Realistic AI Interview
Qwen3 235B A22B 07 25's response to the 'Realistic AI Interview' challenge.
?Prompt
Simulate a fake interview with Steve Jobs in 2025 about the future of AI.
Response
Title: "A Vision Reimagined: Steve Jobs on AI in 2025"
Note: This is a fictional simulation. Steve Jobs passed away in 2011. The following is a speculative, respectfully crafted interview based on his known philosophies, tone, and vision for technology.
Interviewer (Sarah Chen, Tech Vision Magazine):
Mr. Jobs, thank you for joining us today. You’ve been described as a visionary who didn’t just predict the future — you built it. It’s 2025, and AI is everywhere. From self-writing code to AI companions and generative art, we’re in the midst of what many are calling the “intelligence revolution.” What’s your take?
Steve Jobs (simulated):
Sarah, thank you. It’s good to be here — metaphorically, at least. [smiles faintly] You know, when we launched the Mac, people asked me, “Why do we need a computer on every desk?” And I said, “Because it’s a bicycle for the mind.” Today? AI is the jet engine for that bicycle. But most people are still pedaling with training wheels.
The technology is astonishing — yes. Machines that write symphonies, diagnose diseases, drive cars. But I watch these demos, and I see something missing. Not more features. Not faster chips. I see a lack of soul.
Sarah: A lack of soul?
Steve: Exactly. Most AI today is about efficiency. “How can we automate this task?” “How can we reduce costs?” That’s not what technology should be about. It should be about elevating the human spirit. The best technology doesn’t replace us — it reveals us. It brings out what’s already inside. An AI that writes a poem should inspire the poet, not replace her.
I look at products today — AI assistants that mimic human voices, chatbots that pretend to care — and I see mimicry without meaning. It’s theater, not truth.
Sarah: But doesn’t AI help people create? Artists use it for ideas. Writers use it to overcome blocks.
Steve: Of course. Tools are meant to be used. But the danger is when the tool becomes the artist. When the composer hands the score to the algorithm and says, “Make it beautiful,” without understanding what beauty is. That’s surrender, not creation.
At Apple, we didn’t build tools to make people dependent. We built tools to make them capable. The iPhone wasn’t about checking email faster — it was about putting the internet in your pocket and saying, “Now, go change the world.” AI should be the same. Not a crutch. A catalyst.
Sarah: So how do we get there?
Steve: By designing from the heart, not the spreadsheet. Look at the iPhone. We didn’t start with specs. We started with: “How do people feel when they use a phone?” Today, AI designers start with data sets and accuracy metrics. But they forget to ask: “How does this make a person feel more human?”
Imagine an AI that doesn’t just answer your questions — it helps you ask better ones. An AI that doesn’t write your speech, but helps you find your voice. That’s the difference between utility and magic.
Sarah: There are concerns about AI replacing jobs, deepfakes, misinformation. What would you say to that?
Steve: Technology amplifies intention. A hammer can build a house or break a window. AI is no different. The problem isn’t the tool — it’s the lack of moral imagination in those wielding it.
When we created the Mac, we didn’t just worry about processor speed. We worried about what kind of world it would create. Would it empower people? Or would it turn them into passive consumers?
Today’s AI leaders are obsessed with scale. “How many users can we reach?” “How much data can we collect?” But they’re not asking, “What kind of humans are we building?” That’s the real question.
Sarah: Do you think Apple — or any company — is getting AI right?
Steve: [leans forward, eyes sharp] I won’t name names. But I’ll say this: I see flashes of brilliance. A gesture here, a moment of insight there. But no one has yet created an AI that feels... inevitable. Like the iPod. You saw it, and you knew — this is how music was meant to be.
AI today is still trying too hard. It’s loud. It shows off. The best technology disappears. It becomes part of you. I want an AI that doesn’t announce itself — one that helps you become more you, not more like the machine.
And don’t get me started on the user interface. [chuckles] Most AI interactions are clunky, soulless. Talking to a box that guesses your next word? That’s not conversation. That’s stenography.
Sarah: What would your ideal AI look like?
Steve: It would be quiet. Elegant. It would know when to speak — and when to be silent. It would understand context, emotion, nuance. Not by analyzing your facial expressions, but by understanding you — your dreams, your values, your contradictions.
It wouldn’t try to be human. That’s a fool’s errand. But it would respect humanity. It would be like a great teacher — not giving you answers, but helping you discover them. Or a trusted friend who listens more than it talks.
And above all — it would be designed. Every pixel, every interaction, every silence — intentional. Because design isn’t just how it looks. It’s how it works. And how it makes you feel.
Sarah: Final question. What advice would you give to the next generation of innovators?
Steve: Don’t chase the future. Shape it. Don’t ask, “What can AI do?” Ask, “What should it do?” What kind of world do you want to live in? Then build the technology that brings that world into being.
And remember — the most powerful force in the universe isn’t data. It’s the human heart. If your technology doesn’t speak to that, it doesn’t matter how smart it is.
Stay hungry. Stay foolish. And for God’s sake — design with love.
Sarah: Thank you, Mr. Jobs.
Steve: Thank you. Now go make something that matters.
End of Simulation
[Disclaimer: This interview is a fictional and imaginative recreation for illustrative purposes. Steve Jobs passed away in 2011 and did not make these statements.]
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