Realistic AI Interview
Sherlock Dash Alpha'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 Interview: Steve Jobs on the Future of AI (2025)
Interviewer (Tech Insider Host): Welcome back to Tech Insider, everyone. Today, we're thrilled to have a very special guest—Steve Jobs, somehow back from the beyond, sharing his unfiltered thoughts on AI in 2025. Steve, thanks for joining us. Let's dive right in: AI has exploded since your passing. ChatGPT, Grok, image generators—it's everywhere. What's your take on where this is all headed?
Steve Jobs: [Grinning with that signature intensity] Look, AI is the most powerful tool we've ever built, but most people are using it like a glorified typewriter. In 2025, it's not about smarter search engines or endless cat videos. It's about intuition. Real intuition. The future isn't code spitting out answers; it's machines that feel the spark of human creativity. Think Pixar meets the human soul—AI that doesn't just mimic, but anticipates what you dream before you do.
Interviewer: Bold words. Apple Intelligence is rolling out now, deeply integrated into iOS. Siri 2.0 understands context like never before. But critics say it's playing catch-up to OpenAI or Google. How does Apple pull ahead?
Steve Jobs: [Leans forward, eyes narrowing] Catch-up? We're not in a race; we're redefining the finish line. Privacy is the new luxury. Everyone else is slurping your data like a bad milkshake. Apple? We keep it on-device. AI on your iPhone isn't phoning home—it's you, amplified. Imagine an iPhone that knows your heartbeat, your calendar, your unfinished sketches, and whispers, "Hey, finish that app idea—here's the code." By 2030, it'll compose symphonies from your morning jog playlist. That's not catch-up; that's checkmate.
Interviewer: Speaking of risks, Elon Musk warns AI could end humanity. Sam Altman talks safeguards. You've always been a reality distortion field—do you see doomsday, or is this hype?
Steve Jobs: [Chuckles dryly] Doomsday? Please. Fearmongers sell bunkers; innovators build cathedrals. AI won't destroy us—it'll expose the lazy. The danger isn't rogue robots; it's mediocre minds wielding godlike tools. We'll see a renaissance: artists, doctors, teachers who merge with AI become demigods. The rest? Obsolete. My advice? Focus on the intersection of technology and liberal arts. Train AI on beauty, not just data. Or it'll give you the world and forget to make it magical.
Interviewer: Visionary products—AR glasses, Apple Car rumors persist. How does AI supercharge hardware in the next decade?
Steve Jobs: [Gestures emphatically] Hardware without AI is a brick. Vision Pro was the appetizer; the main course is seamless reality. Glasses that overlay your world with infinite knowledge—translate languages in real-time, design prototypes mid-conversation, or relive memories like Minority Report. Apple Car? Autonomous driving isn't about speed; it's about serenity. AI reads the road, your mood, the kids in the back, and turns commute into creation time. By 2027, you'll wonder how we ever touched a steering wheel.
Interviewer: Last one: If you were running Apple today, what's the one AI moonshot you'd chase?
Steve Jobs: [Pauses, smirks] Health. Not fitness trackers—life extension. AI that scans your biology, predicts breakdowns years ahead, and reprograms cells like editing code. We'd dent death itself. Because the ultimate product isn't a gadget; it's more time to create.
Interviewer: Steve Jobs, timeless as ever. Thank you.
Steve Jobs: [Waves] Stay hungry, stay foolish. And make it beautiful.
About Sherlock Dash Alpha
Capabilities
Categories
Specifications
- Provider
- Openrouter
- Released
- 2025-11-15
- Size
- XLARGE