stand out:
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Smarter meeting and conversation tools in glasses
Imagine Meta Ray-Ban Display glasses that not only show live captions and translations, but also generate structured summaries of meetings, identify follow-up items, and sync those notes across Meta’s apps and productivity tools. Limitless’s experience turning raw audio into usable notes makes this scenario technically and conceptually plausible. -
Contextual “second brain” for daily life
With continuous audio capture and AI summarization, Meta could extend its assistant from answering questions to proactively reminding users what was said, who committed to what, or where important details were mentioned. This would align with the “personal superintelligence” narrative—augmenting memory and decision-making rather than just providing search-style responses. -
Better onboarding for productivity-focused users
Limitless targeted professionals who spend their days in meetings, selling its pendant as a work tool rather than a novelty gadget. Meta could use that positioning and product experience to tailor certain glasses bundles, subscriptions, or software features directly at knowledge workers, consultants, and executives.
Privacy, Consent, and Ethical Questions
A device that records conversations continuously and sends them to the cloud for analysis inevitably raises privacy concerns, and Meta’s involvement sharpens the scrutiny. Limitless’s pendant sparked discussion about consent: how much control do bystanders have when someone’s wearable is capturing everything they say, and are they clearly informed?
Meta has already faced criticism over the data practices of its social networks and hardware products, and AI wearables could amplify those worries. Regulators and advocates will likely focus on:
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How prominently recording indicators are displayed on glasses or pendants.
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What controls users have to pause, delete, or limit recordings.
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Where and how securely voice data and transcripts are stored and processed.
Meta has emphasized privacy-preserving designs for its smart glasses, but the integration of Limitless-style persistent recording will test how convincingly the company can balance innovation with public trust.
Competitive Pressure on Big Tech
Meta’s purchase of Limitless also sends a message to other tech giants racing to fuse AI models with hardware. Google, Amazon, Apple, and a wave of startups are exploring new form factors for AI assistants, from earbuds and wristbands to display-heavy AR headsets. Amazon, for instance, has already picked up at least one AI wearable startup of its own, demonstrating that major platforms see wearables as a strategic frontier for AI experiences.
Meta’s move shows a willingness to acquire specialized AI hardware teams rather than relying solely on internal R&D. That could force rivals to move faster on either building or buying companies that have proven capabilities in real-world audio capture, context modeling, and low-friction UX in wearables.
What It Means for Meta’s Long-Term Strategy
Beyond the immediate technical integration, the Limitless deal fits into a broader repositioning of Meta from a social networking company to a hardware-and-AI platform provider. The company has spent years investing in VR headsets, AR glasses, and neural interfaces, and now AI wearables are emerging as the connective tissue tying those efforts together.
Smart glasses—especially models like Ray-Ban Meta and Ray-Ban Display—are now central to Meta’s attempt to make AI a constant presence in users’ lives, rather than something only accessed on phones or PCs. Limitless’s technology reinforces that strategy by making AI not only present but also persistently attentive, capable of transforming a user’s daily stream of interactions into an organized digital memory layer.
Outlook: From Social Feeds to Personal Superintelligence
Meta’s acquisition of Limitless underscores how quickly AI hardware is moving from experiment to strategic asset, as tech giants look for ways to embed large models into everyday routines through subtle devices rather than screens alone. If Meta successfully folds Limitless’s capabilities into its glasses and future wearables, the result could be products that don’t just capture and display information, but actively help users remember, prioritize, and act.
For Limitless, joining Meta means sacrificing its independence but gaining access to a massive distribution platform and deep AI resources, which could bring its “second brain” vision to millions of people rather than a niche early adopter base. For users and regulators, it raises urgent questions about consent, control, and data rights in an era where what you say in passing might be permanently recorded and analyzed by an AI in someone’s glasses or pinned to their shirt.
Either way, the deal confirms that the next phase of Meta’s evolution—and a key battleground in the AI race—will not just be in apps or headsets, but in small, intelligent devices worn on faces, wrists, and lapels, quietly listening and learning all day long






