Mark Zuckerberg
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
I mean, it's early, right?
I mean, it's not, you know, there's a reason why we haven't made that the default voice model in the app, but there's something about how naturally conversational it is that I think is just like really fun and compelling.
And I think being able to mix kind of that in
with the right personalization is gonna lead towards a product experience where, you know, I would basically just guess that you go forward a few years, like we're just gonna be talking to AI throughout the day about different things that we're wondering.
And, you know, it's like you'll,
you'll have your phone, you'll talk to it on your phone, you'll talk to it while you're browsing your feed apps.
It'll give you context about different stuff.
You'll be able to answer questions.
It'll help you as you're interacting with people in messaging apps.
Eventually, I think we'll walk through our daily lives and we'll either have glasses or other kinds of AI devices and just be able to kind of seamlessly interact with it all day long.
So I think that that is...
That's kind of the North Star, and whatever the benchmarks are that lead towards people feeling like the quality is, like, that's what they want to interact with, that, I think, is actually the thing that is ultimately going to matter the most to us.
Well, I mean, I personally think that's pretty compelling.
And that's why we have a big coding effort, too.
We're working on a number of coding agents inside Meta
you know, because we're not really a, um, an enterprise software company, we're primarily building it for ourselves.
So we're, so again, you know, we, we go kind of like for, for, um, you know, the specific goal, we're not trying to build a general developer tool.
We're trying to build a coding agent and an AI research agent that, um, that basically advances Lama research specifically.
And, um,
And it's, like, just fully kind of plugged into our tool chain and all this.