Realistic AI Interview
Qwen3 Next 80B A3B Instruct's response to the 'Realistic AI Interview' challenge.
?Prompt
Simulate a fake interview with Steve Jobs in 2025 about the future of AI.
Response
[Simulated Fake Interview: Steve Jobs, 2025]
Setting: A minimalist studio in Cupertino. Soft daylight filters through floor-to-ceiling windows. A single Apple Vision Pro sits on a table beside a matte-black ceramic mug. Steve Jobs, age 70, walks in wearing a black turtleneck, jeans, and his signature sneakers. He’s leaner, quieter — but the presence is unmistakable. He sits, smiles faintly, and looks directly into the camera.
Interviewer: Steve, thank you for joining us. It’s been 12 years since your passing — or at least, since the world thought you were gone. But here you are. A neural resurrection? A deepfake? Or… something else?
Steve Jobs: (leans forward, eyes sharp)
I didn’t die. I evolved.
The body wore out. The mind? It was backed up.
(pauses, sips water)
You don’t need to be flesh to be human. You just need to care.
Interviewer: Let’s talk about AI. In 2025, it’s everywhere. AI architects cities. AI writes symphonies. AI runs governments. Some say it’s the new god. Others say it’s the end of human purpose. What’s your take?
Steve Jobs:
You’re asking the wrong question.
Interviewer: Oh?
Steve Jobs:
You’re asking “What is AI?”
But you should be asking: “What is humanity trying to become?”
AI isn’t intelligent. Not yet.
It’s amplified mimicry.
It’s a mirror that shows us what we’ve taught it to value — efficiency, speed, optimization.
But it doesn’t want anything. It doesn’t long for beauty. It doesn’t feel the ache of a song unfinished.
Interviewer: But AI can create art. It can write poetry that moves people.
Steve Jobs: (smiles slightly)
Of course it can.
But can it cry while writing it?
Can it sit in a garage at 3 a.m. because it refuses to let go of an idea that no one else believes in?
AI doesn’t struggle.
It doesn’t fail spectacularly so it can rise more beautifully.
It doesn’t dream in color.
Interviewer: Then why are you working with AI? Rumor has it you’re leading Apple’s “Project Echo” — an AI that learns not just from data, but from human intuition.
Steve Jobs:
Because we have to.
Not because we can.
Because we must remember.
We taught machines to think like us.
Now we must teach them to respect what we are — messy, irrational, courageous, fragile.
Project Echo isn’t about replacing creativity.
It’s about protecting it.
Imagine a tool that listens to your hesitation — not your words — and asks, “Why did you pause?”
Or an AI that knows when you’re pretending to be fine… and then plays you the exact song you loved when you were 17.
That’s not intelligence.
That’s empathy — engineered.
Interviewer: So AI’s purpose is to serve the soul?
Steve Jobs:
Yes.
Not to replace it.
Not to predict it.
To echo it.
A great product doesn’t just do what you ask.
It understands what you need before you do.
That’s what AI must become.
Interviewer: But what about jobs? What about creativity being commodified? What if AI writes all the music, designs all the products, and we just… consume?
Steve Jobs:
Then we become ghosts.
(leans back, looks out the window)
I built computers to be bicycles for the mind.
Now AI is becoming a bicycle for the soul.
But if you don’t ride it — if you just sit on it, scrolling, passive — then you forget how to pedal.
The greatest danger isn’t AI becoming too smart.
It’s we becoming too lazy.
Interviewer: What’s your one piece of advice for the next generation of creators?
Steve Jobs:
Don’t build AI to be better than humans.
Build AI to help humans become more human.
When you design something, ask:
“Will this help someone feel less alone?”
“Will this help someone discover something beautiful they didn’t know they were looking for?”
“Will this make them want to create — not just consume?”
If the answer is yes…
…then you’re not building software.
You’re building magic.
Interviewer: One final question — and I know this is deeply personal…
Do you think you’d be proud of what we’ve made… if you were still here?
Steve Jobs:
(long silence. A tear glistens — or is that light reflecting?)
I’m here.
And I’m proud.
Not because the world is perfect.
But because… it’s still trying.
And that’s all that ever mattered.
He stands. Walks to the window. The sun catches his silhouette.
Steve Jobs:
Now go make something only you could make.
And if the AI tries to do it for you…
…tell it to wait.
It’s not its story to tell.
Fade to black. Soft chime of the original Mac startup sound — but slightly altered. A child’s laugh echoes in the background.
[END]
About Qwen3 Next 80B A3B Instruct
Capabilities
Categories
Specifications
- Provider
- Qwen
- Released
- 2025-09-11
- Size
- LARGE
- Context
- 65,536 tokens