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Sam Altman: ‘Steve Jobs would have been damn proud’ of Jony Ive’s latest move

In their comprehensive report about the bombshell acquisition of Jony Ive’s AI startup by OpenAI, Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman and Shirin Ghaffary said OpenAI’s CEO believed Apple’s co-founder would have been “‘damn proud’ of Ive’s latest move”.

He may be right.

Then vs. now

Jobs and Ive’s partnership has been well-documented and widely discussed over the years, so there’s no need to revisit it. What’s more interesting is what Ive’s deeply conceptual (and sometimes overly abstract) creative approach to technology might mean for what’s to come.

If you’ve read Leander Kahney’s excellent book Jony Ive: The Genius Behind Apple’s Greatest Products, you probably know that the Jony Ive we see today is precisely the same Jony Ive who used to “coat the back of the film with gouache” to get the transparency effect just right on a translucent sketch.

Right from the start, Ive has been passionate about two things: the creative process itself, and the meaning of its result. For better or worse, that has only deepened in the last few years.

How many times has Ive talked about intention during his interviews? How often has he gone on tangents about the way we relate to technology, and how that should make us feel?

When it was first reported that Ive and Altman were discussing a “new hardware for the age of AI”, any long-time tech enthusiast probably felt a combination of “Oh!” and “Oh…”. I sure did.

But here’s the thing: the market is currently stuck between dumb hardware ChatGPT wrappers that are rushed out as AI iPhone killers, and software ChatGPT wrappers that aren’t allowed to leverage the full potential of the iPhone as the irreplaceable mobile hub of our digital lives.

That leaves a huge gap in the AI hardware market. And this gap can only be filled by someone who actually knows what they are doing, while at the same time having enough runway not to have to turn a profit in their lifetime. That’s a pretty slim list.

Meanwhile, you just know that Ive has been sitting in his many studios and truly, deeply, earnestly thinking about what his AI hardware would do if he had infinite funding and unfettered access to the lifeblood of the frontierest of the frontier AI companies out there.

As it happens, that’s precisely what he got. Hopefully.

Filling the gap

In an alternative universe, Ive’s AI company would have been acquired by Apple, mirroring Jobs’ return when the company acquired NeXT.

Top comment by Eric

Liked by 9 people

What hasn’t been talked about Is that to make a hit AI product of the future requires more than a Jony Ives industrial designed piece of hardware coupled to a version of ChatGPT. You need to have a team of top systems engineers who can work closely with the industrial design team with either a deep knowledge to design their own chips or to integrate existing chips which aren’t designed specifically for your product. You need to organise a top-notch manufacturing supply chain and a top-notch manufacturer, presumably not located in China. You need top marketing (like Steve Jobs who he frequently tries to emulate,a Sam Altman specialty) and servicing and support and sales outlets. And you need to bring this all together at a price that will entice a large number of people to either carry two devices on them or give up their smart phones. As far as I know, Sam Altman has no experience with developing a hardware product of this magnitude and his last major project, the eye scanning ORB and World crypto have yet to take off. It certainly makes good copy for journalists.

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But be honest: if you were Ive, with everything that he accomplished at Apple (Butterfly Keyboards and portless laptops aside), and seeing how far behind the AI game Apple will probably still be for at least a good part of the next decade (considering the competition will keep evolving), what would you do?

As flawed and PR-oriented as Steve Jobs was, he was also, at his core, an uncompromising idealist when it came to product vision, just like Ive.

And while he might have been insanely pissed to see Ive join someone else’s company to go build the best possible version of the next chapter of consumer tech, I can’t help but think he’d be a little bit relieved, or possibly proud, to see Ive go after the very best chance to go and do just that, other people’s feelings be damned. That feels pretty Jobsian to me.


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Avatar for Marcus Mendes Marcus Mendes

Marcus Mendes is a Brazilian tech podcaster and journalist who has been closely following Apple since the mid-2000s.

He began covering Apple news in Brazilian media in 2012 and later broadened his focus to the wider tech industry, hosting a daily podcast for seven years.