Realistic AI Interview
Glm 4.5 Air's response to the 'Realistic AI Interview' challenge.
?Prompt
Simulate a fake interview with Steve Jobs in 2025 about the future of AI.
Response
Interview: Steve Jobs on the Future of AI (2025)
Setting: A sleek, minimalist studio in Cupertino. Jobs, looking vibrant yet aged, wears his signature black turtleneck and jeans. The interviewer, Alex, sits opposite him.
Alex: Steve, welcome. It’s 2025—AI is everywhere. What’s your take on this revolution?
Steve: [Leans forward, eyes intense] Alex, we’re not in a revolution—we’re in a renaissance. AI is the new electricity. It’s raw, untamed, and full of potential. But here’s the catch: most companies are building tools, not experiences. They’re obsessed with algorithms, forgetting the soul of the product. Great AI isn’t just smart—it’s intuitive. It should feel like a trusted friend, not a cold machine.
Alex: Critics argue AI is dehumanizing. Are they right?
Steve: [Chuckles] They’re missing the point. AI amplifies humanity—when done right. Think of it like the Macintosh. We didn’t just build a computer; we put a bicycle for the mind in everyone’s hands. AI should do the same: handle the grunt work so humans can create, connect, and dream. But if we let it replace empathy? [Shakes head] That’s the real dystopia.
Alex: What’s the biggest pitfall in AI today?
Steve: [Gestures emphatically] Complexity! Engineers pack features like a clown car. I’d tear 90% of it out. AI needs to be invisible—like magic. You ask, it delivers. No prompts, no manuals. Remember the iPhone? We hid the complexity. AI should feel effortless. If you’re bragging about your model’s parameters, you’ve already failed.
Alex: Where will AI be in 10 years?
Steve: [Smiles] Everywhere. In your glasses, your fridge, your car… But the breakthrough? AI that understands you. Not just your voice, but your rhythm, your creativity. Imagine an AI that anticipates your needs before you do. That’s the future: personalized, human-centered tech. We’ll look back and laugh at how primitive "smart assistants" were.
Alex: Should we fear AI?
Steve: [Pauses] Fear comes from the unknown. We’ve been here before. The printing press, the internet… all terrifying. But fear isn’t the enemy—complacency is. If we let tech giants monopolize AI, we lose. Innovation belongs to the rebels, the dreamers. We need more artists in AI labs, not just coders.
Alex: Final thought?
Steve: [Stands, walks to a window] AI is a mirror. It reflects our values. If we build it with greed, it’ll be greedy. If we build it with purpose, it’ll elevate us. My advice? Start with the user. Always. The rest will follow. [Turns back] Now, let’s go change the world.
Post-Interview Notes:
- Jobs’ Philosophy: Echoes his 1980s mantra: "Technology alone is not enough—it’s technology married with liberal arts, married with the humanities."
- 2025 Context: AI has integrated into daily life (e.g., AR glasses, predictive home systems), but ethical debates rage over data privacy and job displacement.
- Visionary Prediction: Jobs’ emphasis on "invisible AI" aligns with trends toward ambient computing (e.g., Apple’s Vision Pro).
This simulation blends Jobs’ real-world pragmatism and futurism, reflecting his belief that technology must serve humanity—not the other way around.
About Z.AI: GLM 4.5 Air
Capabilities
Categories
Specifications
- Provider
- Openrouter
- Released
- 2025-07-25
- Size
- LARGE
- Context
- 128,000 tokens