Nothing CEO Carl Pei、AIエージェントがアプリに取って代わりスマホアプリは消滅すると発言
NothingのCEO Carl Peiは、AIエージェントがユーザーの意図を理解して代わりに行動するシステムへとスマートフォンが移行し、最終的にアプリが置き換えられると述べた。
キーポイント
AIエージェントによるアプリの置き換え
NothingのCEO Carl Peiは、AIエージェントが最終的にスマートフォンアプリを置き換えると予測している。
スマートフォンのパラダイムシフト
スマートフォンは、ユーザーの意図を理解し、代わりに行動するシステムへと移行するとされている。
意図ベースのインタラクション
将来のスマートフォンシステムは、ユーザーの意図を理解し、それに基づいて自律的に行動するようになる。
影響分析・編集コメントを表示
影響分析
この発言は、スマートフォン業界の長期的なビジョンを示しており、アプリ中心の現在のエコシステムからAIエージェント中心の未来への移行を暗示している。実現には技術的・生態系的課題が多く、現時点では概念的展望に留まるが、業界の方向性を示す重要な議論を提起している。
編集コメント
業界リーダーによる未来予測として注目されるが、具体的な実現時期や技術的詳細が不足しており、現時点では概念的展望の域を出ていない。
NothingのCEO、カール・ペイは、AIエージェントが最終的にアプリに取って代わり、スマートフォンがユーザーの意図を理解し、代わりに行動するシステムへと移行すると述べています。
ペイは、現在のアプリ中心のモデルでは、ユーザーが複数のアプリを切り替え、それぞれのインターフェースを学ぶ必要があるため、非効率的であると主張しています。
彼のビジョンでは、AIエージェントがユーザーの目標(例えば旅行の計画や食事の注文)を理解し、必要なサービスや情報を自動的に調整して提供するようになります。
この移行により、スマートフォンはより直感的でパーソナライズされたデバイスへと変わり、ユーザーは複雑なタスクを簡単に実行できるようになる可能性があります。
ペイは、この変化は段階的に進み、初期段階ではAIアシスタントが特定のアプリ内でより深く統合されることから始まると予測しています。
最終的には、AIエージェントが主要なインターフェースとなり、従来のアプリはバックグラウンドで動作するサービスへと退化する可能性があります。
この転換は、開発者や企業にとって、アプリの設計と収益化の方法を再考する必要があることを意味します。
ペイは、Nothingとして、このAI主導の未来に備え、よりシームレスなユーザー体験を実現する製品の開発を進めていると述べています。
原文を表示
Carl Pei, co-founder and CEO of Nothing, is imagining a future beyond the iPhone — and it’s a device powered by AI agents, not running apps.
“In terms of AI in software, I think people should understand that apps are going to disappear,” said Pei, whose consumer electronics brand makes unique smartphones and other accessories. “So, if you’re a founder or a startup and your app is like where the core value lies, that will be disrupted whether you like it or not.”
Pei made these comments during an interview at the SXSW conference in Austin on Wednesday.
The founder has talked about an AI-first device before, as this vision helped the company close its $200 million Series C funding round last year. At the time, Nothing was pitching the idea of a new kind of smartphone using AI and personalization technology that’s accurate enough for its users to not feel they had to go behind the AI and double-check its output.
At SXSW, Pei expanded on his vision for the AI-first device and the steps needed to get there.
The initial step, which is being tested by some companies today, is an AI feature that can execute a command on the users’ behalf, like booking flights or hotels. Pei, however, dismissed this step as being “super boring.”
The next step is where things could get more interesting, as the AI begins to learn a user’s intentions long-term. For instance, if you wanted to be healthier, the device could give you nudges to help you accomplish your goals.
“I think it gets even more powerful when it starts surfacing suggestions for you; you don’t have to manually come up with an idea…when the system knows us so well, it will come up with things that we don’t even [know] we wanted,” Pei explained, comparing this concept to something like ChatGPT’s memory feature.
In describing how he pictured an AI-first smartphone, Pei said it would be a device that would do things for you without needing to be commanded to.
“The current way we use phones is very old-school. It’s pre-iPhone…there used to be Palm Pilots and PDAs back in the day. And if you think about the user experience, it’s still very similar,” Pei said. “You have lock screens, home screens, apps. You browse different apps. Each app is like a full-screen thing. There’s some kind of app store that allows you to download more apps. So it hasn’t really changed for like, 20 years.”
This frustrated him because the technology consumers are using has evolved quite a bit, but the products we use have not. Even simple tasks have us jumping through multiple steps, he explained.
“It’s very hard to get things done on a phone,” Pei said. “Let’s say we want to grab coffee. That’s an intention. But to execute that intention, we have to go through so many different steps and so many different apps. It’s probably like four apps to grab coffee with somebody — some messaging app, some kind of maps, Uber, calendar.”
He continued: “I think the future of smartphones or operating systems should just be: ‘I know you very well, and if I know your intention, I just do it for you,’ instead of having to go through all the apps manually.”
“It should just do it through AI,” he said.
This also means devices would have an interface that’s not focused on apps for humans to navigate, but would instead feature an interface designed for the AI agent to use.
That doesn’t mean apps are going away in the near-term, Pei cautioned. Nothing’s own operating system even allows users to vibe code their own mini apps today. But eventually, the AI will need to be able to use the “app” in a frictionless way, not trying to mimic human touch on the smartphones by moving through menus and tapping options.
“That’s not the future. The future is not the agent using a human interface. You need to create an interface for the agent to use. I think that’s the more future-proof way of doing it,” Pei said.
Sarah has worked as a reporter for TechCrunch since August 2011. She joined the company after having previously spent over three years at ReadWriteWeb. Prior to her work as a reporter, Sarah worked in I.T. across a number of industries, including banking, retail and software.
You can contact or verify outreach from Sarah by emailing sarahp@techcrunch.com or via encrypted message at sarahperez.01 on Signal.
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