Thursday, June 18, 2026

The Necklace AI: OpenAI and Jony Ive's Vision for Ambient, Screenless Computing




The Necklace AI: OpenAI and Jony Ive's Vision for Ambient, Screenless Computing
In a recent X thread responding to Paul Graham's observation that the next computing form factor remains unknown but will eventually feel obvious, I describe a compelling futuristic device. I envision something that "hangs like a necklace and you talk to that is invisible to others, unless you want otherwise. And it speaks to your machines that do all your work." I link this concept to OpenAI, suggesting the company—under Sam Altman—is pursuing it, especially after poaching legendary designer Jony Ive.
This isn't pure speculation. OpenAI has been actively developing AI hardware in partnership with Jony Ive (often stylized as Johnny Ive), the former Apple design chief behind the iPhone, iMac, and many iconic products. The project, which began with Ive's startup io (later merged into OpenAI), aims to create a new generation of "peaceful," context-aware devices for the AI era—potentially transforming how humans interact with intelligent systems. Key Details on the Device Concept
  • Form Factor: Multiple reports and rumors describe a small, pocket-sized or wearable pendant/necklace-style device. It is designed to hang around the neck or clip on, making it unobtrusive and always accessible. It emphasizes ambient, "disappearing" computing—something you wear and forget about, rather than a device that demands attention like a smartphone.
  • Screenless Design: A core feature is the absence of a traditional screen. Interaction relies on voice, multimodality (speech, audio feedback, possibly contextual awareness via sensors or cameras in related prototypes), and seamless integration. This moves away from "talking with our thumbs" toward natural conversation. OpenAI executives have emphasized it should feel natural and human.
  • Core Functionality:
    • Always-on personal AI companion or "co-pilot."
    • Handles reading, writing, managing tasks, and interfacing with other devices/machines (e.g., your laptop or smart home).
    • Contextually aware of surroundings, conversations, and user needs.
    • Agentic capabilities: Performs work autonomously while the user engages in higher-level activities (as I note, "Agentic AI does all your reading... What do you do? You go read books").
    • Multimodal and real-time: Supports voice interaction without constant manual input.
  • Design Philosophy: Jony Ive and Sam Altman have described the device(s) as "lovable," joyful, "peaceful," and an "active participant" that's not annoying. The goal is to elevate humanity and create products that inspire rather than distract. Ive's involvement brings Apple's signature elegance and human-centered design to AI hardware. Altman has called prototypes "the coolest piece of technology that the world will have ever seen."
  • Ecosystem Role: It acts as a bridge to other computing devices. In my vision, it communicates with "your machines that do all your work," such as next-generation AI-powered laptops. It could become a "third core device" alongside a MacBook Pro and iPhone.
Development Background and TimelineOpenAI acquired Ive's io Products (or io) in a major ~$6.5 billion all-stock deal in 2025. Ive and his LoveFrom team took on deep design and creative roles across OpenAI. Prototypes exist, and executives (including CFO Sarah Friar) have tested early versions, describing the experience as seamless and transformative.
Initial targets pointed to a 2026 reveal/launch, but court filings and reports indicate delays, with shipping not expected before February 2027 (partly due to naming/trademark issues with the "io" brand). OpenAI is working on a "family of products," with the first potentially being a smart speaker with camera or the wearable pendant.
This project sits amid broader AI hardware efforts. Competitors like Meta are exploring similar wearable pendants (e.g., building on acquisitions like Limitless for always-on recording/transcription), while earlier attempts (Humane AI Pin, Rabbit R1) faced challenges with form factor, overheating, and usability—lessons OpenAI appears to be heeding. Why It MattersMy thread captures the excitement: In an agentic AI future, the human role shifts toward creativity and reflection, while devices handle the mundane. A necklace-like AI companion could make computing truly ambient—always present but invisible until needed—ushering in the post-smartphone era.
As Graham noted, the next form factor will seem obvious in retrospect. If OpenAI and Ive succeed, a simple, elegant wearable pendant you talk to might one day feel as natural as pocketing a smartphone does today. Details remain under wraps, but the vision points to a more human, voice-first, AI-integrated way of living and working. Expect more concrete prototypes and announcements as development progresses into 2027.





Jony Ive's Design Philosophy: Simplicity, Care, and Tools for Humanity
Sir Jonathan "Jony" Ive is the legendary British designer behind many of Apple's most iconic products, including the iMac, iPod, iPhone, and iPad. After nearly three decades at Apple (leaving in 2019), he founded LoveFrom and later collaborated deeply with OpenAI on AI-era hardware. His approach has profoundly shaped modern consumer technology and industrial design.
Ive's philosophy draws heavily from two key influences: the Bauhaus tradition ("form follows function," "less is more") and, especially, Dieter Rams' 10 Principles of Good Design. Rams, Braun's longtime chief designer, emphasized that good design is innovative, useful, aesthetic, understandable, unobtrusive, honest, long-lasting, thorough, environmentally friendly, and as little design as possible. Ive contributed an essay to Rams' monograph As Little Design as Possible and has described Rams' work as articulating "the way it should be" for the profession. Core Tenets of Ive's Philosophy1. Simplicity as Clarity and Purpose (Not Minimalism for Its Own Sake)
Ive repeatedly stresses that true simplicity goes far beyond removing clutter. It is about deeply understanding and describing the purpose of an object so clearly that the design feels inevitable.

“Simplicity is not the absence of clutter, that’s a consequence of simplicity. Simplicity is somehow essentially describing the purpose and place of an object and product.”

He aims for designs where the technology "disappears" — users stop thinking about how it works and focus on what they can do. When complexity is mastered, the product feels "magical."
2. Obsessive Attention to Detail and Care
Ive believes products communicate values. Care — even for unseen parts (like the inside of a case or manufacturing precision) — shows respect for the user. He contrasts this with the "carelessness" common in much of the manufactured environment.

“What we make stands testament to who we are... People can sense care.”

This extends to materials, manufacturing processes (treated as a design material itself), and every radius or surface. Ease of use comes from obsessing over overlooked details.
3. Genuinely Better, Not Just Different or New
Innovation is hard because it requires rejecting easy novelty in favor of thorough improvement. Ive notes that "different and new is relatively easy. Doing something that’s genuinely better is very hard." This involves extensive prototyping, failure, and iteration — often rejecting many ideas for every one that succeeds.
Products should feel "inevitable," as if no rational alternative exists.
4. Human-Centered Tools in Service of Humanity
Design is an applied art focused on creating useful tools, not self-expression. Ive sees his work as serving people and elevating experiences, often in collaboration with visionary leaders (like Steve Jobs at Apple or Sam Altman at OpenAI).

He emphasizes optimism about the future, recognizability, and making products that are intuitive, joyful, and "peaceful." In recent AI work, this includes addressing technology's disruptive effects and aiming for designs where "humanity deserves better."
5. Thoroughness, Longevity, and Integrity
Good design is honest (no superficial styling that dates quickly), long-lasting, and thorough down to manufacturing and sustainability. Ive avoids "design statements" that draw attention to the designer rather than the user's experience.
Philosophy in Practice and EvolutionAt Apple, this manifested in translucent colors (original iMac), seamless integration of hardware and software, multi-touch interfaces, and products that felt premium yet approachable. White elements (like iPod earbuds) became cultural markers while staying "recessive" to form.
Post-Apple, through LoveFrom and OpenAI/io, Ive applies the same rigor to new challenges: AI hardware that is less socially disruptive than smartphones, ambient computing, and collaborations (e.g., Ferrari's first electric car). He stresses collaboration across disciplines, as modern products involve complex interfaces between physical objects and "soft" (software/AI) experiences.
Ive has described design as revealing character: "The majority of our manufactured environment is characterized by carelessness... we have genuinely tried to make products that don’t stand testament to those values." Lasting ImpactJony Ive's philosophy is ethical as much as aesthetic — precision as respect, simplicity as empathy, and design as a moral act of caring for users and resources. It prioritizes harmony across form, function, manufacturing, and human experience. In an era of rapid technological change, his consistent focus on care, intuition, and genuine improvement offers a timeless framework for creating objects that feel not just useful, but right.
As Ive himself might say, the goal is products so resolved that they simply feel obvious — the only way they could have been.



Jony Ive’s Exit from Apple and His Path to OpenAI: From Design Icon to AI Hardware Visionary
Sir Jonathan “Jony” Ive, the British designer who helped resurrect Apple and shape the modern technology landscape through products like the iMac, iPod, iPhone, and Apple Watch, left the company in 2019 after nearly 27 years. His departure marked the end of an era closely tied to Steve Jobs’ vision. Several years later, Ive emerged as a central figure in OpenAI’s ambitious push into consumer hardware. The Gradual Drift and Departure from AppleIve joined Apple in 1992. His partnership with Steve Jobs, who returned in 1997, produced some of the company’s most transformative designs. After Jobs’ death in 2011, Ive continued as a key leader, becoming Chief Design Officer in 2015. However, his role and engagement at Apple evolved under CEO Tim Cook.
Reports indicate Ive’s departure was not abrupt but the culmination of growing frustration and cultural shifts. Under Cook, Apple became more operationally focused, with emphasis on efficiency, services, and financial performance — a move away from the intensely design-centric culture of the Jobs era. Ive reportedly felt increasingly disconnected as the company grew more bureaucratic and “utilitarian.”
He spent less time in the office, often working from his San Francisco home or focusing on major projects like Apple Park (the company’s spaceship-like headquarters). Design team members sometimes had to travel to present work to him. There were also signs of burnout after decades of intense pressure.
On June 27, 2019, Apple announced that Ive would depart as an employee later that year to found an independent design company, with Apple as its primary client. Ive described it as a “natural and gentle time” for the change. Tim Cook praised his contributions, noting that “his role in Apple’s revival cannot be overstated.”
In 2019, Ive co-founded LoveFrom, a creative collective with designer Marc Newson. It operated as a low-profile studio focused on selective, high-impact projects. Ive maintained a consulting relationship with Apple until it ended in July 2022. Founding LoveFrom and the Road to OpenAIPost-Apple, Ive pursued personal and collaborative projects through LoveFrom, working with clients like Ferrari and Airbnb while keeping a relatively low public profile. His interest in emerging technologies, particularly artificial intelligence, led to new opportunities.
Ive’s collaboration with OpenAI began quietly around 2023. He reached out to CEO Sam Altman as he explored ideas for AI-enabled products. Their shared values — optimism about technology’s potential, a focus on human-centered design, and a desire to create meaningful tools — quickly deepened the partnership.
In 2024, Ive co-founded io Products, Inc. (often stylized as io) with former Apple colleagues, including Evans Hankey and Tang Tan. The startup aimed to develop AI hardware that felt less socially disruptive than smartphones — ambient, intuitive devices suited to the age of advanced AI. OpenAI invested in io, acquiring a stake and eventually pursuing full ownership. The $6.5 Billion Merger with OpenAIOn May 21, 2025, OpenAI announced the acquisition of io in an all-stock deal valued at approximately $6.5 billion — OpenAI’s largest acquisition to date. The io team merged into OpenAI, while Ive and LoveFrom took on deep design and creative responsibilities across the company.
In a joint letter and video, Altman and Ive expressed excitement about building a “new family of products” for the AI era. These would empower creativity and interaction with AI in more natural ways, potentially including screenless or wearable companions. Ive described the opportunity as inspiring, aligning with his long-held philosophy of creating tools that serve humanity.
The move represented a full-circle moment of sorts: just as Ive partnered with Jobs to redefine personal computing, he now collaborates with Altman to shape AI hardware. Prototypes and concepts have been in development, with initial devices eyed for 2026 or later, though timelines have faced some adjustments. A New ChapterJony Ive’s exit from Apple reflected the challenges of sustaining creative intensity in a maturing corporation. Rather than a bitter break, it opened space for independence and fresh collaborations. His union with OpenAI combines unparalleled design expertise with cutting-edge AI, positioning him once again at the forefront of technological evolution.
As Ive and Altman pursue devices that aim to feel magical and human, the partnership underscores a belief that great design remains essential — even, or especially, in the age of artificial intelligence.



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