Computer of the Future Silicon Valley designers are racing to transform the power of generative AI into whatever comes next.
Fast Company|September 2023
THE BARTENDER POURING FREE DRINKS glances around with nothing to do as the raucous room full of startup founders and software developers gravitates toward its preferred drug: networking.
MARK WILSON
Computer of the Future Silicon Valley designers are racing to transform the power of generative AI into whatever comes next.

Chardonnay and charcuterie are no competition in a world upended by generative AI platforms like ChatGPT and Midjourney. We're about eight months into the Al revolution, and this invite-only happy hour hosted by venture firm NFX in its offices in the Hayes Valley neighborhood of San Francisco may well be its epicenter. The firm is arguably the most prominent investor in generative AI, and it's looking to find fresh talent worthy of some of its $150 million seed fund.

General partner James Currier observes the frenzy from a quiet adjoining room with a jaded eye. He estimates that he's already met with 200 AI startups, the majority of which still don't seem to get it. The technology is ready. It's been ready. What's missing is the point of view to transform it into the earth-rocking endgame of software as we know it.

"So you're investing in the design layer of AI," I suggest.

"Exactly," says Currier.

What Currier, a fast talker wearing a '90s-dad-approved open buttondown over a T-shirt, is searching for is a company that figures out the interface of the future that will allow users to tap into these burgeoning AI models not simply to write a poem or paint a picture, but to change day-to-day life and work as we know it. Currier points to an example of the shift he's waiting for: Even after the launch of the iPhone in 2007, it took three years for developers to realize that the combination of touchscreen, GPS, data connection, and app-store distribution could coalesce into society-rattling businesses like Uber. "I think there are big things, but no one wants to whisper them because they're scared-deep down, people are psychologically scared about what this means," says Currier, speaking in the kind of cryptic koans endemic to the AI boom. "They're not thinking the big thoughts."

Dit verhaal komt uit de September 2023 editie van Fast Company.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.

Dit verhaal komt uit de September 2023 editie van Fast Company.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.

MORE ARTICLES FROM {{MAGNAME}}Alles Bekijken
Entangled Publishing
Fast Company

Entangled Publishing

FOR FUELING THE ROMANTASY FRENZY

time-read
1 min  |
Spring 2025
Homecourt For adding luxury to sustainable, nontoxic household products
Fast Company

Homecourt For adding luxury to sustainable, nontoxic household products

CLEANING YOUR home is hardly a sexy undertaking. But when you’re obsessed with design, cleanliness, and things smelling good, it can be joyful.

time-read
2 mins  |
Spring 2025
TOP TEN
Fast Company

TOP TEN

“I WOULDN'T WANT TO COME HERE, TO BE honest” is not the first tourism slogan that would occur to most marketers.

time-read
1 min  |
Spring 2025
HistoSonics
Fast Company

HistoSonics

FOR CHANNELING SOUND TO DESTROY LIVER TUMORS

time-read
1 min  |
Spring 2025
Zero Foodprint For funding "collective regeneration"
Fast Company

Zero Foodprint For funding "collective regeneration"

EVERY DAY, Americans spend hundreds of millions of dollars on food, yet very little of that money directly changes how food is grown.

time-read
1 min  |
Spring 2025
Iceye
Fast Company

Iceye

FOR SEEING THE WORLD, EVEN THROUGH CLOUDS

time-read
1 min  |
Spring 2025
Duolingo
Fast Company

Duolingo

For finding a common language

time-read
10+ mins  |
Spring 2025
WNBA For posting up when it mattered
Fast Company

WNBA For posting up when it mattered

WHEN BASKETBALL STARS CAITLIN Clark, Angel Reese, and Cameron Brink rolled up to the Brooklyn Academy of Music last April for the 2024 WNBA draft, they signaled the arrival of a new generation of talent—and the league’s cultural ascendance.

time-read
3 mins  |
Spring 2025
Port of Portland
Fast Company

Port of Portland

For creating a truly local airport

time-read
2 mins  |
Spring 2025
Crunchyroll For turning anime fandom into an ecosystem
Fast Company

Crunchyroll For turning anime fandom into an ecosystem

BEING A FAN OF ANIME IN THE aughts meant you either had to know Japanese or rely on the kindness of internet strangers, who would up- load their own subtitled versions of popular series to video-hosting site Crunchyroll, which launched in 2006. In the nearly two decades since, anime has crossed from subculture into mainstream pop culture among Western audiences, with Crunchyroll leading the way.

time-read
3 mins  |
Spring 2025