Close Menu
TechTost
  • AI
  • Apps
  • Crypto
  • Fintech
  • Hardware
  • Media & Entertainment
  • Security
  • Startups
  • Transportation
  • Venture
  • Recommended Essentials
What's Hot

A 20-minute pitch wins Lachy Groom-backed Indian startup Pronto

Lucid Motors doesn’t know how many EVs it will build this year

Barry Diller trusts Sam Altman. But “trust is irrelevant” as AGI approaches, he says.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
TechTost
Subscribe Now
  • AI

    Barry Diller trusts Sam Altman. But “trust is irrelevant” as AGI approaches, he says.

    7 May 2026

    Ethos Raises $22.75M From a16z For Its Experience Network With Voice Integration

    6 May 2026

    SAP bets $1.16 billion on 18-month-old German AI lab and says yes to NemoClaw

    6 May 2026

    ElevenLabs lists BlackRock, Jamie Foxx and Longoria as new investors

    5 May 2026

    OpenAI host Cerebras is on track for a major IPO

    5 May 2026
  • Apps

    Snap says $400M deal with Perplexity ‘ended amicably’

    7 May 2026

    Threads finally brings messaging to the web

    6 May 2026

    Bumble’s paying users are slipping as it bets on an overhaul later this year

    6 May 2026

    Meta will use artificial intelligence to analyze height and bone structure to detect whether users are underage

    5 May 2026

    Image AI models are now driving app development, surpassing chatbot upgrades

    5 May 2026
  • Crypto

    As crypto cools, a16z crypto raises $2.2 billion in capital

    6 May 2026

    Coinbase to lay off 14% of staff as part of broader restructuring

    5 May 2026

    British cryptographer Adam Back denies NYT report that he is Bitcoin creator Satoshi Nakamoto

    9 April 2026

    Hackers stole over $2.7 billion in crypto in 2025, data shows

    23 December 2025

    New report examines how David Sachs may benefit from Trump administration role

    1 December 2025
  • Fintech

    Robinhood’s venture fund IPO attracted 150,000+ private investors, CEO says

    7 May 2026

    PayPal says it’s “becoming a tech company again” — that’s AI

    6 May 2026

    Stripe introduces Link, a digital wallet that autonomous AI agents can also use

    1 May 2026

    Y Combinator alum Skio sells for $105 million in cash, raised only $8 million, founder says

    1 May 2026

    Amazon, Meta join the fight to end Google Pay and PhonePe’s dominance in India

    30 April 2026
  • Hardware

    Apple to pay $250 million to settle lawsuit over Siri’s lagging AI features

    7 May 2026

    reMarkable’s new Paper Pure tablet goes back to basics with a monochrome display

    6 May 2026

    Altara secures $7 million to bridge the data gap slowing the natural sciences

    6 May 2026

    This tiny, magnetic e-reader could keep you from doomscrolling

    4 May 2026

    Apple surprised by AI-driven demand for Macs

    1 May 2026
  • Media & Entertainment

    Netflix delays Greta Gerwig’s ‘Narnia’ for big theatrical push to 2027

    2 May 2026

    Roku’s $3 streaming service Howdy hits 1 million subscribers, per recent report

    29 April 2026

    Australia forces Big Tech companies to pay for news or face 2.25% tax.

    28 April 2026

    India’s app market is booming — but global platforms are raking in most of the profits

    23 April 2026

    YouTube extends its AI similarity detection technology to celebrities

    21 April 2026
  • Security

    DOJ says ransomware gang exploited Russian government databases

    6 May 2026

    Hackers steal student data during breach at education tech giant Instructure

    6 May 2026

    Kaspersky Suspects Chinese Hackers Put Backdoor in Daemon Tools in ‘Broad’ Attack

    5 May 2026

    The US government is warning of a serious CopyFail bug affecting major versions of Linux

    5 May 2026

    Hackers are still exploiting the cPanel bug to gain control of thousands of websites

    4 May 2026
  • Startups

    A 20-minute pitch wins Lachy Groom-backed Indian startup Pronto

    7 May 2026

    3 days left to lock in 50% off a second ticket to Disrupt 2026

    6 May 2026

    India’s first GenAI unicorn shifts to cloud services as AI model ambitions face reality

    5 May 2026

    FDA Approval, Fundraising and the Reality of Building Healthcare According to BioticsAI Founder

    1 May 2026

    Legal AI startup Legora hits $5.6 billion valuation, and its battle with Harvey just got hotter

    1 May 2026
  • Transportation

    Lucid Motors doesn’t know how many EVs it will build this year

    7 May 2026

    Aurora lands deal with McLane to run driverless truck routes in Texas

    6 May 2026

    Nuro gets driverless test license ahead of Uber’s robotaxi service launch

    6 May 2026

    Moment Energy raises $40M to meet ‘infinite energy demand’ with EV batteries

    5 May 2026

    Ouster’s new color lidar is coming to replace cameras

    4 May 2026
  • Venture

    All your M&A questions will be answered at Disrupt 2026

    6 May 2026

    ElevenLabs lists BlackRock, Jamie Foxx and Eva Longoria as new investors

    6 May 2026

    Get 50% off a second Disrupt 2026 pass to bid more, faster

    5 May 2026

    Nicolas Sauvage bets on the boring parts of AI

    4 May 2026

    Musely secures $360 million from General Catalyst without giving up equity

    2 May 2026
  • Recommended Essentials
TechTost
You are at:Home»Hardware»Kevin Rose’s simple test for artificial intelligence hardware — would you want to punch someone in the face wearing it?
Hardware

Kevin Rose’s simple test for artificial intelligence hardware — would you want to punch someone in the face wearing it?

techtost.comBy techtost.com3 November 202506 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Kevin Rose's Simple Test For Artificial Intelligence Hardware Would
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Kevin Rose has a visceral rule for evaluating investments in AI hardware: “If you feel like you have to punch someone in the face for wearing it, you probably shouldn’t invest in it.”

It’s a typically candid assessment from the veteran investor, and someone who was born watching the current wave of AI hardware startups repeat mistakes he’s seen before. Rose, a general partner at True Ventures and an early investor in Peloton, Ring and Fitbit, has largely avoided the AI ​​hardware gold rush consuming Silicon Valley. While other VCs are rushing to fund the next smart glasses or AI lockets, Rose is taking a decidedly different approach.

“A lot of it is just like, ‘Let’s hear the whole conversation,'” Rose says of the current crop of wearable AI devices. “And to me, that breaks a lot of these social constructs that we have with people around privacy.”

Rose speaks from experience. He was on the board of Oura, which now has 80% of the smart ring market, and has seen firsthand what separates successful wearables from failures. The difference is not just technical ability. it is emotional appeal and social acceptance.

“As an investor, you have to say not just, okay, good technology, sure, but emotionally, how does it make me feel? And how does it make other people around me feel?” he explained on stage at TechCrunch Disrupt last week. “And to me, a lot of that gets lost in all the AI ​​stuff, where it’s always on, always listening, trying to be the smartest person in the room. And it’s just not healthy.”

He admits to testing various wearable AIs himself, including the failed Humane AI locket that briefly caught the world’s attention a year ago. But the tipping point came during an argument with his wife. “I was like, I know I didn’t say that. And I was trying to use it to actually win an argument,” he recalled. “That was the last time I wore that thing. You don’t want to win a fight by going back and looking at your AI pin stumps. That doesn’t fly.”

The tourist case — asking your glasses which monument you’re looking at — isn’t good enough, Rose said. “We tend to screw AI into everything and that’s ruining the world,” he said, pointing to features like photo apps that let you delete people from the background. “I had a friend who erased a gate behind him to make the picture look better. I’m like, ‘That’s your yard!’ Your kids will see it and say “Didn’t we have a gate there?”

Rose worries that we’re in the “early days of social media” with artificial intelligence — making decisions that seem harmless now but will come back to haunt us later. “We’ll look back and say, ‘Wow, that was weird.’ We just slapped AI on everything and thought it was a good idea,” similar to what happened in the early days of social networking. You look back a decade or two later, and you say, ‘I wish I had done it differently.'”

Techcrunch event

San Francisco
|
13-15 October 2026

He experiences these tensions firsthand with his young children. Using OpenAI’s video creation tool, Sora, to create videos of tiny Labradoodles, his kids asked where they could get these puppies. “Well, Dad’s not really there. How do you have this conversation? Very awkward,” she says. His solution, he said, is to treat AI like movie magic, explaining that just as actors don’t really fly on screen, daddy’s puppies aren’t real either.

But Rose is no Luddite. He is deeply optimistic about how AI is transforming entrepreneurship itself and by extension the venture capital industry that funds it.

“The barriers to entry for entrepreneurs are just shrinking with each passing day,” observed Rose. He talked about a colleague who had never used AI coding tools before building and developing a full app during a drive from Los Angeles to San Francisco. Six months ago, the same task would have taken ten times longer and required navigating dozens of errors.

“In three months, when [Google’s] Gemini 3 comes to market, there will be zero bugs or next to it,” Rose predicted. “High school coding classes aren’t coding classes anymore — they’re vibe coding classes, and they’re going to create the next billion-dollar business that starts out of some random high school. It will happen. It’s just a matter of time.”

These developments are completely changing the VC equation, Rose said. Entrepreneurs can now delay raising capital until they absolutely need it, or possibly skip raising external funding altogether. “It’s really going to change the VC world, and I think for the better,” Rose said.

Many venture firms have responded by hiring armies of engineers—Sequoia Capital, for example, now employs as many developers as investors. But Rose doesn’t think that’s the answer. Instead, he believes the value proposition for VCs is shifting to something more fundamental. “At the end of the day, the entrepreneur will have problems that are not technical,” he argued. “They’re very emotional problems. And so I think the VCs with the highest EQ who can look best to the founders as their long-term partner—who have worked with companies and aren’t jumping in, who aren’t just overnight VCs, but have been around and seen these problems at scale—are going to be in demand.”

So what does Rose look for when making investments? It goes back to something Larry Page told him years ago, when Rose was at Google Ventures, his first institutional investment job after co-founding the social news platform Digg and before he joined True Ventures in 2017. “A healthy contempt for the impossible is what’s important to look for.”

“We want founders who don’t just smooth out the rough edges, but really swing for the fences with big, bold ideas that everyone else says, ‘That’s a horrible idea.’ Why are you doing this?” Rose said. “That’s what attracts me. Because even if it doesn’t work, we love your brain. We love where you are and are happy to support you the second time around.”

artificial face hardware intelligence Kevin Kevin Rose Peloton punch Real Businesses Roses simple test us wearing
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleGrammarly Rebrands as ‘Superhuman’, Launches New AI Assistant
Next Article Google pulls Gemma from AI Studio after Senator Blackburn accuses model of defamation
bhanuprakash.cg
techtost.com
  • Website

Related Posts

Apple to pay $250 million to settle lawsuit over Siri’s lagging AI features

7 May 2026

reMarkable’s new Paper Pure tablet goes back to basics with a monochrome display

6 May 2026

Nuro gets driverless test license ahead of Uber’s robotaxi service launch

6 May 2026
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss

A 20-minute pitch wins Lachy Groom-backed Indian startup Pronto

7 May 2026

Lucid Motors doesn’t know how many EVs it will build this year

7 May 2026

Barry Diller trusts Sam Altman. But “trust is irrelevant” as AGI approaches, he says.

7 May 2026
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • WhatsApp
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
Fintech

Robinhood’s venture fund IPO attracted 150,000+ private investors, CEO says

7 May 2026

PayPal says it’s “becoming a tech company again” — that’s AI

6 May 2026

Stripe introduces Link, a digital wallet that autonomous AI agents can also use

1 May 2026
Startups

A 20-minute pitch wins Lachy Groom-backed Indian startup Pronto

3 days left to lock in 50% off a second ticket to Disrupt 2026

India’s first GenAI unicorn shifts to cloud services as AI model ambitions face reality

© 2026 TechTost. All Rights Reserved
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.