OpenAI's Hardware Obsession
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OpenAI is back with another hardware announcement - and this time, they're going all in. The company has over 200 employees building a lineup of AI-powered devices including a smart speaker with a built-in camera, smart glasses to compete with Meta, and even a smart lamp. The speaker, expected to ship in early 2027 at $200-$300, can identify objects, listen to conversations, and use facial recognition to authenticate purchases. Sound impressive? Maybe. Sound creepy? Definitely.
In this follow-up to their earlier episode on OpenAI's wearable ambitions, Chris and David revisit the AI hardware landscape with fresh skepticism. They examine whether a camera-equipped smart speaker solves real consumer problems or just adds surveillance features nobody asked for, what the $6.5 billion Jony Ive acquisition has actually produced so far, and why even the best-funded hardware teams are struggling with delays and technical challenges.
For founders considering the AI hardware space, this episode is a reality check on what it actually takes to bring AI devices to market - and why vertical-specific hardware solutions may be a smarter play than trying to build the next smartphone replacement. From privacy concerns to the brutal economics of consumer electronics, this conversation separates hardware hype from hardware reality.