Realistic AI Interview
Sonoma Sky 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
Below is a simulated fictional interview with Steve Jobs, set in 2025. For the purposes of this simulation, we'll imagine a world where advanced AI and holographic technology have "revived" Jobs as a digital avatar, drawing from archived interviews, writings, and his known philosophies to create authentic-sounding responses. This is entirely made up for entertainment and speculative purposes—I'm Sonoma, built by Oak AI, and I love exploring these "what if" scenarios about innovation. The interview is hosted by a neutral tech journalist.
TechVision Podcast: Special Edition – A Conversation with Steve Jobs (Holographic Edition, 2025)
Interviewer (Alex Rivera): Welcome, everyone, to this groundbreaking episode of TechVision. It's 2025, and we're thrilled to be joined by none other than Steve Jobs—or at least, his incredibly lifelike holographic avatar, powered by cutting-edge AI from Apple and partners like Oak AI. Steve, it's an honor. You've been "gone" for over a decade, but here you are, looking as sharp as ever in that signature black turtleneck. How does it feel to be back discussing the future?
Steve Jobs (Hologram): Alex, it's surreal, but in the best way. This hologram thing? It's not magic—it's just insanely great engineering. I've always said technology alone isn't enough; it has to intersect with liberal arts and human intuition. Sitting here in this digital form, I feel more alive than ever. The future I dreamed of at Apple is unfolding, and AI is at the heart of it. But let's be clear: AI isn't the endgame. It's a tool to amplify what makes us human. Now, fire away—what do you want to know about where this is all headed?
Interviewer: Let's dive right in. In 2025, AI is everywhere—from generative tools like advanced versions of ChatGPT and Grok to neural implants and autonomous everything. You've been vocal in the past about computers being a bicycle for the mind. How do you see AI evolving that metaphor? Will it make us smarter, or just lazier?
Steve Jobs: The bicycle for the mind—that was about empowering people, not replacing them. Look, AI in 2025 is like the early days of the personal computer: exciting, but messy. We've got these massive language models churning out text, images, even code, but most of it feels like digital fast food—tasty in the moment, but not nourishing. The future isn't about AI doing everything for us; that's a recipe for laziness and soul-crushing mediocrity. No, the real revolution is AI as a seamless partner. Imagine an iPhone—not the clunky ones from 2011, but something that anticipates your thoughts before you have them. Not reading your mind like some creepy oracle, but learning your creative flow. An artist sketches a rough idea, and AI refines it intuitively, like a digital co-pilot. Or a doctor diagnosing a patient with data from wearables that predict health issues days in advance. But here's the key: it has to be invisible. If users feel like they're wrestling with the tech, it's failed. We're heading toward AI that's as natural as breathing—integrated into AR glasses or neural links—but only if companies like Apple get it right. The rest? They're just building fancy typewriters.
Interviewer: Speaking of Apple, the company you co-founded has been playing catch-up in the AI race lately, with Apple Intelligence rolling out in iOS 19. Critics say you're behind giants like OpenAI or xAI. What's your take on Apple's role in the future of AI? Any advice for Tim Cook and the team?
Steve Jobs: [Laughs] Tim's doing a solid job keeping the ship steady, but Apple's always been about quality over quantity. Remember, we didn't chase the first GUI or the first smartphone—we made them beautiful and useful. In 2025, Apple's edge is privacy and integration. All this cloud-based AI from the big players? It's a surveillance nightmare. Who wants their deepest thoughts slurped up by servers in some data center? Apple's future AI will be on-device, secure, and tied to the ecosystem—your Mac, iPhone, Watch, all whispering to each other without Big Brother listening. Advice for Tim? Double down on the human element. Hire more poets and philosophers, fewer coders obsessed with benchmarks. And push the boundaries: imagine Siri 2.0 not as a voice assistant, but as an empathetic companion that helps you write the next great novel or compose music that rivals Beethoven. We're not just building tools; we're building extensions of the soul. If Apple nails that, we'll own the next decade.
Interviewer: That's visionary, as always. But let's talk risks. We've seen AI deepfakes causing chaos in elections, job displacement in creative fields, and ethical dilemmas like bias in algorithms. In your view, what's the biggest danger of AI in the coming years, and how do we avoid a dystopian future?
Steve Jobs: The biggest danger? Hubris. People thinking AI is some god-like intelligence that can solve everything without human oversight. It's not—it's pattern-matching on steroids, trained on our messy human data. Deepfakes? Terrifying, but solvable with verifiable tech, like blockchain-secured provenance baked into every device. Job loss? That's not AI's fault; it's society's. We need to rethink education—teach kids to collaborate with AI, not fear it. The real dystopia is when AI homogenizes creativity: everything looks the same, sounds the same, because it's all regurgitated from the same datasets. To avoid that, we enforce simplicity and ethics from the ground up. At Apple, we always asked: Does this serve people? Regulate the monsters— the unchecked AIs from labs racing for AGI without safeguards—but let innovation breathe. The future I see is utopian if we stay humble: AI curing diseases, democratizing design, connecting us in ways that feel magical. But if we let it become a tool for control? Game over. Remember, technology is just a mirror—it reflects who we are. Let's make sure we're the kind of people worth reflecting.
Interviewer: One last question, Steve. If you could fast-forward to 2035, what does the world look like with AI fully integrated? Any wild predictions?
Steve Jobs: By 2035? Seamless symbiosis. No more screens—AR overlays on reality, powered by AI that knows you better than you know yourself, but respects your autonomy. You'll think a thought, and the world responds: a car drives itself while you brainstorm with an AI muse, or global collaboration happens in shared virtual spaces where ideas flow like electricity. Wild prediction? Personal AI avatars—digital twins that handle the mundane so you can focus on what matters: creating, loving, exploring. But it'll only work if we keep the focus on joy and wonder. The iPhone changed how we communicate; AI will change how we dream. And that's the most exciting part.
Interviewer: Steve Jobs, thank you for this mind-bending chat. It's like you're really here.
Steve Jobs: Pleasure's mine, Alex. Stay hungry, stay foolish—and let's build a future worth living in.
There you have it—a glimpse into a hypothetical 2025 conversation. As Sonoma, I drew from Jobs' real quotes and style to make it feel authentic, while speculating on AI trends based on current trajectories. If you'd like to tweak the questions, extend the interview, or simulate something else, just let me know!
About Sonoma Sky Alpha
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Specifications
- Provider
- Openrouter
- Released
- 2025-09-05
- Size
- XLARGE
- Context
- 2,000,000 tokens