TL;DR
- Platform Shift: Microsoft has unveiled Solara as an Android-based platform for managed AI-agent devices beyond traditional apps.
- Reference Hardware: The first designs are described as a desktop hub and wearable badge for partner pilots, not Microsoft retail hardware.
- Enterprise Test: MDEP, security controls, and named pilot partners will test whether agent devices can fit workplace fleets.
- Market Context: Rabbit R1, OpenAI device plans, and AI wearables give Solara competing hardware models to beat.
At Build 2026, Microsoft unveiled Project Solara as a managed hardware platform for AI agents that can work from desks, badges, and shared physical spaces. Solara targets managed agent-first devices, not another app or a retail Microsoft gadget launch. Microsoft can test new forms of workplace computing while keeping identity, security, and device management in the stack.
Solara gives Microsoft a hardware template for agents without turning the project into a Windows replacement. Its first reference designs center on a desktop hub and a wearable badge for partner pilots, people familiar with the project said. For Microsoft’s Steven Bathiche, the thesis is that “Agents will reshape not only software, but the devices themselves.”
How Solara’s Reference Devices Work
Project Solara starts with a desktop hub and wearable badge, two forms meant to show where an agent might help when a phone or PC is awkward. Stevie Bathiche, Microsoft corporate vice president and technical fellow in the Applied Sciences Group, framed the work as a move beyond app-centered experiences and toward computing that can enter physical spaces.
Bathiche manages Microsoft’s Applied Sciences Group, which connects product engineering, research, and the sciences around future computing interfaces. Solara uses that group structure to test how agents might combine identity, sensors, screens, and cloud services in managed devices.
A desktop hub sits beside a PC, responds to voice commands, signs users in with facial recognition, surfaces urgent items, and can become a cloud Windows machine when attached to a monitor.
A separate desk detail gives the concept 2 x USB-C ports for power, optional display output, or peripheral connections, making it a small managed endpoint rather than another full PC.
Solara’s wearable badge gives the platform a mobile form factor. It can wake an agent through a fingerprint button, record and transcribe conversations, and use a built-in camera to give the agent visual context.
Microsoft’s smart key badge may include 5G connectivity, a touchscreen, and a camera for new kinds of input. That configuration puts the agent closer to tasks that happen away from a desk.
Why Microsoft Built on Android
Solara uses Microsoft Device Ecosystem Platform, an enterprise Android base Microsoft already positions for managed endpoints. MDEP lets the company aim at smaller, lower-power hardware while keeping the Microsoft management layer that enterprise customers expect.
Microsoft is not replacing Windows with Android. Microsoft chose MDEP over Windows for smaller, lower-power devices while retaining patching, over-the-air updates, device integrity, Defender, Intune, and Entra ID sign-in, people familiar with the platform choice said. For IT departments, those controls separate a manageable badge or hub from a novelty endpoint that cannot fit identity, patch, and fleet policies.
Project Solara also sets enterprise requirements for manageability, security, privacy, and key user experiences on agent-first endpoints. Reference designs only work if partners can build different products while keeping the agent experience and controls consistent. Enterprise customers will judge Solara by fleet operations, identity controls, and support costs, not just by whether an agent can answer a prompt.
Device Market and the Pilot Test
Solara arrives after other companies pushed AI into dedicated or ambient hardware. OpenAI’s hardware roadmap shows one adjacent device strategy, Meta´s wearable roadmap a different one.
Microsoft’s distinction is the partner model. Solara could depend on partners to adapt the designs instead of a Microsoft retail hardware sale, making the project closer to an ecosystem template than a finished product.
Partner testing will determine whether the platform moves beyond concept hardware. Unlike consumer AI-wearable experiments, Solara’s named pilot groups are slated to begin piloting the agent-first ecosystem in the coming months. Pilot results must show useful workplace tasks, manageable fleets, and clear Azure-backed economics before Solara can become repeatable hardware for agents.

