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I Packed a 6-Monitor Office in My Backpack (And I Look Like a Cyborg): INAIR 2 Pro Go Pack Review

I Packed a 6-Monitor Office in My Backpack (And I Look Like a Cyborg): INAIR 2 Pro Go Pack Review

Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐ (4/5) for Productivity, ⭐⭐⭐ (3/5) for “Walking Around”

Price: ~$1,059.00 USD (Base Kit)

Let’s be brutally honest: hunching over a 14-inch laptop screen in a cramped coffee shop or an airplane economy seat is terrible for your posture, your privacy, and your sanity. We all want the massive 4-monitor setup we have at the office, but we can’t exactly drag a 32-inch display onto a Delta flight.

Enter the INAIR 2 Pro Go Pack.

INAIR isn’t just selling you a pair of Augmented Reality (AR) glasses to watch Netflix; INAIR is selling an entire decentralized spatial computing ecosystem. The INAIR Go Pack bundle includes the glasses, a pocket-sized computer (the INAIR Pod), a folding keyboard, a remote PC-wake dongle, and an HDMI hub.

I spent two weeks living inside the INAIR spatial environment, doing real work, ignoring my physical surroundings, and occasionally looking like a time traveler from 2045. Here is my exhaustive, US-focused review of the INAIR 2 Pro.

Test 1: The Optics & The “Invisible” Office

The Claim: Sony Micro-OLEDs with 49 PPD and 120Hz refresh rate.

The Reality: Text is finally legible, and nobody can see what you are doing.

Historically, AR glasses made text look like a blurry, fringed mess. The INAIR 2 Pro fixes this with an insane 49 Pixels Per Degree (PPD).

  • The Display: It projects a massive, crisp 135-inch virtual screen. Because INAIR uses Micro-OLEDs, the contrast is infinite. The digital windows simply float in the air.
  • The Dimming Magic: Older AR glasses made you snap on ugly plastic blockers if the room was too bright. INAIR built stepless electrochromic dimming directly into the lenses. Swipe the side of the INAIR glasses, and they instantly transition from clear glass to pitch black, blocking 99.5% of light.
  • Corporate Privacy: If you are looking at sensitive spreadsheets on a plane, INAIR has you covered. The directional speakers beam audio straight into your ears (no leakage), and the dark lenses mean the guy next to you has zero idea you are looking at your company’s Q4 financials.

Test 2: The INAIR Pod (Brains in Your Pocket)

The Claim: Decentralized computing with a Snapdragon processor.

The Reality: No more hot, sweaty VR headsets.

Instead of putting a heavy computer and battery on your face (looking at you, Apple Vision Pro), INAIR moved all the heavy lifting to the INAIR Pod—a phone-sized device that stays on your desk or in your pocket.

  • The Performance: The INAIR Pod rocks a Snapdragon 778G chip and 8GB of RAM. The Go Pack version of the Pod is entirely fanless, meaning it is whisper-quiet in a library or office.
  • The Fatal Flaw: The INAIR Pod has a 5000 mAh battery, but it only has one USB-C port. Because the glasses plug into that port, you cannot charge the INAIR Pod while using the glasses. Once the battery dies (after a few hours of intense spatial computing), your workflow stops until it recharges.

Test 3: INAIR OS & The AI Minority Report

The Claim: 3D spatial window management and real-time AI.

The Reality: The best RDP (Remote Desktop) experience available.

The INAIR Pod runs INAIR OS, an Android-based system that lets you pin up to six massive windows in the air around you. But the real magic happens when you connect to your PC.

  • The INAIR Wakey: The Go Pack includes a tiny dongle called the Wakey. Leave it plugged into your heavy Windows PC at home. When you are sitting in a Starbucks across the country, you can use the INAIR Pod to wake your home PC up and stream your full desktop into the INAIR glasses.
  • 2D-to-3D AI: INAIR built a neural engine that takes flat 2D content (like a YouTube video or an old video game) and instantly pops it into stereoscopic 3D. It sounds like a gimmick, but the depth is surprisingly accurate.
  • Proactive AI: Press the home button on the INAIR Pod to bring up an AI agent (powered by ChatGPT). You can literally look at a document in your virtual window and ask the INAIR AI to summarize what you are looking at.

Test 4: Real-World Mobility (Sit Down, Don’t Walk)

The Claim: The ultimate “Go Pack” for travel.

The Reality: It’s for deploying, not for walking.

Despite the “Go Pack” name, do not try to walk down a busy New York street while working in INAIR OS.

  • The Friction: The IMU tracking is flawless when you are sitting on a train, at a desk, or in a cafe. But if you walk, the biological shock of your footsteps makes the virtual screens jitter slightly, which will make you nauseous.
  • Pocket Touches: Putting the unlocked INAIR Pod in your pocket while walking often leads to accidental screen touches. Consider the INAIR 2 Pro a “Portable Stationary” device: pack it up, take it anywhere, sit down, and unfold your massive virtual office.

Test 5: The “Go Pack” Peripherals

The Claim: Everything you need out of the box.

The Reality: A brilliantly curated bundle.

INAIR didn’t just give you glasses; they gave you a whole desk.

  • INAIR Touchboard Fold: A folding Bluetooth keyboard mapped perfectly for INAIR OS shortcuts. Essential for actual typing.
  • INAIR Hub: Want to play Xbox, PS5, or a Steam Deck on a 135-inch screen? The INAIR Hub converts HDMI to USB-C while allowing 100W power passthrough to keep your console charged.

Buying in the USA 🇺🇸

Price: The INAIR 2 Pro Go Pack is a premium investment at $1,059.00 USD.

Prescriptions: If you wear glasses, do not wear them under the headset! INAIR includes uncut lenses you can take to an optometrist, or you can order custom magnetic prescription inserts directly from INAIR at checkout (+$50 to $100).

Shipping: INAIR offers free express shipping to the US for orders over $100, usually arriving in 2-6 business days.

Comparison: The Spatial War

FeatureINAIR 2 ProXREAL Air 2 ProVITURE Pro XR
Compute DeviceINAIR Pod (Pocket/Desk)Beam Pro (Pocket)Neckband (Wearable)
DimmingStepless ElectrochromicStepless ElectrochromicElectrochromic
Desktop AppINAIR Space (Excellent)Nebula (Buggy)Spacewalker (Great)
Real-Time 3D AIYes (Native Engine)Basic3D Video Only
Rx CorrectionCustom Magnetic InsertsCustom InsertsBuilt-in Diopter Dials

Vs. XREAL: XREAL is lighter and cheaper, but INAIR OS and the INAIR Space desktop app run circles around XREAL’s Nebula software for pure, stable productivity.

Vs. VITURE: VITURE uses a neckband for computing, which puts battery heat right on your neck. The INAIR Pod sits happily on your desk, keeping the heat away from your body.

The Verdict: The Digital Nomad’s Dream

The INAIR 2 Pro Go Pack is an unapologetically premium product. It is expensive, and the single USB-C port on the INAIR Pod is a frustrating engineering oversight.

However, if you travel for work, handle sensitive data, or simply want a massive, private, multi-monitor workstation that fits in a small carrying case, the INAIR ecosystem is unmatched. INAIR successfully decoupled the heat and weight from your face and gave you the tools to actually get work done anywhere in the world.

Pros:

  • Flawless Optics: 49 PPD makes reading text comfortable for hours.
  • Stepless Dimming: Incredible privacy and contrast control.
  • The INAIR Ecosystem: The included keyboard, hub, and Wakey make it a complete kit.
  • Decentralized Compute: No heavy battery or processor cooking your forehead.

Cons:

  • One Port Limit: (if you lose the adapter from the Kit) You cannot charge the INAIR Pod and use the glasses at the same time until you acquire a replacement. “$69”
  • Not for Walking: Head tracking jitters when you walk.
  • Price: A high barrier to entry compared to basic tethered glasses.

Disclaimer: I used the INAIR stepless dimming to completely black out my vision while on a flight so I could watch a movie in peace. The flight attendant had to tap my shoulder to hand me my pretzels. 10/10 immersion.

Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐ (4/5) for Productivity, ⭐⭐⭐ (3/5) for “Walking Around”

Price: ~$1,059.00 USD (Base Kit)

Let’s be brutally honest: hunching over a 14-inch laptop screen in a cramped coffee shop or an airplane economy seat is terrible for your posture, your privacy, and your sanity. We all want the massive 4-monitor setup we have at the office, but we can’t exactly drag a 32-inch display onto a Delta flight.

Enter the INAIR 2 Pro Go Pack.

INAIR isn’t just selling you a pair of Augmented Reality (AR) glasses to watch Netflix; INAIR is selling an entire decentralized spatial computing ecosystem. The INAIR Go Pack bundle includes the glasses, a pocket-sized computer (the INAIR Pod), a folding keyboard, a remote PC-wake dongle, and an HDMI hub.

I spent two weeks living inside the INAIR spatial environment, doing real work, ignoring my physical surroundings, and occasionally looking like a time traveler from 2045. Here is my exhaustive, US-focused review of the INAIR 2 Pro.

Test 1: The Optics & The “Invisible” Office

The Claim: Sony Micro-OLEDs with 49 PPD and 120Hz refresh rate.

The Reality: Text is finally legible, and nobody can see what you are doing.

Historically, AR glasses made text look like a blurry, fringed mess. The INAIR 2 Pro fixes this with an insane 49 Pixels Per Degree (PPD).

  • The Display: It projects a massive, crisp 135-inch virtual screen. Because INAIR uses Micro-OLEDs, the contrast is infinite. The digital windows simply float in the air.
  • The Dimming Magic: Older AR glasses made you snap on ugly plastic blockers if the room was too bright. INAIR built stepless electrochromic dimming directly into the lenses. Swipe the side of the INAIR glasses, and they instantly transition from clear glass to pitch black, blocking 99.5% of light.
  • Corporate Privacy: If you are looking at sensitive spreadsheets on a plane, INAIR has you covered. The directional speakers beam audio straight into your ears (no leakage), and the dark lenses mean the guy next to you has zero idea you are looking at your company’s Q4 financials.

Test 2: The INAIR Pod (Brains in Your Pocket)

The Claim: Decentralized computing with a Snapdragon processor.

The Reality: No more hot, sweaty VR headsets.

Instead of putting a heavy computer and battery on your face (looking at you, Apple Vision Pro), INAIR moved all the heavy lifting to the INAIR Pod—a phone-sized device that stays on your desk or in your pocket.

  • The Performance: The INAIR Pod rocks a Snapdragon 778G chip and 8GB of RAM. The Go Pack version of the Pod is entirely fanless, meaning it is whisper-quiet in a library or office.
  • The Fatal Flaw: The INAIR Pod has a 5000 mAh battery, but it only has one USB-C port. Because the glasses plug into that port, you cannot charge the INAIR Pod while using the glasses. Once the battery dies (after a few hours of intense spatial computing), your workflow stops until it recharges.

Test 3: INAIR OS & The AI Minority Report

The Claim: 3D spatial window management and real-time AI.

The Reality: The best RDP (Remote Desktop) experience available.

The INAIR Pod runs INAIR OS, an Android-based system that lets you pin up to six massive windows in the air around you. But the real magic happens when you connect to your PC.

  • The INAIR Wakey: The Go Pack includes a tiny dongle called the Wakey. Leave it plugged into your heavy Windows PC at home. When you are sitting in a Starbucks across the country, you can use the INAIR Pod to wake your home PC up and stream your full desktop into the INAIR glasses.
  • 2D-to-3D AI: INAIR built a neural engine that takes flat 2D content (like a YouTube video or an old video game) and instantly pops it into stereoscopic 3D. It sounds like a gimmick, but the depth is surprisingly accurate.
  • Proactive AI: Press the home button on the INAIR Pod to bring up an AI agent (powered by ChatGPT). You can literally look at a document in your virtual window and ask the INAIR AI to summarize what you are looking at.

Test 4: Real-World Mobility (Sit Down, Don’t Walk)

The Claim: The ultimate “Go Pack” for travel.

The Reality: It’s for deploying, not for walking.

Despite the “Go Pack” name, do not try to walk down a busy New York street while working in INAIR OS.

  • The Friction: The IMU tracking is flawless when you are sitting on a train, at a desk, or in a cafe. But if you walk, the biological shock of your footsteps makes the virtual screens jitter slightly, which will make you nauseous.
  • Pocket Touches: Putting the unlocked INAIR Pod in your pocket while walking often leads to accidental screen touches. Consider the INAIR 2 Pro a “Portable Stationary” device: pack it up, take it anywhere, sit down, and unfold your massive virtual office.

Test 5: The “Go Pack” Peripherals

The Claim: Everything you need out of the box.

The Reality: A brilliantly curated bundle.

INAIR didn’t just give you glasses; they gave you a whole desk.

  • INAIR Touchboard Fold: A folding Bluetooth keyboard mapped perfectly for INAIR OS shortcuts. Essential for actual typing.
  • INAIR Hub: Want to play Xbox, PS5, or a Steam Deck on a 135-inch screen? The INAIR Hub converts HDMI to USB-C while allowing 100W power passthrough to keep your console charged.

Buying in the USA 🇺🇸

Price: The INAIR 2 Pro Go Pack is a premium investment at $1,059.00 USD.

Prescriptions: If you wear glasses, do not wear them under the headset! INAIR includes uncut lenses you can take to an optometrist, or you can order custom magnetic prescription inserts directly from INAIR at checkout (+$50 to $100).

Shipping: INAIR offers free express shipping to the US for orders over $100, usually arriving in 2-6 business days.

Comparison: The Spatial War

FeatureINAIR 2 ProXREAL Air 2 ProVITURE Pro XR
Compute DeviceINAIR Pod (Pocket/Desk)Beam Pro (Pocket)Neckband (Wearable)
DimmingStepless ElectrochromicStepless ElectrochromicElectrochromic
Desktop AppINAIR Space (Excellent)Nebula (Buggy)Spacewalker (Great)
Real-Time 3D AIYes (Native Engine)Basic3D Video Only
Rx CorrectionCustom Magnetic InsertsCustom InsertsBuilt-in Diopter Dials

Vs. XREAL: XREAL is lighter and cheaper, but INAIR OS and the INAIR Space desktop app run circles around XREAL’s Nebula software for pure, stable productivity.

Vs. VITURE: VITURE uses a neckband for computing, which puts battery heat right on your neck. The INAIR Pod sits happily on your desk, keeping the heat away from your body.

The Verdict: The Digital Nomad’s Dream

The INAIR 2 Pro Go Pack is an unapologetically premium product. It is expensive, and the single USB-C port on the INAIR Pod is a frustrating engineering oversight.

However, if you travel for work, handle sensitive data, or simply want a massive, private, multi-monitor workstation that fits in a small carrying case, the INAIR ecosystem is unmatched. INAIR successfully decoupled the heat and weight from your face and gave you the tools to actually get work done anywhere in the world.

Pros:

  • Flawless Optics: 49 PPD makes reading text comfortable for hours.
  • Stepless Dimming: Incredible privacy and contrast control.
  • The INAIR Ecosystem: The included keyboard, hub, and Wakey make it a complete kit.
  • Decentralized Compute: No heavy battery or processor cooking your forehead.

Cons:

  • One Port Limit: (if you lose the adapter from the Kit) You are limited to charging or glasses with the INAIR Pod until you acquire a piece. You can get a replacement pretty face from Inair for $69
  • Not for Walking: Head tracking jitters when you walk.
  • Price: A high barrier to entry compared to basic tethered glasses.

Disclaimer: I used the INAIR stepless dimming to completely black out my vision while on a flight so I could watch a movie in peace. The flight attendant had to tap my shoulder to hand me my pretzels. 10/10 immersion.

https://inairspace.com/pages/learn-more-with-inair-2-pro-go-pack

About The Author

Nate Ayers

I have been in the electronics game since 1998. But I have loved it since 1985. Over the years I have sold, reviewed, bought, Broken and fixed thousands of pieces of tech. My main passion is Mobile technology (Smartphones, Gadgets, laptops, Tablet) and Audio (Headphones, Speakers, Home theatre etc...). My other passion is writing my experience down and sharing it with people who will read it. I am not the best writer in the world but I am honest.

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