Julian Chokkatu
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And then I asked, how do I play it?
And it started giving me instructions on how I played it.
But then I said, hey, actually, can you just save that into a Google Keep note?
And it saved it on a note in my phone so that I can look at it later.
So I think there's elements of this where it's really helpful.
And you can imagine that when, say, you're at a restaurant and you're like, oh, this looks really good.
I kind of want to make this at home.
Hey, can you like find something like this and give me a similar recipe and save it to my phone?
Hey, I'm walking past a poster for a music show.
And can you just put that on my calendar?
Because I want to like remind myself to buy tickets.
All of that stuff becomes much more sort of ambient computing and more integrated with the daily flow of life and breaking that pattern of, oh, I have to stop, pull out my phone, take a picture, and maybe I then get distracted by something else I see on my phone.
So I think there is elements of that that I think people appreciate when they finally get to try and see these features out in the real world.
But of course, that's also not to minimize the rightful rejection of all the AI capabilities that are being forced on everyone as well.
No, I think that is the number one thing.
I think that a lot of people also, especially in the wave of meta's popularity with the glasses, I think the number one rejection was that, but it's meta.
Like, you know, meta has just a really bad history with privacy and managing your data and all of the above.
It's just just not a good company from that outlook.
And I think anyone who is interested in trying to keep their data private would probably not want to buy the meta glasses.
Boone probably can say the same.