WearablesBee has been busy since its acquisition by Amazon last yearThe AI wearable company has announced four new features shipping on existing hardware that will be exhibited at CES.Andre RevillaContributing ReporterMon, January 5, 2026 at 3:00 PM UTCBee, the company behind an always-listening AI wearable that Amazon acquired last year, has announced new features in a status update.The device is designed to run in the background of daily life and captures conversations or thoughts spoken aloud.Recording can be started or stopped with the push of a button.Co-founder of Bee, Maria de Lourdes Zollo, says the company has shipped four major updates that will run on the existing Bee Pioneer hardware.
The first is “Actions,” which connects Bee to a user's email and calendar and works to turn spoken commitments into actions.The company says that when you say you need to send an e-mail, for instance, Bee can draft one for you.“Daily Insights” is designed to identify patterns and trends based on information collected over weeks or months.The company says the goal of this feature is to notice things before a user might, including "shifts in your relationships" and recommend personalized goals related to these, like a life coach of sorts.AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisement“Voice Notes” lets a user press the record button on Bee and log a fleeting thought, a task for a to-do list or anything else that a user wants to recall later.
Finally, "Templates" is designed to organize and summarize large amounts of information into a more digestible format.It can also create a study plan from a lecture or recap a sales meeting with a client.Most of these features would presumably be more useful if a user sets their Bee to record constantly, which raises questions around legality and privacy.Zollo says that Bee processes audio in real time so no audio is ever stored, adding that neither Bee nor Amazon ever have access to transcripts.
Still, the wearable could come up against recording consent laws which vary by jurisdiction.