Min-Liang Tan
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And that's also one good example where at CES, you know, I was just looking at some of the stats and they said, what's the biggest buzz at CES?
And there was a lot of like Ava, Motoko and things like that.
And for what it's worth, we've literally just put vision capabilities, audio capabilities on a headphone.
and combine it with AI.
And for what it's worth, it's not a quantum leap from a hardware design perspective, but it's captured so much imagination at this point of time.
People are going, oh, wow, now I can bring AI on the go with me at any point of time.
It's truly something revolutionary at this juncture.
So the way that we see it, and maybe that's something that-
Well, I would say that, first off, we...
are really looking at being able to have an unobtrusive universal form factor to enable AI smarts.
I'll bet it's headphones in the sense that we don't necessarily have to retrain human beings as a whole with an entirely new form factor.
I don't have to change any behavior of sorts.
Boom, tomorrow we can get you AI smarts immediately.
And that, I think, is a promise.
There's a disconnect today with the possibility of AI and what it could be.
And that's where we see ourselves as designers having that responsibility or the opportunity, so to speak, to be able to design in such a way that we don't necessarily have to change the entire behavior.
For what it's worth, in the very early days, it could be
for that matter, you know, maybe it's a mouse.
It's just a mouse.
You know, why is a mouse so important that today we've brought it from a mouse all the way to a gaming mouse and now the gaming mouse is a broader category than productivity mice.