OpenAI already knows which device will replace our smartphone in the age of AI. It will be another smartphone, according to Kuo

He doesn’t always get it right, but Ming-Chi-Kuo just made a particularly striking statement. According to your dataOpenAI is preparing its first “mobile AI agent”, a smartphone that will be quite different from the current ones not so much in form as in substance. If its predictions come true, we could be facing a device that will shake the pillars of the current mobile segment. Hello, “OpenAI phone”. Kuo states that mass production of this smartphone designed by OpenAI will begin in the first half of 2027. He also tells us that the SoC that will govern this device will be a customized version of the future MediaTek Dimensity 9600 manufactured with TSMC’s N2P process and that will theoretically arrive in the second half of the year. The mobile that wants to see the world. This chip will have some special features, such as an ISP (Integrated Signal Processor) with an HDR system that allows optimizing the visual perception of the world. It is logical: the mobile wants to become an integral part of our interaction with the world, and that visual capacity is critical. Two NPUs better than one. It will also have a dual NPU architecture to increase its AI computing capacity. It will theoretically integrate LPDDR6 memory and will have UFS 5.0 to avoid memory bottlenecks. If all goes well, Kuo says, between 2027 and 2028 30 million units will be distributed. Not anything else, but the plan seems incredibly ambitious. Paradigm shift. This type of device, Kuo points outwill doom the UI as we know it. The concept of navigating a patchwork of icons to perform independent tasks will be obsolete. The concept proposed by OpenAI understands that the user does not want to use an “application stack”, but rather achieve objectives through a centralized agent. This implies a radical redesign of the smartphone in which the screen stops being a menu of options and becomes a kind of mirror of what the user wants, of their “intentions.” We went from a manual interaction to a proactive inference, because the AI ​​is responsible for detecting what needs to be done to complete the action that the user needs. Without touching the screen. Task resolution rules over navigation. OpenAI being Apple. To achieve this OpenAI needs to control everything on this device, so similar to what happens with Apple and its iPhone. For an AI agent to function seamlessly, it needs access to sensors and device status in real time, something that current operating systems restrict by design. OpenAI wants to control both the hardware and the software to capture all the relevant information at all times. The technical barrier is not the AI ​​model, but that total control that also requires perfect management of memory and energy consumption. Apple, by the way, is in that same battle, although in a different way. The energy challenge. It seems logical to think that this device bases a good part of its capacity on AI models in the cloud, but also that it will have the ability to execute some tasks thanks to small local models. Hence having two NPUs that allow at least certain tasks to be executed on the mobile itself. That will be crucial precisely regarding energy consumptionbecause this AI that automates tasks by chaining them consumes much more computing than the usual interaction with an app today. App Store in danger of extinction. There is a particularly striking idea here. The app store economics faces existential disruption. The current model relies on friction: you need to open a specific app for each task, which justifies the 30% “tax” and the walled garden. If an AI agent can book a flight or order food by directly accessing the background APIs, the icon on the home screen disappears. The “app” stops being a destination and becomes an invisible tool. This not only threatens Apple’s revenue, but redefines mobile development towards an “API-first” ecosystem, where the graphical interface is irrelevant and competition is decided by agent efficiency, not UI design. Goodbye, privacy? And in this context, privacy could once again become the price of that “it’s so convenient to use a device like this” of these future mobiles. For an AI agent to be useful and function truly autonomously, it needs to know everything or almost everything about us. Our location, health, messages and of course the screen content at all times, among other things. The opacity of proprietary models will mean that we will never know what data is leaked to the cloud to “improve the service”, turning privacy into a variable controlled (once again) by the manufacturer. In Xataka | Microsoft has insisted on making Windows “agent.” His users have reminded him that they had not asked for it

Apple will launch a MacBook Pro with a touch screen in 2026, according to Ming Chi Kuo. We believe to know why they have changed their minds

After thirteen years, refusing flatly, Apple has begun to prepare its first MacBook with a touch screen, according to the leaks that arrive from two fronts: Ming-Chi Kuo He has announced now That the MacBook Pro with OLED screen will arrive at the end of 2026, and will do so with tactile capabilities. Mark Gurman had already anticipated this possibility in Bloomberg Two years ago, although lacking the level of detail that Kuo has given. Why is it important. This change involves the admission that users’ expectations have changed and that Apple is willing to abandon one of its most entrenched dogmas to stay competitive. And above all: for the generational advance. The figures. Kuo has spoken: the MacBook Pro with OLED screen will begin its mass production at the end of 2026, incorporating a tactile screen with technology ON-CELL. This technology integrates tactile sensors directly into the upper panel layer, without the need for a separate touch layer. Gurman had initially speculated with a launch in 2025, but everything indicates that this schedule has moved to 2026, coinciding with the arrival of the OLED screens. It is not clear if the commercialization will also be at the end of 2026, or if the production will begin on that date, so the commercial arrival would be in 2027. The context. The decision does not arise in a vacuum. Apple is at a particular moment in its history: The MAC now generates more income than the iPad, becoming a more profitable business than expected. Meanwhile, the competition has integrated touch screens for years, setting a market expectation that Apple has ignored again and again. Apple has also been preparing the technological land: Since 2018 it began to unify applications between iPad and Mac. In 2020 it allowed iPhone applications to work in their MAC. Also in 2020 it premiered a more appropriate interface for tactile panels with macOS Big Sur. And in 2025, Macos 26 even more uniform interfaces of operating systems. All this has highlighted how strange it is to use an application designed for touch screen on a device that does not admit it. The turn. Steve Jobs was categorical about touch screens on computers: “Tactile surfaces do not want to be vertical,” He said in 2010. “After a prolonged period, your arm wants to fall.” Tim Cook maintained this position for years, comparing in 2012 the combination of tablets and portables with “combine a toaster with a fridge“ Now Apple is about to do exactly that. Between the lines. Jobs’s ergonomic argument was foundation, but the solution is in the complementary use, not on the total prohibition. Tactile tactile screens are not designed to be the primary interaction method, but an occasional complement to trackpad and keyboard to make Scrollpinch or interact with specific elements. On the other hand, at this point there is an entire generation that has grown with touch screens everywhere. For them it is unnatural to meet a screen without that capacity. Yes, but. Apple will gain competitiveness by eliminating frequent criticism and improve coherence between its devices. But it will also lose that clear distinction between products that defended so much. The MAC will be less unique and more complex conceptually. Deepen. If the 2026 Macbook Pro includes touch screen, it is reasonable to expect Apple to update macos to optimize the experience. This could translate into larger interface elements, specific gestures and an even greater convergence with ipados. The question about compatibility with Apple Pencilwhich would be important for creative professionals. The MacBook with a 2026 touch screen will mark the end of an era of conceptual purity in Apple, but also the beginning of an era of greater flexibility. It is not necessarily better or worse, it is different. And after thirteen years of refusing, Apple finally admits that the user sometimes knows what he wants. In Xataka | Outstanding image | Joshua ng

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