ÖFY by Futurewave
- Niwwrd

- 3 hours ago
- 2 min read
At CES 2026, Belgian design and engineering studio Futurewave introduced ÖFY, an early-stage AI wearable designed to stay out of the way. Instead of screens, alerts, or visible interaction, ÖFY focuses on listening, understanding, and acting quietly in the background. The ambition is simple: build intelligence that supports thinking without demanding attention.
What ÖFY is
ÖFY is a hands-free, screen-free audio wearable. It records conversations, transcribes notes, and delegates tasks across connected tools. Spoken words are converted into structured data and executed actions, without asking the user to look, tap, or respond.
It is not positioned as an assistant. Nor as a productivity gadget. ÖFY behaves more like a discreet layer between people and systems.
Designing without a screen
Removing the screen is a design decision, not a limitation. By eliminating visual interaction, Futurewave shifts the relationship from command-based use to natural speech. Intelligence flows through conversation, not interfaces.
This approach reframes AI as something that supports presence, rather than pulling attention away from it.
Form, attachment, and restraint
ÖFY’s physical form is compact, circular, and modular. A magnetic attachment system allows it to clip onto phones, clothing, or bags, adapting to daily routines instead of forcing new ones.
The object avoids visual dominance. Its design is calm and neutral, allowing it to blend into personal styles and professional contexts. The focus is on presence, not display.
Subtraction as methodology
Futurewave’s process is rooted in reduction. After observing the AI wearable market for over two years, the studio identified a core problem: speed is overtaking meaning. New devices ship monthly, use cases shift constantly, and value remains unclear.
Rather than racing to market, Futurewave chose to slow down. Their design method removes features until only the essential remains. This approach is consistent with their earlier work for Renault, Sony, and Nokia, as well as speculative projects like Memoria, a medical wearable for Alzheimer’s patients, and Soundwave, a study in personalized audio hardware.
Designed from real work
ÖFY emerged from studying real professional workflows. Across trades, crafts, and knowledge work, the same issue appears: valuable time is lost to transcription, documentation, and administration.
These tasks do not use expertise. They interrupt it. ÖFY aims to shift this burden away from the professional, allowing people to stay focused on what they do best.
Slow build, open validation
For CES 2026, Futurewave begins a phased validation process. Instead of predicting use cases, ÖFY will be tested in real contexts with professionals facing genuine workflow friction.
Feedback will shape the product openly. Prototypes will be shared with partners over the coming year, and insights will be documented publicly. Development is treated as a continuous process, not a launch deadline.
NIWWRD perspective
ÖFY matters not because it uses AI, but because it questions how AI should exist. It rejects noise, urgency, and visual dominance. It suggests that the future of intelligent products may be quieter, slower, and more respectful of human attention.
In a market obsessed with presence, ÖFY explores the value of absence.





















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