OpenAI’s New AI Device by Sam Altman and Jony Ive: A Screenless Future That Will Replace Smartphones
pJiiWk8JVPQ • 2025-11-15
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Let's be honest, your phone is making
you anxious.
The constant notifications, the screen
addiction, the feeling that you can
never truly disconnect.
Even Joanie IV, the man who literally
designed the iPhone, admits our
relationship with technology is
uncomfortable, and that's putting it
mildly. Well, here's something you might
not expect. He's now building something
completely different with OpenAI Sam
Alman, and it's not another smartphone.
Welcome back to bitbiased.ai where we do
the research so you don't have to join
our community of AI enthusiasts. Click
the newsletter link in the description
for weekly analysis delivered straight
to your inbox. So, in this video, I'm
breaking down everything we know about
this mysterious new AI device that could
actually make you happier instead of
more stressed. We're talking about a
screenless palmized gadget that's being
designed to transform how we interact
with AI in our daily lives. This isn't
science fiction. Open AAI just invested
6.5 billion into this project. And by
the end of this video, you'll understand
why this could genuinely change your
relationship with technology for the
better.
Let's start with who's behind this
extraordinary collaboration.
The power duo, Sam Alman and Joanie
Ivite.
Here's what makes this project so
different from every other AI gadget
announcement you've seen. You've got Sam
Alman, the CEO of OpenAI, the company
that gave us ChatGpt.
He's not just thinking about better chat
bots. He's openly said that AI might
require rethinking the whole structure
of society.
Big ideas, right? But then you pair him
with Johnny IV. If you don't know that
name, you know his work.
He's the legendary designer who spent
over two decades at Apple and gave us
the iMac, the iPod, and yes, the iPhone.
The man defined what minimalistic,
beautiful technology looks like for an
entire generation.
Now, here's where it gets interesting.
These two didn't meet in a boardroom.
Their collaboration started in 2023 from
what they described as friendship,
curiosity, and shared values.
They started having casual brainstorming
sessions just exploring ideas.
But those conversations quickly grew in
ambition as they realized something
profound.
We now have AI that can see, think, and
understand the world. But we're still
interacting with it through products
designed decades ago. Think about that
for a second. You're using chat GPT or
other cuttingedge AI through a device,
your smartphone, whose basic design
hasn't fundamentally changed since 2007.
It's like trying to harness nuclear
energy with a steam engine. By 2024,
this got serious. Joanie IV founded a
new company called IO with former Apple
colleagues specifically to focus on this
AI hardware vision. Then by mid 2025,
OpenAI decided to acquire IO outright,
bringing Iive and his entire team
inhouse. Why? So they could work more
intimately with OpenAI's engineers and
researchers.
No more back and forth between
companies. They wanted everyone under
one roof, completely aligned. In their
public announcement, Sam and Joanie
called this an extraordinary moment in
computing history.
And Sam Alman's praise for IVE almost
poetic.
He said, "Great tools require work at
the intersection of technology, design,
and understanding people. No one can do
this like Joanie and his team."
That's high praise. But wait until you
hear what Joanie said. Everything I have
learned over the last 30 years has led
me to this moment.
Let that sink in. The man who
revolutionized personal computing is
saying this project represents the
culmination of his entire career. Both
of them share this deep belief that with
the right design and AI working
together, what it means to use
technology can change in a profound way.
They want to recapture the delight,
wonder, and creative spirit of early
personal computing before tech became
synonymous with stress and distraction.
So, you've got a visionary AI leader and
perhaps the greatest product designer of
our generation joining forces. The stage
is set for something genuinely
different.
A new category of AI device.
All right, so what exactly are they
building?
Here's what we know for certain. This is
not another smartphone. It's not smart
glasses. It's not a smart speaker or AR
headset.
Sam Alman explicitly described this as
creating a third core device for our
lives right alongside your laptop and
smartphone.
Stop for a moment and think about what
that means. How many devices can claim
to be truly essential to modern life?
Your phone, your computer, maybe a
smartwatch for some people. That's about
it. Altman and Iive are saying this new
AI device will be in that tier. An
entirely new category of consumer
technology. According to internal
briefings, the device is designed to be
portable and discreet, deeply integrated
with OpenAI's AI software. It's meant to
understand the user's life and
environment and serve as the central way
you interact with AI models throughout
your day. Now, here's where the design
gets fascinating. Reports indicate the
device is palmsized and screenless. Yes,
you read that right. Johnny IV, who put
a touchcreen in everyone's pocket and
changed the world, is now exploring a
future where maybe we don't need to
stare at screens constantly.
Instead of a touch screen, this device
would rely on cameras, microphones, and
AI to perceive the world around you and
respond intelligently.
Imagine an ambient AI presence. It's
taking in audio and visual cues from
your environment, listening to your
voice commands, understanding the
context of what you're doing.
Sam Alman hinted internally that the
product would be genuinely aware of your
surroundings and day-to-day experiences.
But here's where it gets really
intriguing. One concept they're
exploring is an always on AI assistant
that doesn't even require a wake word.
You know how you have to say, "Hey
Siri," or "Alexa?" This wouldn't need
that. It could proactively chime in when
it has something useful to offer.
Picture this. You're about to leave the
house and the device notices you've left
the lights on and gently mentions it. Or
you're running late to a meeting and it
reminds you without being prompted.
The idea is that it knows when to help
and when to stay quiet. Of course,
getting this right is incredibly tricky.
The team has reportedly struggled with
ensuring the AI only speaks up when
useful and knows when silence is golden.
They want it to be accessible but not
intrusive.
As one source put it, they're trying to
avoid creating a weird AI girlfriend
that's constantly in your business.
Finding that balance between helpful and
creepy is one of their biggest
challenges. Under the hood, expect the
absolute latest in open AI technology.
While specifics aren't public yet, we're
talking powerful language models for
natural conversation, computer vision
for understanding what it sees, and
probably integration with other AI
services.
Altman has called this an effort to
create a new generation of AI powered
computers.
Essentially, hardware customuilt around
advanced AI capabilities from the ground
up.
This device is intended to be the
central way you interact with OpenAI's
AI in the future.
Now, let's talk design philosophy
because this is where Joanie Ives's
fingerprints are all over it. He said
the design should feel obvious, as if
there wasn't possibly another rational
solution once you see it.
That's classic IV. The goal is something
entirely new that somehow feels natural
and inevitable, like it was always meant
to exist. And here's a detail I love.
They want it to be beautiful and even
whimsical.
I've mentioned that if they design an
interface and we can't smile honestly at
it, then they haven't done their job.
This hints that the product might have
delightful touches or personality in how
it interacts rather than being a cold,
sterile machine. Some early reports
compared it to the AI assistant from the
movie Her, an AI you could carry around
and talk to naturally, almost like a
friend. And they're adamant this isn't
just strapping chat GPT to a phone.
I finds it absurd that we deliver
today's breathtaking AI capabilities
through products that are decades old.
So, they're building something from
scratch. A clean slate reimagining of
what an AI device should be.
The vision, making life better.
Now, we get to the heart of this
project, the why behind it all. And
honestly, this is what makes this device
different from every other tech
announcement you'll hear. Sam Alman and
Joanie IV aren't just trying to make a
cool gadget. They have a deeply
philosophical purpose here. They see our
current relationship with technology as
fundamentally broken and they want to
fix it. Listen to what Joanie Ives said.
I don't think we have an easy
relationship with our technology at the
moment.
Then he caught himself and said that
calling it uncomfortable was the most
obscene understatement.
Think about who's saying this.
The man who helped create the modern
smartphone era is essentially admitting,
"Yes, these devices are amazing, but
they've also contributed to anxiety,
stress, and social disconnection.
The notifications, the screen addiction,
the constant alerts. We all live with
these downsides every day. So, with this
new AI device, they explicitly want to
change that dynamic." And here's what's
radical about their approach. They're
not prioritizing productivity or
efficiency. Joanie Ives says the primary
goal is to improve our emotional
well-being. Read that again. Happiness
is the goal, not efficiency.
He imagines tools that make us happy and
fulfilled and more peaceful and less
anxious and less disconnected.
In other words, this device should help
you feel better and more connected to
what truly matters in life instead of
adding to your digital overload.
What might that actually look like?
Well, imagine the device gently
organizing your day in a way that
reduces stress or helping you focus on
meaningful work by intelligently
filtering distractions or even fostering
more real human interaction by getting
technology out of the way when it should
be. Johnny Ives sees this as a chance to
transform the relationship people
currently have with the devices they use
every day. If our phones sometimes make
us unhappy or anxious, this AI device
aims to flip that script entirely and be
a calming, enriching presence in your
life. Sam Alman echoes this deeply
human- ccentric vision. He said
something pretty remarkable about why
they're doing this project.
The reason we're doing this is we love
our species and we want to be useful.
Humanity deserves much better than
humanity generally is given.
That's not marketing speak. That's a
genuine statement of purpose. Let me
give you a concrete example of what this
might mean. Imagine an AI companion that
not only manages your calendar but
senses when you're getting overwhelmed
and suggests taking a break or notices
you've been working for hours and
haven't spoken to your family. So, it
gently encourages you to connect with
them.
These are the kinds of humanentric
benefits they're targeting. I've even
described this opportunity as being
literally on the brink of a new
generation of technology that can make
us our better selves. That phrase better
selves suggests almost an uplifting
self-improvement angle. Maybe the device
will help you learn more effectively,
create more freely, or simply take
better care of yourself in ways current
devices don't facilitate.
This optimistic philosophy actually
harks back to an earlier era of
technology.
In their joint announcement, Sam and
Joanie reminisced about when people
celebrated new tools that helped us
learn, explore, and create. When
technology made us feel optimistic and
hopeful,
they want to recapture that spirit. So,
making life better isn't just a tagline
here. It's genuinely at the core of
every design decision. If this device
works as intended, it could make you
happier, less lonely or stressed, and
more empowered in your daily life.
That's an incredibly high bar to meet,
and only real world use will tell if
they succeed.
But it's refreshing to see a piece of
technology explicitly aimed at
well-being rather than just productivity
or entertainment potential to change
systemic structures. Now, let's zoom out
and talk about the bigger picture beyond
individual well-being. What about those
systemic structures this product might
reshape? Because if this device
succeeds, the implications go way beyond
just having a nicer gadget. Consider how
smartphones over the last 15 years
completely reshaped communication,
commerce, social norms, even democracy
itself.
Similarly, OpenAI's device could usher
in what's being called ambient computing
or AI first computing, where artificial
intelligence is seamlessly woven into
our daily routines rather than something
we explicitly interact with.
Sam Alman has suggested we're on the
cusp of profound shifts in how
technology fits into our lives. If this
truly becomes a third core device next
to phones and laptops, it might
fundamentally reduce our reliance on
screens and keyboards. We'd move toward
more natural interactions instead.
Picture a future where instead of
pulling out your phone every few minutes
to check something, you simply trust an
AI companion to handle tasks or
proactively provide information as
needed. That behavioral shift alone
could change our habits around
information consumption, work patterns,
and even how we socialize. Think about
it. We might spend dramatically less
time staring at phone screens. that
could improve face-to-face social
interactions and reduce all those
welldocumented negative effects of
screen addiction. In that sense, it
challenges the entire system of how we
currently use technology, shifting from
manual onscreen engagement to a more
ambient voice and contextbased
interaction model. Another systemic
change could happen in accessibility and
inclusion. A well-designed AI device
that truly understands you and your
environment could be transformative for
people with disabilities or older users
who find today's gadgets frustratingly
complex. If it's genuinely intuitive and
contextaware, it could break down
barriers that current interfaces create.
Looking at broader societal structures,
if these devices become commonplace, we
might see real changes in education.
Imagine AI tutors always available for
students. In workplace dynamics, every
employee could have an AI assistant that
actually understands their role and
context.
The economic implications alone are
staggering. Alman has talked about how
advanced AI might lead us to rethink
social contracts, like how jobs and
income work, though that's a much larger
conversation.
This device is one piece of that puzzle,
helping to usher AI into everyday life
in a tangible, accessible way.
This project is also pushing boundaries
in the tech industry itself. It
represents a melding of hardware and AI
software in a way few companies have
attempted. Alman has said he admires
Apple's tight integration of hardware
and software, and he's taking a page
from that playbook here. We might see
new standards emerge particularly around
privacy.
An always listening device with cameras
and microphones raises critical
questions and the team is already
grappling with how it handles privacy to
ensure users are comfortable.
If they solve those challenges well, it
could set new norms for trust in a eye
gadgets throughout the industry.
The initiative has also attracted
massive investment interest. Soft Bank
was reportedly ready to pour in $1
billion early on, and OpenAI sees this
as potentially adding trillions in value
long-term. If successful, it might spur
other tech giants to follow suit,
shifting the entire competitive
landscape of consumer tech toward
AIcentric devices rather than
incrementally improving smartphones.
So, this little palmsized device could
have enormous ripple effects, altering
how we use technology daily, how tech
companies innovate and compete, and even
how we fundamentally think about AI's
role in society, challenges, and
timeline. With all this incredible
promise, it's important to ground
ourselves in reality. This is an
extraordinarily hard project, and the
team is completely upfront about that.
Hardware is hard. Figuring out new
computing form factors is hard, Alman
said at OpenAI's developer conference.
That's not false modesty. These are
genuine, significant technical and
design challenges they're actively
working through. One major issue has
been focusing the product concept
itself. Johnny IV revealed that the
collaboration has generated 15 to 20
really compelling product ideas thanks
to how rapidly AI is progressing and
choosing just one direction to pursue
first has been genuinely difficult. The
momentum is so extraordinary. I've
explained that it's been almost
overwhelming trying to decide which
approach to commit to. This explains why
even after 2 years of intensive work,
they're still refining exactly what the
first device will do and look like.
Beyond conceptual challenges, they've
hit some real technical hurdles.
Unresolved questions about the devices
AI personality are still being debated
and prototyped.
They're wrestling with computing
infrastructure decisions.
Should processing happen in the cloud or
on the device itself?
What about battery life? How do you pack
powerful AI into a palmsized form factor
that doesn't need charging every hour?
That always voice assistant idea we
talked about earlier.
It's raising tricky implementation
questions.
Exactly when and how should the device
interject in your conversations or
activities without being annoying.
Getting that balance right is proving
complex. And then there's privacy. This
is huge. A device loaded with cameras
and microphones that's constantly
listening will need absolutely ironclad
safeguards.
Users need to trust it and people around
them need to feel their privacy is
respected too. These kinds of challenges
have reportedly slowed progress, but to
their credit, the team is taking the
time to get it right rather than rushing
out a half-baked product. So when might
we actually see this device in our
hands?
As of now, OpenAI hasn't announced an
official release date, but multiple
reports suggest they were initially
targeting late 2026 for launch.
Bloomberg reported that first devices
from the Altman IV collaboration were
scheduled to debut in 2026 and internal
plans aimed for the end of 2026 as a
tentative timeline. Sam Alman himself
has hinted to insiders that development
will take a while, tempering
expectations for any quick reveal.
And given those technical challenges we
just discussed, the Financial Times
noted the launch could be delayed beyond
2026 if issues aren't resolved
satisfactorily.
So late 2026 is the rough target, but we
should be prepared for that date to
potentially slip.
The key point, this is likely at least a
couple of years out, probably more.
Here's what's wild, though. Altman and
Iive are incredibly ambitious about
scale once it does launch. They have a
long-term goal to ship 100 million units
of this device faster than any product
of that scale in history. Let me put
that in perspective. Even the iPhone
took a couple of years to reach 100
million units sold. They're talking
about smashing that record. This shows
the level of impact they're genuinely
envisioning.
They see this as a device that almost
everyone might eventually have if it
lives up to its promise.
Of course, that's highly aspirational,
and achieving it will depend entirely on
how compelling the actual product is
when it finally ships.
For now, in late 2025, the device
remains completely under wraps.
At OpenAI's Devday conference in
November 2025, Sam Alman and Johnny IV
spoke at length about their philosophy
and vision for the project, but they
didn't show a prototype or even reveal
what it's called yet. So, we don't have
images or detailed specs to examine,
just these broad strokes of what it's
supposed to be. The secrecy suggests
they want to surprise the world when
it's ready, and probably also indicates
things are still genuinely in flux
during development. It's also worth
noting they're not alone in this space.
Big players like Meta have already
entered the AI gadget market. Meta's
smart glasses with AI capabilities have
sold a couple million units and smaller
startups launched devices like the
Humane AI pin, a screen-free wearable AI
assistant that came out in 2023.
But here's the thing, those early movers
have largely stumbled. The humane AI pin
got generally unfavorable feedback from
users and was actually pulled from the
market in under two years.
Wired reported that many early AI
devices had frustrating user experiences
that didn't live up to their promises.
This history of AI devices 1.0 failing
tells us that nailing this product will
require solving problems that others
simply couldn't crack.
The OpenAI Joanie IVive team seems
keenly aware of these cautionary tales,
which is likely why they emphasize doing
it right over doing it fast. So, here's
where we stand. Open AAI's upcoming AI
device built under the joint leadership
of Sam Alman and Joanie IV is genuinely
one of the most eagerly anticipated
projects in all of tech right now. What
we know for certain is that it's
designed to inaugurate an entirely new
class of AIcentric hardware. Something
that doesn't look or act like any gadget
we use today. Its design will likely be
minimal and screenless, relying instead
on advanced AI to interact with us in a
more human, less attention-grabbing way.
The purpose driving this project is bold
and refreshingly humane. To make daily
life genuinely better by reducing
technology induced stress and fostering
happiness, meaningful connection, and
creativity. As Joanie IV said, we have a
chance to absolutely change the
situation that we find ourselves in with
technology. He's rejecting the idea that
our current anxious, distracted
relationship with our devices has to be
the permanent norm. If this device lives
up to even half its promise, it could be
truly transformative.
Imagine an AI that seamlessly assists
you throughout your day and actually
improves your well-being without all the
downsides we've come to accept from our
current technology that could
fundamentally change how we think about
our relationship with devices entirely.
It's no wonder Altman described it as
potentially the coolest piece of
technology that the world will have ever
seen.
That's certainly hyperbole, but it
captures the genuine excitement behind
this project.
Johnny IV, who once put a touchcreen in
every pocket and changed modern life,
now envisions a future where an almost
invisible AI companion makes us, as one
journalist put it, a little less anxious
and a little more human. For now, we'll
need to be patient as development
continues.
The timeline suggests a launch around
2026 if things go smoothly, though that
could slip. And when it does launch, you
can be absolutely certain the entire
tech world will be watching with intense
scrutiny.
It's genuinely rare to see a
collaboration of this caliber, this
level of talent and ambition focused on
such a deeply human societal goal rather
than just building another gadget.
As someone who follows AI developments
closely, this is definitely something to
be genuinely excited about,
not just for the cutting edge
technology, but for the potential it has
to reshape our relationship with
technology for the better. So stay tuned
for late breaking news from Open AI over
the next couple of years. We just might
witness the arrival of a device that
marks a completely new chapter in the
story of AI in our lives.
And if Sam Alman and Joanie Ives succeed
in their vision, it could be a chapter
that leaves us happier, healthier, and
fundamentally rethinking what our
technology should actually do for us.
Only time will tell if they can pull it
off, but the vision and effort behind
this project are truly inspiring. And in
a tech landscape often dominated by
incremental updates and marketing hype,
it's refreshing to see something that
genuinely aims to make all our lives
better. Thanks for watching and let's
hope this is one AI innovation that
lives up to its extraordinary promise.
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file updated 2026-02-12 02:44:17 UTC
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