
Amazonâs Alexa chief predicts an end to doom scrolling: the next generation is âgoing to just think differentlyâ
Panos Panay, Amazonâs head of devices and services, believes the reign of the smartphone screen may be nearing a tipping point. Speaking at Fortune Brainstorm AI in San Francisco, he suggested that a growing fatigue with social media âdoom scrollingâ is paving the way for a new era of âambient intelligenceâ-one driven by a generation that interacts with technology in fundamentally different ways,. According to Panay, the future of consumer technology isnât about better apps, but about making the technology disappear into the background. âThereâs a whole younger generation coming up that I think at some point they get tired of doom scrolling,â he observed, noting that many young people feel âstuckâ when it comes to social media. He argued that this demographic, having been raised in an emerging âAI world,â will demand interactions that bypass the friction of traditional computing. âTheyâre going to just think differently,â Panay predicted . âYouâve got to make sure you have products in their pockets, on their bodies, in their homes that they donât expect... [but] expect to connect seamlessly.â The death of the âappâ experience Panay described a user experience that eliminates the need to look at a screen to solve daily problems. âItâs such a joy because thereâs no opening a phone, opening the app, clicking, finding ... none of it,â he said. âYou just ask the question and you get it backâ. He illustrated this shift with a personal anecdote about a family debate over which restaurant to visit. Rather than everyone retreating to their corners to stare at their phones-a moment that usually disrupts family connection-they simply asked Alexa. The AI recalled a conversation from months prior regarding a restaurant they had wanted to try, settling the debate instantly. âItâs such a simple, delightful moment of when ambient intelligence is around you,â Panay noted. To support this screen-free future, Amazon is aggressively experimenting with new hardware. While Panay declined to get into specific product roadmaps, he hinted that the current smart speakers and phones are not the endgame. âI donât think weâve seen the next form factor yet on where AI devices are going to go,â he said, adding that Amazon has a âlab full of ideas,â though most ideas wonât make it from prototype to reality. When pressed on whether Amazon would release wearables or glasses to compete with recent partnerships like that of OpenAI and Jony Iveâs io, Panay pointed to Amazonâs portfolio, including the recent acquisition of a company that makes a wristband . âWe have wearables, we have earbuds, weâve had glasses in the past.â He added that he wonât reveal whatâs coming next, but insisted, âI think youâre going to want your assistant with you everywhere you go.â Security concerns come hand in hand with these sort of advances, too. When asked by an audience member about the risks of placing listening devices in homes, Panay described security as a non-negotiable agreement. âI feel like itâs a contract with our customers, period. We break that...
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