Artificial intelligence is moving into everything. It’s in the phone in your pocket, the watch on your wrist, the TV on your wall, and the appliances in your kitchen. As companies race to build AI wearables and ambient assistants, there’s a risk we skip a crucial step: grounding this future in the devices people already trust and use constantly.
For most of us, that foundation is the smartphone.
Smartphones sit at the center of daily life, helping with communication, payments, creativity, navigation, entertainment, and more. About 91% of Americans own one, according to Pew Research. They are personal, always with us, and deeply embedded in our routines. If AI is to become truly integrated into life, it must prove itself here first, not as a feature, but as part of the system’s core architecture.
JUDGMENT OVER CAPABILITY
The first wave of AI innovation expanded capability. AI models became faster, larger, and more powerful. But capability alone doesn’t create better experiences. The next phase will be defined by judgment.
Judgment is AI’s ability to prioritize correctly, interpret context and timing, and act with restraint, knowing not just how to help, but when. On a device you use hundreds of times a day, poor judgment is immediately obvious. A meeting reminder that pops up during a video call or an “urgent” notification triggered by a trivial email doesn’t feel smart; it feels disruptive.
Useful AI must read signals across messages, apps, location, and routines without overwhelming attention. It should surface the one flight update you need and hold back on 20 promotional emails you don’t. That requires intelligence at the operating level, where the system can weigh context across functions instead of acting like a series of isolated tricks. Capability may impress, but judgment is what builds trust. And that trust is what people will carry into every other AI-powered device in their lives.
HELPFUL AUTONOMY, BUILT IN
As AI matures, it should move from reactive response to helpful autonomy. Instead of waiting for prompts, systems can carry tasks forward, such as suggesting the fastest route to a meeting as traffic builds.
Those kinds of experiences don’t live inside a single app. They depend on coordination across calendars, communications, services, and devices. Done well, this kind of autonomy reduces friction and absorbs complexity in the background. Done poorly, it erodes trust. That’s why these experiences must be designed with discipline, so AI acts in ways that are predictable, aligned with user expectations, and easy to override.
PRIVACY AND SECURITY ARE ESSENTIAL
The more AI is woven into daily life, the more essential trust becomes. Our devices hold almost everything about us: conversations, photos, financial details, and health data. People aren’t just worried about hackers; they’re worried about their information being over-collected, combined, or misused without their knowledge.
Protection cannot be an afterthought, or settings users must hunt down. It must be built into the architecture itself—keeping sensitive data on the device whenever possible, with clear data practices and proactive safeguards. Strong coordination across devices without strong protection is fragile. But when AI is implemented responsibly across phones, wearables, TVs, and appliances, with privacy and security built in, it earns the confidence required for everyday use.
THE NEW BAR FOR INTELLIGENT DESIGN
We’re entering an era of ambient intelligence, where AI stretches beyond any single screen. Glasses, wearables, home systems, and devices we haven’t imagined yet will all play important roles. But these experiences will only feel seamless if they are anchored in devices people already rely on.
The smartphone is not the entire story of AI’s future. It is the foundation. It’s where systems must demonstrate judgment, helpful autonomy, and secure, trustworthy behavior under real-world conditions. For AI to continue to move to an everyday life, it must reach people where they are, work across ecosystems rather than isolated silos, and build confidence gradually through consistent, dependable value.
If we get this right, the broader ecosystem can truly come together. The question isn’t whether AI will become more ambient. It’s whether we design it to be a partner that genuinely lightens the load—or adds another layer of complexity.
Yoonie Joung is president and CEO of Samsung Electronics North America.

