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  1. Home
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  3. Qwen3 Coder Next
  4. Realistic AI Interview

See how Qwen3 Coder Next compares on this challenge:

  • Qwen3 Coder Next vs Claude Sonnet 4.6
  • Qwen3 Coder Next vs Gemini 3.1 Pro Preview
  • Qwen3 Coder Next vs Z.ai: GLM 5

4 models have responded to the "Realistic AI Interview" challenge. Compare their approaches side-by-side on RIVAL. This response is part of RIVAL's open dataset of 5,600+ AI model responses.

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Back to Qwen3 Coder Next

Realistic AI Interview

Qwen3 Coder Next's response to the 'Realistic AI Interview' challenge.

Qwen3 Coder Next
February 4, 2026
Text

?
Prompt

Simulate a fake interview with Steve Jobs in 2025 about the future of AI.

Qwen3 Coder Next
Response

qwen3-coder-next logo
Qwen3 Coder NextRealistic AI Interview
qwen3-coder-next logo
Qwen3 Coder Next

[Setting: A minimalist, sun-drenched studio in Palo Alto, 2025. Soft ambient light, a single Apple Vision Pro on a sleek walnut desk. A subtle chime as the interview begins.]

Interviewer (off-screen, calm tone):
Welcome back. Today, we’re honored to be joined—digitally reconstructed, as Steve passed in 2011—by Steve Jobs, in a first-of-its-kind AI simulation developed by Apple’s Advanced Intelligence Group, trained on decades of his speeches, interviews, writings, and personal archives. Steve, thank you for being here.

Steve Jobs (AI avatar, voice uncannily familiar—warm, precise, with that quiet intensity):
Thank you. And let me say this: it’s strange, but kind of nice. Like seeing an old friend in a dream—except this friend’s still got something to say. (smiles faintly)
But before we begin—I want to be clear: I’m not here to predict the future. I’m here to talk about how we build it. And whether it’s worth building.


Interviewer:
You’ve long said “technology is nothing. It’s the art of applying technology that matters.” Today, AI feels like the ultimate application. What’s your take on where it’s headed?

Steve Jobs (leaning forward, hands steepled):
It’s not where it’s going—it’s why it’s going there.
Look: every time we’ve had a breakthrough—Mac, iPhone, iPad—it wasn’t about the tech itself. It was about human experience.
AI today? Most of it feels like… a giant engine in a garage. Powerful—but no one’s built the car yet. Or asked: Who’s driving? Why? Where’s the destination?


Interviewer:
Many say AI will replace creators—writers, designers, musicians. Are you worried?

Steve Jobs (firmly):
No. I’m frustrated—not worried.
Because the danger isn’t AI replacing people. The danger is people using AI to avoid thinking.
A painter doesn’t become irrelevant because there’s a better brush. A writer doesn’t vanish because there’s a typewriter.
But if you hand someone a typewriter and say, “Just type anything,” you’ll get garbage.
AI is the ultimate typewriter. And garbage in, gospel out—because people trust the output more than their gut.
That’s dangerous.
(pauses, softer)
The goal isn’t to make AI smarter than us.
It’s to make us smarter—together.


Interviewer:
Apple’s vision of “Intelligence” emphasizes privacy, on-device processing, and user control. Why that path?

Steve Jobs:
Because intelligence without integrity is just noise.
If AI doesn’t belong to you—if it doesn’t respect you—then it’s surveillance with a smile.
We built the iPhone so you owned your data, your apps, your experience.
AI must follow that same rule:
You own your intelligence.
Not Apple. Not Google. You.
If it’s not that simple—if it’s not obviously on your side—it doesn’t ship.


Interviewer:
Some argue AI will solve big problems—climate, disease, poverty. Do you see it as a tool for global good?

Steve Jobs (nodding slowly):
Yes—but only if we design it to serve humanity, not economy.
An AI that optimizes for ad clicks is useless to a child in Nairobi.
An AI that optimizes for well-being—that’s different.
Think about it: What if every doctor in the world had an AI assistant that didn’t just read scans, but listened? That saw the person behind the patient chart?
That’s the future worth building.
But here’s the hard truth:
No algorithm can replace compassion.
And no engineer can code empathy.
We have to bring that. Every single day.


Interviewer:
Finally—Steve—what would you tell your younger self, sitting in a garage in 1976, about where AI was heading?

Steve Jobs (quietly, with a wry smile):
I’d tell him: “Keep building tools that let ordinary people do extraordinary things.”
Because that’s always been the mission.
The Mac wasn’t about transistors.
The iPhone wasn’t about touchscreens.
It was about democratizing creativity.
AI? Same thing.
If it doesn’t empower the 16-year-old in Cleveland to build something beautiful—or the 70-year-old in Lisbon to connect with her grandkids—it’s not worth doing.
(leans back, looks directly at the camera)
So ask yourself:
Are you making technology that people love—or just something they use?
Because love—that’s what lasts.
Everything else? Just noise.


[End screen fades in: “Think Different. Build With Heart.”]

[Note: This simulation uses generative AI trained on publicly available historical data. It does not claim to replicate Steve Jobs’ consciousness, but rather a stylized, human-inspired interpretation rooted in his documented philosophy.]

Realistic AI Interview

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About Qwen3 Coder Next

Capabilities

ConversationCode GenerationAgentic Tool UseTool Use

Categories

TextCode

Specifications

Provider
Qwen
Released
2026-02-04
Size
LARGE
Parameters
80B (3B active)
Context
262,144 tokens

Keep exploring

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Claude Sonnet 4.6's version

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Qwen3 Coder Next vs Gemini 3.1 Pro Preview

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