“There are some secret form factors that I cannot tell you about,” the Qualcomm CEO said in an interview with Fortune Editor in Chief Alyson Shontell on the Titans and Disruptors of Industry podcast. “But I think we’re working with pretty much all of them.”

“Pretty much all of them,” in this case, means the AI companies racing to build the device that replaces the smartphone. OpenAI, Meta, and others that Amon declined to name in an interview from the company’s San Diego headquarters. This device won’t be something you can hold; it’ll be “things you wear”: glasses, jewelry, pins, pendants. And it’ll center on the idea that the center of digital life will no longer be a phone but an autonomous agent.

  • PlantJam@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    All these ai agents sound interesting on paper, but who actually wants them? A salesman was talking about a company that used one to let customers initiate returns like it was impressive. I can accomplish that with any app, email, or phone call today. How is an agent doing it better?