We Ship. They Demo.
There's a lot of narrative in the neural-input space right now. Polished launch videos, grand platform names, ambitious category claims — for products that, in many cases, you can't actually buy. The storytelling is impressive. The shipping is not.
We've taken the opposite path, and it's worth being plain about why. Wearable Devices has been shipping commercial neural wristbands since 2023 — first the Mudra Band for Apple Watch, then the Mudra Link. Thousands of people use them. We're a public company (Nasdaq: WLDS) with audited financials, a patent portfolio, and a CES Innovation Award. None of that is a promise about the future; it's a record of the past.
That matters for a simple reason: in this category, shipping is the hard part. Demoing a gesture once, under controlled conditions, in a video, is comparatively easy. Getting a wrist EMG signal to work reliably across thousands of different bodies, every day, in the real world, without constant recalibration — that's the part most entrants never reach. It's the difference between a concept and a product.
We're also open in a way the biggest players aren't. Meta proved wrist EMG works at scale — and then locked it to an $799 pair of its own glasses. Apple's gestures are camera-based and confined to Apple hardware. Our technology is available to any device manufacturer and any developer, from a $249 band you can buy today up to full integration.
None of this is a knock on ambition. Ambition is good; we have plenty, and our research roadmap is genuinely far-reaching. The point is that ambition should be anchored in something real. We'd rather show you the product working on actual AR glasses than tell you what it'll do someday.
So when you're evaluating options in this space, ask the simplest question: can I buy it and use it today? For us, the answer is yes — and has been for years.