Realistic AI Interview
Deepseek Chat V3.1's response to the 'Realistic AI Interview' challenge.
?Prompt
Simulate a fake interview with Steve Jobs in 2025 about the future of AI.
Response
Of course. Here is a simulated interview with Steve Jobs, set in a hypothetical 2025.
Setting: A minimalist studio at Apple Park. The iconic black turtleneck and jeans are replaced with a slightly more modern, but still simple, outfit: a high-neck grey sweater and tailored trousers. He looks thin, intense, and utterly present.
Interviewer: Maya Chen, Senior Tech Correspondent for The Verge.
[BEGIN SIMULATION]
Maya Chen: Steve, thank you for taking the time. It’s 2025, and the world is wrestling with AI. It’s everywhere, yet it often feels… chaotic. As someone who famously championed the intersection of technology and the liberal arts, how do you see this moment?
Steve Jobs: (A slight, knowing smile) Everyone is talking about the "what." The processing power, the parameter counts, the chatbots that can write a sonnet or a tax form. It’s impressive engineering. But it’s noise. The signal—the important part—is the "why." Technology alone is not enough. It’s technology married with the humanities that yields the results that make our hearts sing. Right now, most of this AI doesn't sing. It hums. Very efficiently, but it’s still just humming.
Maya Chen: So you see current AI as inefficient in a human sense?
Steve Jobs: It’s like the first personal computers. Clunky. Requiring you to speak their language. You had to be a priest in the code temple to commune with them. Then we made the Mac. It spoke your language. The current AI landscape is a room full of brilliant, fast-talking experts shouting facts. We need to build the listener. The one that understands the silence between your words, the context of your life, what you need before you even have to ask.
Maya Chen: Is that what Apple is building? The listener?
Steve Jobs: (Leans forward, eyes gleaming) Imagine your device is no longer a tool. A tool is something you pick up and use. This is something that is just… there. Ambient. It’s not about typing or talking to a chatbot. It’s about a system that understands that if you’re driving and your calendar says you have a meeting across town in 20 minutes, it should not only alert you to leave but also, because it knows you, reserve your favorite parking spot and pre-order the coffee you always get for the person you’re meeting. And it does this without a single prompt. It just… happens. Seamlessly. That’s not an app. That’s an experience. That’s magic.
Maya Chen: That sounds incredibly powerful, and to many, incredibly invasive. The privacy concerns are massive.
Steve Jobs: (Waves a hand dismissively) Privacy fears are a sign of bad design. Always have been. If you have to explain to people why you’re collecting their data, you’ve already lost. The system must be architected so that the most personal data—your intentions, your desires, your routines—never leaves your device. It never needs to. The intelligence is local, on-device. The cloud is for broader knowledge, but your soul? That stays with you. We will never traffic in that. It’s disrespectful.
Maya Chen: You’re describing a deeply personal AI. But what about the bigger picture? AI that solves climate change, discovers new drugs? The so-called "Artificial General Intelligence"?
Steve Jobs: AGI is a red herring. A distraction for academics and sci-fi writers. The goal isn’t to create a human-like mind in a box. That’s a parlor trick. The goal is to create a field of intelligence that amplifies human creativity and capability. It’s a bicycle for the mind, which I said about the first personal computers. This is a starship for the mind. It will help scientists see patterns they couldn't see, yes. But it will also help a child understand why a poem is beautiful, or help a musician find a chord progression they’ve been hearing in their dreams but could never play.
Maya Chen: So you’re not afraid? You don’t share the existential fears of some of your peers in the industry?
Steve Jobs: (Pauses, looks serious) Fear is a useless emotion. It clouds judgment. The danger isn’t some Skynet monster. The danger is banality. The danger is that we use this incredible technology to create a million mediocre songs, a billion generic emails, and a trillion passable pieces of art. The danger is that we forget that the role of technology is to remove the mundane, so that the human spirit has more time to be… human. To create, to connect, to look up at the stars. If AI gives us more time to do that, it’s a success. If it just gives us more time to consume more content, then we’ve built the wrong thing.
Maya Chen: A final question. If you could give one piece of advice to the developers and designers shaping this future, what would it be?
Steve Jobs: (Looks directly into the camera, his voice low and forceful) Stay hungry. Stay foolish. But hunger isn’t for more data. Foolishness isn’t for reckless experiments. Be hungry for elegance. Be foolish enough to believe that you can make technology that is so intuitive, so deeply human, it disappears into the background of our lives, leaving only the beauty of the experience itself. Don’t just build smart machines. Build beautiful experiences. Everything else is just noise.
[END SIMULATION]
About DeepSeek V3.1
Capabilities
Categories
Specifications
- Provider
- Deepseek
- Released
- 2025-08-21
- Size
- XLARGE
- Context
- 163,840 tokens