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OpenAI CEO Sam Altman takes one of the biggest AI U-Turn, says: Current computers are …

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman takes one of the biggest AI U-Turn, says: Current computers are …

Time of India5 hours ago

OpenAI
CEO
Sam Altman
has dramatically reversed his position on AI hardware requirements, now claiming that "current computers were designed for a world without AI" and suggesting users will need new devices as artificial intelligence becomes more prevalent. This marks a significant shift from his previous stance that the AI revolution wouldn't require new hardware.
Speaking on his brother Jack Altman's podcast, Sam declared that computers, software, and hardware "were designed for a world without AI," indicating that user needs are changing rapidly in an AI-driven landscape. He envisions future systems that are "way more aware of their environment" and have "more context in your life," moving beyond traditional typing and screen-based interactions.
Altman goes from hardware optimism to reality check
The reversal comes after Altman's confident assertion last year that AI advancement wouldn't necessitate new hardware, promising users would be "happy" with new devices if needed. However, mounting evidence suggests current systems may struggle with
next-generation AI demands
, with Google CEO Sundar Pichai similarly indicating today's hardware limitations for achieving
artificial general intelligence
.
Altman revealed that OpenAI has been exploring new interaction paradigms and developing "a couple of ideas that they are excited about," though he acknowledged the adjustment period required for users to trust AI systems with comprehensive life context and decision-making authority.
The Jony Ive connection
This hardware pivot coincides with former Apple Chief Design Officer
Jony Ive
joining OpenAI to lead design efforts. The collaboration has sparked speculation about a revolutionary AI device that could rival the iPhone's impact, especially following OpenAI's $6.5 billion acquisition of Ive's AI device startup.
New details reveal their first device will be pocket-sized, screen-free, and contextually aware, designed as a "third core device" alongside laptops and smartphones. Altman envisions it shipping by late 2026 and predicts it will reach 100 million units "faster than any company has ever shipped something new before." The device won't be glasses or wearable technology, reflecting Ive's desire to move away from screen-dependent interactions.
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