Marketdash

Elon Musk's Next Prediction: Phones Are Dead in Five Years, AI Takes Over

MarketDash Editorial Team
3 days ago
Elon Musk says smartphones as we know them will disappear within five to six years, replaced by AI-powered devices that anticipate what you want before you even ask. No apps, no operating systems—just a screen serving as a local interface to powerful cloud-based artificial intelligence.

Elon Musk isn't building a phone, but that's fine—he thinks the entire concept of a phone is going extinct anyway.

During an October appearance on The Joe Rogan Experience, Musk outlined a vision that sounds like science fiction but might arrive sooner than you think. Within five to six years, he says, everything that makes a phone a phone today will vanish. Apps? Dead. Operating systems? Irrelevant. The word "phone" itself? Basically obsolete. What replaces it is a sleek piece of hardware that functions as an "edge node" for artificial intelligence—a bridge connecting your local device to a far more intelligent, server-powered AI system that knows what you want before you do.

"I don't think there'll be operating systems. I don't think there'll be apps," Musk explained. "It's just the phone will just display the pixels and make the sounds that it anticipates you would most like to receive."

Joe Rogan wasn't ready to let him off that easily. He pressed Musk about the rumored "X Phone"—a device many tech watchers believe could challenge Apple's smartphone empire. Musk shut that down quickly. "I'm not working on a phone," he said flatly. But when Rogan asked if he'd ever considered it, Musk pivoted: "I can tell you where I think things are going to go."

What followed wasn't about competing with smartphones. It was about making them irrelevant. Musk described a near-future where what we currently call a phone becomes nothing more than a lightweight interface—just a screen and some audio hardware—serving as a local node for an AI system that manages everything from content creation to communication. The device will pack enough onboard AI to keep bandwidth usage down, but the real computational muscle will come from its connection to a much smarter AI system running in the cloud.

Rogan asked the obvious question: what happens to apps, platforms, and everything we use today? "You'll get everything through AI," Musk replied. "Whatever you can think of—or really whatever the AI can anticipate you might want—it'll show you."

And the timeline? "It's probably five or six years, something like that," Musk predicted. In his estimation, apps are headed for the same fate as Blockbuster Video. "Most of what people consume in five or six years—maybe sooner than that—will be just AI-generated content," he added.

Musk even dove into how far AI has already come. He mentioned people using Grok's image and video generation tools to produce full-length videos—sometimes 10 to 15 minutes long—that aren't just coherent, they're genuinely impressive. "The music's disturbing," he said. "Because it's my favorite music now."

In Musk's version of the future, your device won't wait for you to tap through menus or launch apps. It will anticipate, generate, and serve up content that feels custom-made for your brain—without requiring you to lift a finger. Whether you're ready or not, the phone-less future might be closer than you think.

Elon Musk's Next Prediction: Phones Are Dead in Five Years, AI Takes Over

MarketDash Editorial Team
3 days ago
Elon Musk says smartphones as we know them will disappear within five to six years, replaced by AI-powered devices that anticipate what you want before you even ask. No apps, no operating systems—just a screen serving as a local interface to powerful cloud-based artificial intelligence.

Elon Musk isn't building a phone, but that's fine—he thinks the entire concept of a phone is going extinct anyway.

During an October appearance on The Joe Rogan Experience, Musk outlined a vision that sounds like science fiction but might arrive sooner than you think. Within five to six years, he says, everything that makes a phone a phone today will vanish. Apps? Dead. Operating systems? Irrelevant. The word "phone" itself? Basically obsolete. What replaces it is a sleek piece of hardware that functions as an "edge node" for artificial intelligence—a bridge connecting your local device to a far more intelligent, server-powered AI system that knows what you want before you do.

"I don't think there'll be operating systems. I don't think there'll be apps," Musk explained. "It's just the phone will just display the pixels and make the sounds that it anticipates you would most like to receive."

Joe Rogan wasn't ready to let him off that easily. He pressed Musk about the rumored "X Phone"—a device many tech watchers believe could challenge Apple's smartphone empire. Musk shut that down quickly. "I'm not working on a phone," he said flatly. But when Rogan asked if he'd ever considered it, Musk pivoted: "I can tell you where I think things are going to go."

What followed wasn't about competing with smartphones. It was about making them irrelevant. Musk described a near-future where what we currently call a phone becomes nothing more than a lightweight interface—just a screen and some audio hardware—serving as a local node for an AI system that manages everything from content creation to communication. The device will pack enough onboard AI to keep bandwidth usage down, but the real computational muscle will come from its connection to a much smarter AI system running in the cloud.

Rogan asked the obvious question: what happens to apps, platforms, and everything we use today? "You'll get everything through AI," Musk replied. "Whatever you can think of—or really whatever the AI can anticipate you might want—it'll show you."

And the timeline? "It's probably five or six years, something like that," Musk predicted. In his estimation, apps are headed for the same fate as Blockbuster Video. "Most of what people consume in five or six years—maybe sooner than that—will be just AI-generated content," he added.

Musk even dove into how far AI has already come. He mentioned people using Grok's image and video generation tools to produce full-length videos—sometimes 10 to 15 minutes long—that aren't just coherent, they're genuinely impressive. "The music's disturbing," he said. "Because it's my favorite music now."

In Musk's version of the future, your device won't wait for you to tap through menus or launch apps. It will anticipate, generate, and serve up content that feels custom-made for your brain—without requiring you to lift a finger. Whether you're ready or not, the phone-less future might be closer than you think.