At a time when AI revolution dominates headlines, few voices carry as much weight as Adam Cheyer, co-founder of Siri and a pioneer with over 40 years in AI.
Speaking on stage at HumanX, Cheyer didn’t pitch a product—he delivered something far more valuable: a framework for building the next generation of AI companies.
His message is clear: “AI is still early—and the biggest opportunities are still untapped”.
Cheyer opened with a simple but powerful lesson:
In today’s AI gold rush, where ideas are abundant, execution is the true differentiator. According to Cheyer, success doesn’t come from inspiration—but from action.
One of the most actionable insights from the talk is Cheyer’s concept of: Trends + Triggers = Opportunity
Cheyer revealed he has been using this framework for decades to build companies ahead of the curve.
The best founders don’t just follow trends—they wait for the right moment to act.
One of the most fascinating insights is how Siri was actually designed.
Cheyer explains that Siri wasn’t built for the world as it was—but for the world two years ahead.
At the time smartphones were slow, apps required too many clicks, interfaces were inefficient, so the team imagined a new interaction model.
That vision became Siri. Even Steve Jobs immediately recognized its potential—so much so that he called Cheyer 30 days in a row to acquire the company.
Despite massive progress, Cheyer believes AI is still incomplete.
He identified three critical gaps:
Today’s AI is mostly text-based. That’s a problem.
The future is multimodal AI:
The winning interface will combine voice, graphics, and touch seamlessly
Cheyer highlights a fundamental limitation:
Example: ChatGPT answers questions; Siri sends messages, books taxis, executes actions. The future requires combining both a unified system that can reason AND act.
Every tech revolution had a monetization model:
AI still lacks a dominant model.
Until this is solved, the ecosystem will remain fragmented.
Cheyer also introduced a deeper idea:
From climate change to global inequality, the real challenge is not intelligence—but coordination. This leads to a new frontier.
This could become one of the most important tech sectors of the next decade
Perhaps the most striking claim of the talk:
2035 = the next paradigm shift. He doesn’t reveal exactly what it will be—but hints that we are currently early in the AI era so the biggest wave is still ahead.
Cheyer revealed that Change.org was not originally intended to be a petition platform.
It became one because user behavior pointed in that direction and the team adapted quickly.


