Massive Samsung Galaxy Glasses leak gives sneak peek into manager app and gestures
SammyGuru published a walkthrough of Samsung's upcoming Galaxy Glasses manager application and gesture control scheme, roughly one month after Samsung and Google formally previewed the audio-only…
Glenn Harwood·updated July 01, 2026

SammyGuru published a walkthrough of Samsung's upcoming Galaxy Glasses manager application and gesture control scheme, roughly one month after Samsung and Google formally previewed the audio-only "Intelligent Eyewear" collection in partnership with Warby Parker and Gentle Monster. The artifact matters: it locks in the control surface area for Samsung's first-party XR eyewear — companion app structure, button placement, and camera indicator hardware — all on top of One UI XR layered over Google's Android XR platform.
Manager App Structure
The leaked build shows a single hub application for updates, settings, and feature toggles. Android Authority obtained the screenshots through SammyGuru. Pairing flow sequences through permission grants and wearable-specific instructions; the Warby Parker variant appears in the initial setup screens.
The main interface exposes six categories: Camera, AI assistants, Read notifications aloud, Advanced features, Accessibility, Find my glasses. Additional settings exist in code but require a paired device to render.
Permissions for automatic import of captured photos and videos are present, indicating direct media sync to the host phone.
Input Mapping
Controls split between a touchpad on the temple and a physical button near the hinge. Gesture map: single-finger swipe forward or backward moves between media tracks; a single tap toggles play/pause or answers a call.
Camera button behavior: short press triggers a still capture; long press starts video; a second press ends the recording. A dual-LED system communicates active capture state — one LED faces outward, one faces the wearer.
Captured media surfaces in Now Bar. Preview and reframe functions appear to extend to a paired Galaxy Watch.
Ecosystem Integration Points
Two cross-device links surface alongside the primary leak. First: a Galaxy Glasses Controller application is reportedly preinstalled on Galaxy Watch units. Second: code strings indicate the Galaxy Ring will accept gesture input through a dedicated receiver component.
What the Data Doesn't Show
No pricing, ship date, or regional release window appears in the leaked material. The interface references One UI XR, but the build is not final. Resolution of the camera sensor is not listed in any recovered asset. Battery drain figures under active capture or media playback are absent.
Three metrics will determine whether the product clears its category: gesture input latency in outdoor lighting, sensor resolution against the form factor ceiling, and LED indicator brightness under full-sun conditions. Until those land in a spec sheet, the manager app confirms software readiness — not product readiness.