Humane’s AI pin promotes a screenless future we’re not ready for

Last week, Humane debuted its AI Pin as a phone replacement without a screen. You interact with it through voice, and a tiny projector displays things like media controls and incoming calls on the palm of your hand. The idea is to allow you to simply move through the world, unencumbered by digital devices constantly demanding your attention. To wear the AI Pin is to live in a world beyond screens.

It’s a beautiful vision that I’d love to buy into. But here’s the thing: screens are great, and I don’t think we can, or even should, ditch them quite yet.

Humane’s whole deal centers on the screenless-ness of its product — founder Imran Chaudhri said as much in his TED talk earlier this year. In Humane’s view, screens are a barrier between us and the rest of the world. The AI Pin allows you to “access the power of compute while remaining present in your surroundings, fixing a balance that’s felt out of place for some time now,” Chaudhri said. He’s not alone in that sentiment, with some research suggesting a link between depression and higher screentime. The science there isn’t settled, but Choudhri is tapping into a general worry that we’re all looking at our phone screens too damn much; just look at any number of products and features designed in response.  

I don’t want to savor my trip to the DMV, I want to zone out and play Wordle on my little pocket computer

But even if a screenless future is the right destination, it requires more than zero screens in the present. Screens are great when you want to consume a lot of information at a glance or just check the 10-day weather forecast without waiting for a voice assistant to spit it all out.

And screens are, dare I say, fun. Say I’m on a work trip and my husband sends me a cute video of our kid — how exactly do I watch that on a screenless AI Pin? How do I text my sister about something gross that happened to me without telling everyone else in my immediate vicinity about it, too? The quest to have us live more in the moment is admirable, but some moments are personal or just plain dumb. I don’t want to savor my trip to the DMV, I want to zone out and play Wordle on my little pocket computer as I will time to pass faster.

She could be showing her friend a picture of her cat — as god intended — but she’s just describing it instead.
Photo: Humane

I’d love to experience more of life’s fleeting moments without a little glowing box in front of my face. No argument here! Hell, I’d just like a break from the constant flood of notifications screaming for my attention at all hours of the day.

That’s why Humane’s pitch rings true in a way — it’s easy to imagine just walking around existing rather than checking your phone every five minutes. It sounds wonderful!…