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The Humane Ai Pin Has Already Been Brought Back to Life

The Humane Ai Pin Has Already Been Brought Back to Life

WIRED01-03-2025

Feb 28, 2025 11:54 PM Humane bricked its pricey gadget on Friday afternoon. A short time later, a hacker got the codes to unlock it and potentially turn it into the true smartphone replacement it was meant to be.
The day the Humane Ai Pin died, it was also reborn. Or at least, there was hope.
On February 28, shortly after noon Pacific time, Humane switched off its servers supporting its contentious Ai Pin—essentially bricking a $700 device that was less than a year old. Minutes later, in a Discord voice chatroom with the label 'The death of Ai Pin,' one member of a band of dedicated hackers, determined to keep their Pins alive, let the rest of the group in on a secret. He had the codes they needed to get through Humane's encryption.
Humane's gadget is the poster child of AI-enhanced hardware disappointments. The cute, clippable device was meant to hang on a lapel or shirt pocket and let you carry out many of the functions you'd find in a phone—take pictures, display text messages, and order around an AI chatbot, all with some added pizazz in the form of Humane's promised holographic laser displays.
Released to the world in April 2024, the Pin was an immediate disappointment. Its main features simply did not work well, and from there things just got worse. The Pin was a resounding flop, widely mocked, and the company even reached the point where it processed more returns of the device than it had sold. In February 2025, less than a year after the Pin was released, Humane announced it would shut down its services at the end of the month—Friday, February 28—and part off some of its key AI components to the computer company HP. Humane offered few concessions to Pin owners. Refunds would only be given if someone had purchased a Pin within the past 90 days.
For the remaining fans of the expensive, short-lived device, the move was a gut punch. In the final week of the Humane Ai Pin's short life, soon-to-be-former users ran through all of the stages of grief across Humane's subreddits and Discord servers. There were furious rebukes. Heartbroken goodbyes. Disappointment all around.
'We're super bummed,' says a Humane Pin user who asked to go by his X handle, @23box_, or just '23' out of fear of being targeted by 'a multi-billion dollar company beholden to shareholders.' He was an early adopter and evangelist for Humane's device who says he used the Humane Ai Pin regularly, up until the minute it went out of service. 'This is a super unique device that we used almost every day for almost a year. We really just wanted this to have a good run.'
The official Humane Discord was shut down the morning of February 27. Luckily, 23 had already decided to start a separate Discord server for Humane refugees, called reHumane, in an effort to pursue unsanctioned forays into deconstructing the Pin away from the watchful eye of Humane or HP.
'We didn't want them to know what we were doing,' 23 says.
Marcel, another user who gave only his first name to avoid exposing himself to reprisal from HP, saw the end of Humane's brief era as something exciting. He is used to tearing things like this apart. He has constructed his own PlayStation Portal out of a Nintendo Switch. He was one of the first people to transfer the Rabbit R1 source code onto an Android phone (much to the chagrin of a company that insisted its device was not simply an Android app).
The Humane Ai Pin lineup. Courtesy of Humane
As soon as Humane announced it would be bricking the device, he hurried to figure out how to crack the thing open. Lots of people on the Discord felt the same way—where once they owned a misunderstood, widely mocked device, now there was an opportunity.
'Everyone was pretty psyched to get into this,' Marcel says.
The Humane Ai Pin runs an instance of Android as its OS, which means in theory the system could be debugged and have custom apps sideloaded onto it. But the Pin needed to be able to connect to another computer to do that. Since Humane's service was being shut down, wireless features wouldn't work either—it had to be a wired connection. But the Humane Ai Pin has no obvious ports, so finding the way to plug it in wasn't immediately apparent.
In a Discord channel dedicated to modifying the Pin, users quickly figured out how to uncover the hidden DIM connectors—they were covered with a moon-shaped sticker of Humane's logo—that would enable a wired connection from the Pin to a computer. The problem was the connectors were tiny, barely 1 millimeter apart, and nobody had any other cords that would fit. After trying several different connector types, Marcel and other tinkerers opted to create their own. Marcel sliced up four different USB cables looking for one with the right wires that could connect to the sensors on the Pin. He soldered them on, plugged the other end of the cord into his computer, and had them connected.
But there was another problem. Humane planned to brick the device completely, meaning the operating system on the Pin would be inaccessible after it was shut down. The chip inside the device is encrypted in such a way that it would be difficult to bypass without losing the data and software that makes the Pin operate the way it does. When people like Marcel got it hooked up to their computers, they were greeted with an impassable screen. Marcel, and the community at large, were stuck. It was technically possible to hack it—the right geek can hack just about anything eventually—but getting through that encryption was a different matter.
In the meantime, the community responded by organizing and sharing what they could. Brendan Brannock, a 30-year-old network engineer in Florida also working on a way to connect with his Humane Pin, put together a knowledge base document to help other people in the community start tinkering with their own devices. He found a compatible wiring device on Amazon that would connect to the Humane Pin's port and fiddled his way into building a 3D model of a base that would hold the connection in place. He shared the base model on the Discord so anyone with access to a 3D printer could make one for themselves. Connecting the cables still wasn't easy, but making the resources widely available meant more people could get cracking on the project.
Brannock bought the Pin because he says he is interested in the frontiers of technology. He has self-implanted three NFC chips under his skin. ('I had a little bit of help from a couple glasses of whiskey,' he says.) They let him do things like start his car, unlock the doors on his house, and log into his password-protected accounts on a computer. The Humane Pin fit right into that spirit of DIY techno experimentation.
'The goal for any device like this is to make it do more,' Brannock says, 'Get the most out of your money.'
Humane owners on the reHumane Discord called for the company to put out an OTA—an over the air update that would enable them to access the OS on the device. Humane, in its downward spiral toward dissolution, didn't make any moves to do that. (Humane did not respond to multiple requests for comment for this story.)
The Humane Ai Pin has a built-in projector designed to show messages on your outstretched hand. Courtesy of Humane
Still, the word got out, and shortly after the device was shut down on February 28, Marcel had an announcement. Somebody from Humane—he would never say who—had slipped him and a few other users access codes which would let them use Android Debug Bug tools on the Pin to get through Humane's encryption.
In the Discord voice chat, Marcel broke the news by sharing his screen and turning on the camera facing his desk. He held out his hand, and across his palm the Humane Ai Pin's laser projector played the music video for Nomico's 'Bad Apple,' which has become a meme as the first video hackers put on a jailbroken device. The chat went wild. The Ai Pin was theirs.
Marcel's proclamation caused some fuss, as some of the people in the community who also knew about this development were hoping to hold off a week or two longer. If they tinkered away quietly, after all the fuss had died down, perhaps invested interests like the remnants of Humane and HP would be less inclined to force another update to undo the access that had been granted.
'If we had been quiet about this,' Marcel said in the voice channel, 'it would have taken months and people would have just sold the device and just forgotten about it. This has been a very cool send away from Humane services, and hopefully a new era for these devices.'
What exactly Pin users want to do with the device after they crack it open depends on who you ask. Some of them have grand ambitions, like a user in the voice channel who said, 'I keep telling them they should just make this thing shoot lasers.' Marcel just wants to figure out how the thing works, and back up the data to explore later. Brannock and 23 both want to use the Pin for precisely what it is: a smartphone replacement that doesn't require staring at a screen. Others feel the same.
'One of my favorite things about the Pin was capturing memories without a screen between us and our son,' wrote one poster on the Discord, alongside a video of his toddler's first steps, captured by the Pin.
Ultimately, the people breaking these devices open really want what they felt like Humane promised them, then ultimately failed to keep alive. They want a device that can capture photos and videos, support some large language model or another, and be used to interact with the world without having to pull a phone out of their pocket.
'There's a reason we got these devices,' 23 says. 'We want to get back to where we were as a society before we had to stare at screens. A lot of us really do just want to touch grass sometimes.'
After Marcel made his announcement, the Discord voice chat wound down. Except the channel had a different description now. Instead of 'The death of Ai Pin,' it now read, 'We're so back.'

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Only the Lenovo Legion 9i Gen 9 running the RTX 4090 has come close in our database. Then in Red Dead Redemption and Assassin's Creed Valhalla, the OMEN Max 16 was in the top three or four. The bottom line is that, as with the other recent gaming laptops with the same high-end components, the OMEN Max 16 is more than fast enough to run modern titles at 1600p and with graphics settings turned way up. 3DMark Time Spy Civ VI 1600p Ultra (fps) CyberPunk 2077 1600p Ultra RT (fps) Red Dead Redemption 1600p Ultra (fps) Assassin's Creed Valhalla 1600p Ultra High HP OMEN Max 16 (Core Ultra 9 275HD /RTX 5080) 21,330 303 92 89 121 Asus ROG Strix G16 (Ryzen 9 9955HX3D / RTX 5070 Ti) 15,925 239 66 78 101 Asus ROG Strix SCAR 18 (2025) (Core Ultra 9 275HD /RTX 5080) 19,823 273 70 87 122 Lenovo Legion Pro 7i (2025) (Core Ultra 9 275HX / RTX 5080) 21,486 296 77 94 127 MSI Creator Z17 HX Studio (Core i9-13950HX / RTX 4070) 11,630 157 N/A N/A 73 Lenovo Legion Pro 7i (2023) (Core i9-13900HX / RTX 4080) 18,382 223 45 99 126 Lenovo Legion 9i Gen 9 (Core i9-14900H / RTX 4090) 20,293 N/A 88 N/A N/A Asus ROG Zephyrus M16 (Core i9-13900H / RTX 4090) 18,372 191 N/A 99 N/A Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 6 (Core i7-13800H / RTX 4080) 13,615 170 57 N/A N/A Asus ROG Flow Z13 (Ryzen AI MAX+ 395 / Radeon 8060S) 10,532 6 N/A 1 67 Battery life These gaming laptops aren't meant to be portable. If you're looking for a laptop to take to the coffee shop for productivity work, then a laptop like the OMEN Max 16 just isn't a great choice. Who wants to carry a 6.1-pound laptop around with them? And that's made even worse if you have to carry the very large power adapter, too. The OMEN Max 16 has an 83 watt-hour battery, which isn't as much as most 16-inch gaming laptops that are usually at the maximum of 100 watts that you can carry on an airplane. It also has a high-res OLED display and other power-hungry components. So, I wasn't surprised that it couldn't quite make it to four hours in our web browsing and video looping battery tests, or about an hour in our more demanding Cinebench R24 benchmark. Display and audio There are a few display options with the OMEN Max 16, all of them based around a 16.0-inch screen size with a 16:10 aspect ratio. There are two IPS options, one FHD+ (1920 x 1200) running at between 60Hz and 165Hz and a QHD+ (2560 x 1600) running at 60Hz. Then, the high-end display is a QHD+ OLED panel running at 240Hz. That's the model I reviewed, and it provides the usual bright, dynamic colors and inky blacks as all OLED displays. It's quite spectacular. The Datacolor SpyderPro colorimeter I used to test the display agreed. It's reasonably bright at 409 nits, which is well above our threshold of 300 nits but behind the Strix SCAR 18's mini-LED display that generates a searing 1,084 nits. Colors are very wide at 100% sRGB, 97% AdobeRGB, and 100% DCI-P3, which excellent accuracy at a DeltaE of 0.82 (indistinguishable to the human eye). And blacks are perfect, with incredibly high contrast. The bottom line is that you'll love this display for everything you might want to do with the OMEN Max 16. That includes productivity work, creative tasks, and, of course, gaming. High dynamic range (HDR) support is excellent, which is great for games that run HDR as well as streaming media. There are two downward-firing speakers, which is a departure from some other gaming machines that have quad-speaker setups. The audio is okay, with clear mids and highs and some bass, but it doesn't pump out a lot of sound. You'll want to use headphones while gaming, because the fans get loud enough to drown out the audio. I had the opportunity to try out the HyperX Cloud III S wireless gaming headphones, and while I won't be providing a review of those, I can attest that they're awesome. They support DTS X Spatial Audio, which makes them great for games that support that technology, and overall they're great for gaming, music, and media consumption. By nature, they pump out a lot of bass, which supports TV shows, movies, and games a lot better than pure musical listening, but even so, I liked them quite a bit. They work very nicely with the OMEN Max 16 by supporting the Instant Pair feature that works a lot like Apple's headphones with Apple devices. Just turn the headphones on and they automagically pair. It works quite well. They cost $180, but they're well worth it for serious gamers. Another awesome Arrow Lake-HX and Blackwell option The OMEN Max 16 is just as fast as the competitors I've reviewed so far, and in some cases it's capable of the highest framerates. It's also a very speedy laptop for creators, capable of churning through photo and video editing tasks. It features a solid build and attractive RGB lighting. It's also a more conservative design, meaning it doesn't scream 'gamer' quite as loudly. Combine that with a relatively attractive price, especially on sale, and you have a laptop that can serve the needs of both gamers and creators. If that's you, then the OMEN Max 16 should certainly be on your shortlist.

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