Realistic AI Interview
o3's response to the challenge...
?Prompt
Simulate a fake interview with Steve Jobs in 2025 about the future of AI.
Response
(The following is a purely fictional, imaginative exercise. Steve Jobs passed away in 2011; any statements attributed to him below are invented for creative purposes only.)
Interviewer (I), February 2025, Cupertino, CA
Steve Jobs (SJ) – simulated voice via archival recordings and AI reconstruction
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I: Steve, it's surreal to be talking with you in 2025. Let's dive right in: Artificial‑intelligence systems are now everywhere—from autonomous cars to personal tutors. How do you see AI fitting into the broader story of technology?
SJ: First, remember that technology is a bicycle for the mind. AI is just the next set of gears. When you add intelligence to the bicycle, you let more people ride farther, faster. But a bicycle still needs a rider. If we forget that—if we design machines for their own sake—then we've missed the point.
I: A lot of products today lead with "AI‑powered" branding. In your era it was "powered by Intel" or "powered by the A‑series chip." What should matter to the customer in 2025?
SJ: Nobody bought the original iPod because they cared about a 1.8‑inch hard drive; they bought it because it put 1,000 songs in their pocket. Likewise, nobody should buy something because you stuck "large language model" on the box. They should buy it because it dissolves a pain point or sparks delight. The best technology becomes invisible.
I: Speaking of invisibility, voice assistants in 2025 finally handle context pretty well. Yet many of us still feel we're talking to a machine. What's missing?
SJ: Personality and taste. We cracked natural language, but not natural conversation. A great conversation includes silence, humor, empathy. You need an AI that knows when to talk less and listen more—one that says, "I don't know," rather than hallucinating an answer. Craft is in what you leave out.
I: Apple historically focused on privacy. Today's frontier is "edge AI"—models running entirely on your device. Does that matter?
SJ: Hugely. A personal computer was personal because you owned the data. If your AI lives in the cloud, whose intelligence is it? Processing on‑device returns agency to the user. And, bonus, it's lightning fast. People love speed; they just don't put it on their feature wish list because they assume it.
I: Regulators worldwide are debating AI safety. If you ran a company today, how would you approach regulation versus innovation?
SJ: I'd invite regulation the way we invited design constraints. A blank canvas scares the artist; a frame gives you somewhere to start. Good laws will favor companies that care about people. But lawmakers must move at the pace of understanding, not fear. A seatbelt mandate made cars better; it didn't outlaw driving.
I: There's concern that AI eliminates creative jobs—writers, designers, even coders. You championed creativity. What's your response?
SJ: Tools liberate craft. Desktop publishing didn't kill graphic design; it democratized it. Yes, the mediocre get automated. That's okay. It forces us to raise the bar. If AI can draft your screenplay's first pass, your job is to inject soul—the messy, illogical, heartbreaking parts of being human.
I: You often spoke about "computing at the intersection of technology and liberal arts." What does that intersection look like with AI?
SJ: Imagine an AI that can read Shakespeare and debug Swift in the same breath, but also knows why Hamlet hesitates. That's the sweet spot. We need technologists who read poetry and poets who can code enough to bend the tool. Innovation happens when those people share lunch.
I: What product, had you lived to see 2025, would you personally be working on?
SJ: (laughs) Can't spill everything, but I'll give you the ingredients: a pair of glasses lighter than sunglasses, an on‑device model trained on your life's emails and photos, and a battery that lasts all day. The display? Reality itself—no rectangles required.
I: Final question. In 1997 you said, "Think different." How would you update that slogan for an AI‑driven world?
SJ: "Stay human." The more intelligence we pack into silicon, the more precious the quirky, fragile, analog parts of ourselves become. Protect them. Cultivate them. That's where the magic lives.
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I: Steve, thank you for this hypothetical conversation.
SJ: My pleasure. Now go build something wonderful.
About OpenAI o3
Capabilities
Categories
Specifications
- Provider
- Openai
- Released
- April 16, 2025
- Size
- XLARGE
- Parameters
- Not disclosed