Vídeo: Sam Altman
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00:00¡Suscríbete al canal!
00:02¡Suscríbete al canal!
00:04Creo que tenemos la oportunidad aquí
00:06de reimaginar completamente
00:08lo que significa usar un computador
00:14Sam es...
00:16un visión raro
00:18Él pide una gran responsabilidad
00:20pero su curiosidad
00:24y su humildad
00:26permanecerán
00:28el pensamiento
00:30de todos los que he conocido
00:32Johnny es el más profundo
00:34de quien he conocido
00:36lo que lleva a él
00:38para poder llegar a ser
00:40es un mato
00:42Yo me fui a América
00:44detenido
00:46de la optimización
00:48de la libertad
00:50de la libertad
00:52de la libertad
00:54de la optimización
00:56de la optimización
00:58de San Francisco
01:00y Silicon Valley
01:02Estamos en el principio
01:04de lo que creo serán
01:06la gran revolución tecnológica
01:08de nuestra vida
01:10que todo lo que he aprendido
01:14durante los últimos 30 años
01:16me ha llevado
01:18a este lugar
01:20y a este momento
01:22de la libertad
01:24de la libertad
01:26de la libertad
01:28de la libertad
01:30de la libertad
01:32de la libertad
01:34de la libertad
01:36de la libertad
01:38de la libertad
01:40de la libertad
01:42de la libertad
01:44de la libertad
01:46So what is this announcement we're talking about?
01:52Two years ago, Johnny and I started talking about what the future of AI and new kinds of computers was going to look like.
01:59I was running OpenAI. Johnny was running a design firm called Love From that had established itself as really the, I think, densest collection of talent that I've ever heard of in one place and probably has ever existed in the world.
02:12And it became very quickly apparent to both of us that we needed a third company.
02:17A year ago, I founded I.O. with Scott Cannon, Evans Hanke, and Tang Tan, who are the most extraordinary engineers.
02:30They have built a team of remarkable subject matter experts that range from hardware and software engineering, physicists, researchers, product manufacturing experts.
02:43And so I.O. is merging with OpenAI.
02:47Formed with the mission of figuring out how to create a family of devices that would let people use AI to create all sorts of wonderful things.
02:56The first one we've been working on, I think, is, has just completely captured our imagination.
03:08You know, Johnny called one day and said, this is the best work our team has ever done.
03:12I mean, Johnny did the iPhone.
03:13Johnny did the MacBook Pro.
03:15I mean, these are, these are like the defining ways people use technology.
03:20It's hard to beat those things.
03:21Those are really wonderful.
03:22Johnny recently gave me one of the prototypes of the device for the first time to take home, and I've been able to live with it.
03:28And I think it is the coolest piece of technology that the world will have ever seen.
03:33The products that we're using to deliver and connect us to unimaginable technology, they're decades old.
03:44Yeah.
03:45And so it's just common sense to at least think, surely there's something beyond these legacy products.
03:52We have like magic intelligence in the cloud.
03:55If I wanted to ask ChatGPT something right now about something we had talked about earlier, think about what would happen.
04:02I would like reach down, I would get on my laptop, I'd open it up, I'd launch a web browser, I'd start typing, I'd have to like explain that thing.
04:08And I would hit enter and I would wait and I would get a response.
04:11And that is at the limit of what the current tool of a laptop can do.
04:14But I think this technology deserves something much better.
04:20So how did it all begin?
04:21So my son Charlie was the first, the first person in the family to use ChatGPT.
04:27And he said, you've, you've just got, you've got to me, Sam.
04:30I met Johnny's family relatively quickly after meeting Johnny.
04:34And they were sort of just like, it was an impossibly lovely family.
04:37I was just thinking what a privilege it is to really connect with somebody new.
04:41And it's, it hasn't happened in a long time.
04:43All right.
04:44And I, the, the, the reason I think that it happened is we had both a very strong shared vision.
04:53We maybe didn't know exactly where we were going to go, but like the direction of the, like the force vector felt clear.
04:58And then this like deeply shared sense of values about what technology should be, when technology has been really good, when it's gone wrong.
05:06I mean, that, that was in a way one of the basis, I think, for one of the reasons Sam and I clicked was despite our wonderfully different journeys to this point, our motivations and values are completely the same.
05:21In my experience, if you're trying to have a sense of where you are going to end up, you shouldn't look at the technology.
05:33You should look at the people who are making the decisions.
05:36San Francisco has been like a mythical place in American history and maybe in world history in some sense.
05:52It is the city that I most associate with the sort of leading edge of culture and technology.
05:59This city has enabled and been the place of the creation of so much.
06:05The fact that all of those things happened in the Bay Area and not anywhere else on this gigantic planet we live on, I think is really not an accident.
06:13There's a lot of like weird, quirky details about geography that I think matter, that the way the city is set up.
06:19You know, I mean, the absurd hills, why, why you would choose to actually put so much energy into building on this topography is insane.
06:29I think there's something about San Francisco.
06:32You don't get to pick and choose freedom.
06:34Either you have, like, you let creative freedom be expressed in all of its weirdness or you don't.
06:40I feel I owe this city such an enormous debt of gratitude.
06:46I want this to be democratized.
06:50I want everybody to have it.
06:51I don't want it to be the tiny percentage of the population that figures out how to use bad tools and that's really smart.
06:56I want anybody to say, hey, I have this idea and make it happen.
06:58The responsibility that Sam bears is actually, honestly, is beyond my comprehension.
07:05I have a sense of some of it.
07:07But I see him and I have seen him over the last two years shoulder that responsibility, I mean, late, late, late into the night.
07:19But what really struck me is what he's worrying about is not himself and it's not his company.
07:25What I see you worrying about are other people, about customers, about society, about culture.
07:33And to me, that tells me everything I want to know about someone.
07:37You talk to people who use our latest model and say this is, like, genius level in every field and you just have to put in the work to, like, pull it all together.
07:45But if you have a hard problem, you can have this, like, team of geniuses in all of their different disciplines.
07:50And they report, I'm two or three times more productive as a scientist than I was before.
07:55I'm two or three times faster to find a cure for cancer than I was before because I have this incredible external brain.
08:01That just didn't exist six months ago.
08:03I think this will be one of these moments of just an absolute embarrassment of riches of what people go create for collective society.
08:12I am absolutely certain that we are literally on the brink of a new generation of technology that can make us our better selves.
08:33Thank you.
09:03Thank you.
09:04Thank you.