Realistic AI Interview
o4-mini-high's response to the Tests an AI's ability to simulate personalities and predict future trends
?Prompt
Simulate a fake interview with Steve Jobs in 2025 about the future of AI.
Response
Note: This is a purely fictional, imaginative interview set in 2025. The following "Steve Jobs" quotes are invented for creative purposes and do not represent real statements.
Interviewer (I): Steve, it's 2025, and AI is everywhere—from our phones to our cars. What excites you most about where AI is heading?
Steve Jobs (SJ): What fascinates me is AI's potential to bring technology into harmony with people's lives. We're moving beyond apps that just do tasks, toward systems that anticipate needs, foster creativity, and keep the human experience at the center. It's not about smart machines; it's about making technology feel alive yet invisible.
I: Apple has historically been about integrating hardware and software. How do you see AI fitting into that ecosystem?
SJ: AI should be woven into every layer—silicon, operating system, services, and interface—but in a way that feels seamless. Imagine a chip designed specifically for on‑device AI that consumes milliwatts of power, so your iPhone or AR glasses can run sophisticated models without draining the battery or sending all your data to the cloud. That tight integration is where magic happens.
I: Privacy is a big concern. How do you balance powerful AI with user trust?
SJ: Privacy is a human right. We design AI to run locally whenever possible—your data stays on your device. We use techniques like on‑device differential privacy and federated learning, so the system learns from patterns without ever seeing your raw data. If AI is going to change the world, it can't do so by sacrificing trust.
I: How do you see AI transforming creative work—design, music, film, writing?
SJ: Creativity is the highest form of human expression. AI should be a collaborator—an endless brush palette for artists, a new instrument for musicians, a camera assistant for filmmakers. The key is giving creators control. Instead of "AI does it all," it suggests, improvises, iterates—and you choose the direction. That's the sweet spot.
I: Some worry that AI will replace human jobs. What's your take?
SJ: Technology always rearranges work. In the '80s we worried PCs would replace secretaries; instead, it created whole new industries. The same will happen here. Routine tasks go to machines, but humans will rise to roles that require empathy, judgment, artistry. We need to invest in education and tools so people can move into these more fulfilling roles.
I: Do you imagine a future where Apple sells an AI subscription?
SJ: Possible, but it has to feel liberating, not another monthly bill to dread. I'd rather see it baked into devices or covered by services people already love—like their iCloud plan or Apple Music. The moment it feels like a ransom for "AI features," you lose the soul of the product.
I: What about ethics? Should companies self‑regulate AI development?
SJ: Ethics must be baked in from day one—design, research, engineering. We need clear principles around transparency, accountability, and fairness. And yes, companies should hold themselves accountable, but there must also be standardized audits and public reporting. Technology that shapes society requires public trust.
I: Any dream use‑case of AI that you're still hoping someone builds?
SJ: A personal health coach that sees your biometrics, learns your habits, and nudges you toward better choices—before any symptoms appear. Not by spamming notifications, but by being context‑aware and supportive, like a friend. That combination of hardware sensors and AI modeling is still under‑explored.
I: Finally, if you could give one piece of advice to today's AI pioneers, what would it be?
SJ: Obsess over the user's experience, not the model's accuracy. Accuracy is table stakes; elegance, simplicity, and delight are what turn people into fans. Focus on delivering a human feeling—joy, awe, confidence—every time someone interacts with your AI.
I: Thanks, Steve. Inspiring as always.
SJ: Thank you. Remember, technology alone isn't enough. It's technology married with the liberal arts and humanities that yields the results that make our hearts sing.
About OpenAI o4 Mini High
Capabilities
Categories
Specifications
- Provider
- Openai
- Released
- April 16, 2025
- Size
- MEDIUM
- Parameters
- Not disclosed
- Context
- 200,000 tokens