Jean Luo
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
I think that's the next evolution in terms of the way that we just remove more of this friction from computing.
Then to put it in my input and output framework, the big step change there, the big difference there is that computing output happens through see-through lenses in the glasses.
And the input is just your natural hands and your voice.
So that's certainly something that we're really excited about.
And then, you know, we can talk futuristic sensors and all this kind of thing.
But I think that's sort of the next big step as it pertains to computing and interfaces.
I never saw it.
Sounds terrifying.
Well, if you go back to the founding of Snapchat, one of the fundamental things we questioned was, why is everything saved forever online?
It makes no sense.
The world that we live in is largely ephemeral.
Almost all of our conversations, except for this one and maybe a few here and there, they're not recorded at all.
And in fact, a lot of the way that the Internet worked at the time and the online world worked at the time, saving and storing everything was distorting human relationships because people feel less comfortable expressing themselves or less comfortable sharing a photo where they think they don't look their best or a photo of maybe a more intimate moment like they're in the hospital and they don't want to save or save that or post that publicly.
They just want to share it with a friend.
And so I think that was one of the first things we did 15 years ago to say technology should actually resemble the way we interact in the real world, not create this whole other paradigm just because we can with technology.
So I would say overall,
I would be concerned about that sort of future where everything is recorded.
I think privacy is so foundational to human expression.
I think it's so foundational to creativity.
I think it's the way that you can try out a bad idea without feeling embarrassed.