he experience was unlike anything we’d used before. Sesame’s conversational layer felt different,” the post states. “It doesn’t just translate LLM output into audio — it generates speech directly, capturing the rhythm, emotion, and expressiveness of real dialogue.”
Early reviews of the tech demo seem to agree, as one report by The Verge described Sesame as “genuinely fun” and “natural-sounding.”
Sesame says its upcoming glasses will offer “high-quality audio” and access to an AI companion that will “observe the world alongside you.”

Sequoia also noted the smartglasses Sesame is building will be fashion-forward, so they look like something you’d choose to wear even if they didn’t offer built-in AI technology. A timeframe for their availability is not yet being shared — as Sequoia noted, “hardware takes time.”
On that front, Sesame may have an advantage. Its founding team also includes Oculus co-founder Nate Mitchell as its chief product officer, former Oculus COO and Fitbit exec Hans Hartmann as COO, former Oculus engineer manager and Reality Labs engineering director Ryan Brown, and longtime Facebook and Meta exec Angela Gayles.
In addition to sharing the news of its Series B, Iribe announced on X that Sesame is now opening an early beta of the Sesame iOS app. The app experience will allow testers to get hands-on with the AI technology being built, as the app will have the ability to “search, text and think,” he says.
Beta testers are asked to keep their testing experiences confidential for the time being, which includes not discussing features or results beyond the official beta test forums.
Investors in the Sesame Series B include Sequoia, Spark, and other undisclosed backers, according to Iribe.