OpenAI’s 1st hardware device may look like an Apple product
OpenAI’s ambitions to move from software into hardware are taking clearer shape — and, well, they look a lot like Apple’s.
Earlier on Friday, The Information reported that Sam Altman’s company has been busy scooping up Apple veterans — designers, hardware engineers, and even wearable specialists — and talking with the go-to manufacturers that make Apple’s crown jewels. Luxshare, the iPhone and AirPods parts supplier, has reportedly already jumped on board , while Goertek, which builds parts for AirPods, HomePods, and Apple Watches, has been approached to make components such as speaker modules.
And that means: It’s not a stretch to say the same factories that churn out Apple gear could soon be minting OpenAI’s first AI-native devices.
Reports from The Information suggest that one device prototype resembles a screen-free smart speaker (Apple makes two). Other ideas thought to be on the table include glasses, a digital voice recorder, and a wearable “pin,” echoes of Apple’s experiments in the same and similar categories. The devices won’t arrive tomorrow (or the day after that); the target launch window is late 2026 or early 2027 — but the apparent trail for an Open AI-branded gadget is already telling.
Earlier this year, Altman pitched the idea of an “AI companion” — a device that’s context-aware, screen-light, and designed to live alongside you rather than in your pocket. The OpenAI CEO has floated an eye-popping target of 100 million units and a shipping date by the end of 2026.
As a whole, the Apple parallels are obvious. Earlier this year, OpenAI bought io , the hardware startup that Apple design legend Jony Ive co-founded, for about $6.5 billion. Ive’s design firm, LoveFrom, remains independent but has been deeply involved in shaping OpenAI’s hardware vision. Now, add in senior Apple alumni such as Tang Tan and Cyrus Irani, who also once helped define the look and feel of the iPhone and Apple Watch, and you get what sounds like an Apple sequel, just maybe with a rebooted cast of characters.
OpenAI leaning hard on Apple’s DNA is both a shortcut and a strategy. Hardware is brutally hard; it’s often better to borrow a blueprint that works. But for Apple, the optics are thornier. It isn’t just losing talent to a rival; it’s watching that rival repurpose its suppliers, its playbook, and maybe even its signature product categories. Apple’s challenge may be reputational as much as it is operational. That steady stream of high-profile staff to OpenAI suggests that Apple’s once-impenetrable design aura might be fading.