"I've only had it for like a week or something," he [Sam Altman] said, but one way of using it is "putting my phone on the table while I'm really in the zone of working, and then, without having to change windows or change what I'm doing, using it as like another channel," he said.
He elaborated, "So I'm working on something, I would normally stop what I'm doing, switch to another tab, Google something, click around or whatever, but while I'm still doing it, to just ask and get an instant response without changing from what I was looking at on my computer, that's been a surprisingly cool thing."
This is the very definition of "ubiquitous computing" and something I do all the time using my Google Home speaker.
I will be doing that for much more than simple tasks such as checking my spelling as soon as I can talk to Gemini from it.
Early on in my career I read a scholarly article about ubiquitous computing that made the argument that the power of computing needs to become so prevalent that it essentially disappears.
It made the point that eye glasses are a technology that extends the power of your sight but when you put on a pair, you don't look at them, you look through them.
Computers need to become ambient and effortless.
We're almost there.
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Data Scientist
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