I\u2019m just going to call it: we\u2019ll look back on April 2024 as the beginning of a new technological era. That sounds grandiose, I know, but in the next few weeks, a whole new generation of gadgets is poised to hit the market. Humane will launch its voice-controlled AI Pin. Rabbit\u2019s AI-powered R1 will start to ship. Brilliant Labs\u2019 AI-enabled smart glasses are coming out. And Meta is rolling out a new feature to its smart glasses that allow Meta\u2019s AI to see and help you navigate the real world. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n
There are many more AI gadgets to come, but the AI hardware revolution is officially beginning. What all these gadgets have in common is that they put artificial intelligence at the front of the experience. When you tap your AI Pin to ask a question, play music, or take a photo, Humane runs your query through a series of language models to figure out what you\u2019re asking for and how best to accomplish it. When you ask your Rabbit R1 or your Meta smart glasses who makes that cool mug you\u2019re looking at, it pings through a series of image recognition and data processing models in order to tell you that\u2019s a Yeti Rambler. AI is not an app or a feature; it\u2019s the whole thing.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
It\u2019s possible that one or many of these devices will so thoroughly nail the user experience and feature list that this month will feel both like the day you got your first flip phone and <\/em>the day the iPhone made that flip phone look like an antique. But probably not. More likely, what we\u2019re about to get are a lot of new ideas about how you interact with technology. And together, they\u2019ll show us at least a glimpse of the future.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n The primary argument against all these AI gadgets so far has been that the smartphone exists. Why, you might ask, do I need special hardware to access all this stuff? Why can\u2019t I just do it on the phone in my pocket? To that, I say, well, you mostly can! The ChatGPT app is great, Google\u2019s Gemini is rapidly taking over the Android experience, and if I were a betting man, I\u2019d say there\u2019s a whole lot of AI coming to iOS this year.\u00a0<\/p>\n<\/div>\n Smartphones are great! None of these devices will kill or replace your phone, and anyone who says otherwise is lying to you. But after so many years of using our phones, we\u2019ve forgotten how much friction they actually contain. To do almost anything on your phone, you have to take the device out of your pocket, look at it, unlock it, open an app, wait for the app to load, tap between one and 40,000 times, switch to another app, and repeat over and over again. Smartphones are great because they\u2019re able to contain and access practically everything, but they\u2019re not actually particularly efficient tools. And they\u2019re not going to get better, not as long as the app store business model stays the way it is.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n