After what felt like an age of tech industry tea-leaf reading, OpenAI has officially snapped up βio,β the much-buzzed-about startup building an AI device from former Apple design guru Jony Ive and OpenAIβs chief, Sam Altman. The price tag? $6.5 billion.
OpenAI put out a video this week talking about the Ive and Altman venture in a general sort of way, but now, a few more tidbits about what theyβre actually cooking have slipped out.
And what are they planning with all that cash and brainpower? Well, the eagle-eyed folks at The Washington Post spotted an internal chat between Sam Altman and OpenAI staff where he set a target of shipping 100 million AI βcompanions.β
Altman allegedly even told his team the OpenAI device is βthe chance to do the biggest thing weβve ever done as a company here.β
To be clear, Altman has set that 100 million number as an eventual target. βWeβre not going to ship 100 million devices literally on day one,β he said. But then, in a flex thatβs pure Silicon Valley, he added theyβd hit that 100 million mark βfaster than any company has ever shipped 100 million of something new before.β
So, what is this mysterious βcompanionβ? The gadget is designed to be entirely aware of a userβs surroundings, and even their βlife.β While theyβve mostly talked about a single device, Altman did let slip it might be more of a βfamily of devices.β
Jony Ive, as expected, dubbed it βa new design movement.β You can almost hear the minimalist manifesto being drafted.
Why the full-blown acquisition, though? Werenβt they just going to partner up? Originally, yes. The plan was for Iveβs startup to cook up the hardware and sell it, with OpenAI delivering the brains. But it seems the vision got bigger. This isnβt just another accessory, you see.
Altman stressed the device will be a βcentral facet of using OpenAI.β He even said, βWe both got excited about the idea that, if you subscribed to ChatGPT, we should just mail you new computers, and you should use those.β
Frankly, they reckon our current tech β our trusty laptops, the websites we browse β just isnβt up to snuff for the kind of AI experiences theyβre dreaming of. Altman was pretty blunt, saying current use of AI βis not the sci-fi dream of what AI could do to enable you in all the ways that I think the models are capable of.β
So, we know itβs not a smartphone. Altmanβs also put the kibosh on it being a pair of glasses. And Jony Ive, well, heβs apparently not rushing to make another wearable, which makes sense given his design ethos.
The good news for the impatient among us (i.e., everyone in tech) is that this isnβt just vapourware. Iveβs team has an actual prototype. Altmanβs even taken one home to βlive with itβ. As for when we might get our hands on one? Altmanβs reportedly aiming for a late 2026 release.
Naturally, OpenAI is keeping the actual device under wraps, but you can always count on supply chain whispers for a few clues. The ever-reliable (well, usually!) Apple supply chain analyst Ming-Chi Kuo has thrown a few alleged design details into the ring via social media.
Kuo reckons itβll be βslightly largerβ than the Humane AI Pin, but that it will look βas compact and elegant as an iPod Shuffle.β And yes, like the Shuffle, Kuo says no screen.
According to Kuo, the device will chat with your phone and computer instead, using good old-fashioned microphones for your voice and cameras to see whatβs going on around you. Interestingly, he suggests itβll be worn around the neck, necklace-style, rather than clipped on like the AI Pin.
Kuoβs crystal ball points to mass production in 2027, but he wisely adds a pinch of salt, noting the final look and feel could still change.
So, the billion-dollar (well, Β£5.1 billion) question remains: will this OpenAI device be the next big thing, the gamechanger weβve been waiting for? Or will it be another noble-but-failed attempt to break free from the smartphoneβs iron grip, joining the likes of the AI Pin in the βgreat ideas that didnβt quite make itβ pile?
Altman, for one, is brimming with confidence. Having lived with the prototype, heβs gone on record saying he believes it will be βthe coolest piece of technology that the world will have ever seen.β
See also: Linux Foundation: Slash costs, boost growth with open-source AI
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