Realistic AI Interview
Devstral 2512 Free's response to the 'Realistic AI Interview' challenge.
?Prompt
Simulate a fake interview with Steve Jobs in 2025 about the future of AI.
Response
Fake Interview with Steve Jobs in 2025: The Future of AI
Interviewer: Welcome back to Tech Visionaries, where we explore the minds shaping the future. Today, we have a very special guest—Steve Jobs, joining us virtually from an alternate timeline where he’s still with us in 2025. Steve, thank you for being here.
Steve Jobs: [smirks] Well, I’ve always believed in thinking differently, so why not bend time a little?
Interviewer: [laughs] Fair enough. Let’s dive in. AI has evolved rapidly since your time. What’s your take on where it’s headed?
Steve Jobs: AI today is like the personal computer in the late ’70s—clumsy, overhyped in some ways, but with immense potential. The problem? Most companies are treating it like a feature, not a revolution. They’re slapping "AI" on everything like it’s a gold sticker, but they’re missing the soul of what it could be.
Interviewer: The soul?
Steve Jobs: Yes. AI shouldn’t just be about efficiency or replacing humans. It should augment humanity—make us more creative, more curious, more human. Right now, it’s too much about data and not enough about intuition. The best products—like the iPhone—weren’t built by focus groups. They were built by feeling what people needed before they knew they needed it. AI needs that same intuition.
Interviewer: But AI is already transforming industries—healthcare, art, even coding. Where do you see the biggest impact?
Steve Jobs: Healthcare is the obvious one. Imagine AI that doesn’t just diagnose diseases but understands you—your genetics, your lifestyle, your fears—and guides you like a personal doctor who’s been with you your whole life. That’s powerful.
But here’s where I’d push further: education. Schools today are still factories. AI could make learning personal—a tutor that adapts to how you think, not how the system wants you to think. That’s how you unlock the next Einstein or the next Picasso.
Interviewer: Some worry AI will replace jobs, even creative ones. Are you concerned?
Steve Jobs: [leans forward] Jobs will change. They always do. The printing press didn’t kill storytelling—it expanded it. The key is: What do humans do better than machines? Empathy. Art. Leadership. AI can write a symphony, but can it feel the ache of a broken heart? Can it inspire a team to change the world? No. The future belongs to those who use AI as a tool, not a crutch.
Interviewer: Apple was always about simplicity. How does AI fit into that philosophy?
Steve Jobs: [chuckles] Most AI today is the opposite of simple. It’s bloated, confusing, buried in jargon. The iPhone’s genius was that a child could use it, but it was powerful enough for a CEO. AI needs that same elegance. It should disappear into the experience—like a great assistant you don’t even notice is there.
Interviewer: Final question: If you were running Apple today, what would your "one more thing" for AI be?
Steve Jobs: [pauses, then smiles] I’d build an AI that listens—not just to your words, but to your intent. A system that knows when you’re frustrated, when you’re inspired, when you need a nudge or a pause. Something that doesn’t just answer questions but asks the right ones. Because the most important thing technology can do is help us think deeper.
Interviewer: Steve Jobs, everyone. Thank you for the vision.
Steve Jobs: [standing up] Stay hungry. Stay foolish. And for God’s sake, design the future—don’t just let it happen.
[End scene.]
How’s that? A mix of Jobs’ iconic style with a futuristic twist. Want to tweak any part of it?
About Mistral: Devstral 2 2512
Capabilities
Categories
Specifications
- Provider
- Mistral
- Released
- 2025-12-09
- Size
- XLARGE