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Ferrari's New Jony Ive–Designed EV Is Swathed in Glass and Aluminum
Ferrari's New Jony Ive-Designed EV Is Swathed in Glass and Aluminum We got a peek at the interior of Ferrari's new Luce electric car, which was dreamed up by famed ex-Apple designer and his firm, LoveFrom. It looks and feels a whole lot like an Apple product. Despite Ferrari dramatically scaling back its EV plans at the end of 2025, it's no exaggeration to say that the reveal of the Italian automaker's first full electric car is going to be automotive event of 2026. While the exterior is still under wraps, Ferrari has unveiled the interior of its upcoming electric vehicle designed by LoveFrom, the creative firm of Apple's former chief designer, Jony Ive. It may not turn out quite like the Project Titan car Apple worked on for a decade then killed in 2024, but it sure does look like it has similar DNA. "We are entering a new era in Ferrari," the company's CEO Benedetto Vigna said at the unveiling, which took place last week at San Francisco's pyramid-shaped Transamerica building.
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Jony Ive Says He Wants His OpenAI Devices to 'Make Us Happy'
Jony Ive Says He Wants His OpenAI Devices to'Make Us Happy' "I don't think we have an easy relationship with our technology at the moment," the former Apple designer said at OpenAI's developer conference in San Francisco on Monday. At OpenAI's developer conference in San Francisco on Monday, CEO Sam Altman and ex-Apple designer Jony Ive spoke in vague terms about the "family of devices" the pair are currently working to develop . "As great as phones and computers are, there's something new to do," Altman said on stage with Ive. The duo confirmed that OpenAI is working on more than one hardware product but finer details, ranging from use cases to to specifications, remain under wraps. Figuring out new computing form factors is hard," said Altman in a media briefing earlier in the day. "I think we have a chance to do something amazing, but it will take a while." Ive said that his team has generated "15 to 20 really compelling product" ideas on the journey to find the right kind of ...
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Imagine, Verify, Execute: Memory-guided Agentic Exploration with Vision-Language Models
Lee, Seungjae, Ekpo, Daniel, Liu, Haowen, Huang, Furong, Shrivastava, Abhinav, Huang, Jia-Bin
Exploration is essential for general-purpose robotic learning, especially in open-ended environments where dense rewards, explicit goals, or task-specific supervision are scarce. Vision-language models (VLMs), with their semantic reasoning over objects, spatial relations, and potential outcomes, present a compelling foundation for generating high-level exploratory behaviors. However, their outputs are often ungrounded, making it difficult to determine whether imagined transitions are physically feasible or informative. To bridge the gap between imagination and execution, we present IVE (Imagine, Verify, Execute), an agentic exploration framework inspired by human curiosity. Human exploration is often driven by the desire to discover novel scene configurations and to deepen understanding of the environment. Similarly, IVE leverages VLMs to abstract RGB-D observations into semantic scene graphs, imagine novel scenes, predict their physical plausibility, and generate executable skill sequences through action tools. We evaluate IVE in both simulated and real-world tabletop environments. The results show that IVE enables more diverse and meaningful exploration than RL baselines, as evidenced by a 4.1 to 7.8x increase in the entropy of visited states. Moreover, the collected experience supports downstream learning, producing policies that closely match or exceed the performance of those trained on human-collected demonstrations.
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'Humanity deserves better': iPhone designer on new partnership with OpenAI
The designer of the iPhone has promised his next artificial intelligence-enabled device will be driven by a sense that "humanity deserves better", after admitting feeling "responsibility" for some of the negative consequences of modern technology. Sir Jony Ive said his new partnership with OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, would renew his optimism about technology, amid widespread concerns about the impact of smartphones and social media. In an interview with the Financial Times, London-born Ive declined to give details about the device he is developing with OpenAI, but indicated unease about people's relationship with some tech products. "Many of us would say we have an uneasy relationship with technology at the moment," he said. He added that the device's design would be driven by "a sense of'we deserve better. However, Ive, Apple's former chief design officer, said he felt the burden of the negative impact of modern technology products. "While some of the less positive consequences were unintentional, I still feel responsibility.
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Apple's triple threat: tariffs, AI troubles and a Fortnite fail
This week in tech: Apple struggles on multiple fronts, OpenAI grows increasingly ambitious, and Trump helps some of his fans lose money on cryptocurrency. Long dominant and unassailable, Apple is showing signs of weakness. The CEO, Tim Cook, can't tame Donald Trump's threats of tariffs that would spike the price of an iPhone; Apple's AI offerings pale against its competitors; and the company can't win a Fortnite match – or a single battle in its legal war with Epic Games – to save its life. On Friday, the president threatened to levy a 25% tariff on any iPhone not made in the US. Trump said in the post: "I have long ago informed Tim Cook of Apple that I expect their iPhones that will be sold in the United States of America will be manufactured and built in the United States, not India, or anyplace else. If that is not the case, a Tariff of at least 25% must be paid by Apple to the US."
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iPhone design guru and OpenAI chief promise an AI device revolution
Everything over the last 30 years, according to Sir Jony Ive, has led to this moment: a partnership between the iPhone designer and the developer of ChatGPT. Ive has sold his hardware startup, io, to OpenAI and will take on creative and design leadership across the merged businesses. "I have a growing sense that everything I have learned over the last 30 years has led me to this place, to this moment," he says in a video announcing the 6.4bn ( 4.8bn) deal. The main aim will be to move on from Ive's signature achievement designing Apple's most successful product, as well as the iPod, iPad and Apple Watch. The British-born designer has already developed a prototype io device, and one of its users is OpenAI's chief executive, Sam Altman.
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OpenAI buys iPhone architect's startup for 6.4bn
OpenAI is buying an untested startup for 6.4bn, the ChatGPT maker's biggest acquisition yet. The hardware startup, called io, was founded by Apple design guru Jony Ive, known best as one of the principal architects of the iPhone. Ive and OpenAI's CEO, Sam Altman, said in a blog post that their partnership has been two years in the making. "A collaboration built upon friendship, curiosity and shared values quickly grew in ambition," they wrote in the blog post, which offered scant details on upcoming devices. "Tentative ideas and explorations evolved into tangible designs."
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OpenAI's Big Bet That Jony Ive Can Make AI Hardware Work
OpenAI has fully acquired Io, a joint venture it cocreated last year with Jony Ive, the famed British designer behind the sleek industrial aesthetic that defined the iPhone and more than two decades of Apple products. In a nearly 10-minute video posted to X on Wednesday, Ive and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said the Apple pioneer's "creative collective" will "merge with OpenAI to work more intimately with the research, engineering, and product teams in San Francisco." OpenAI says it's paying 5 billion in equity to acquire Io. The promotional video included musings on technology from both Ive and Altman, set against the golden-hour backdrop of the streets of San Francisco, but the two never share exactly what it is they're building. "We look forward to sharing our work next year," a text statement at the end of the video reads.
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Apple is working on a bizarre CURVED iPhone design to mark 20 years since its first ever handset, report claims
Although their specs and features are updated every year, Apple's iPhones maintain the same general size and shape. But according to a new report, the tech giant is preparing a radical new form factor for one of its upcoming handsets. Apple tipster Mark Gurman claims the trillion-dollar tech company is working on a'mostly glass, curved iPhone'. The device will come'without any cutouts in the display', he claims, such as a notch at the top or a small circle for a front-facing camera. It will hit the shelves in a couple of years to mark 20 years since the very first iPhone went on sale – June 29, 2007.
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iPhone designer still asks: 'I wonder what Steve Jobs would do?' – despite being told not to
Sir Jony Ive, the innovative designer of Apple's iMac, iPhone and Apple Watch, and a close friend and collaborator of the late Steve Jobs, says he still often asks himself: "I wonder what Steve would do?" Ive told BBC Radio 4's Desert Island Discs on Sunday that he does so despite the fact that Jobs had specifically told him not to before his death in 2011, aged 56. "He used to say I really don't want you to be thinking'Well, what would Steve do?'," Ives said. The designer, who was born in Chingford, Essex, and moved to San Francisco to work at Apple in 1992, worked alongside the company's co-founder and CEO five years later, when Jobs was called back in to help the struggling company after a period working elsewhere. Jobs' return marked an immediate improvement for Ive, he recalled. "It was remarkable that, despite the limitations of my ability to communicate, Steve understood what I thought and how I felt," Ive said.
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