Gabe Perez

AI Hardware Design - should we bring back early 2000's design?

When it comes down to hardware my X feed is filled with two types of designs.

  • Retro/nostalgic 2000's hardware that was defined by Gameboy translucent purples, Colorful macs, Sony's beautiful eclectic electronics, and embracing colors that pop like pink, purple, and orange.

  • Sleek, modern, simple designs like the @Humane AI pin, @Limitless, @Friend, or the @omi.

I personally miss the fun days where consumer tech was wacky. Think Tamagotchi, Mini Clips, PSPs, and clear-shelled devices. I do see some like @Burner that have brought back some fun design but I'm curious... what does everyone think?

Should we bring back the weird or embrace the sleek, simple, and modern?

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Igor Kirillov

I think 2000s design was at least distinct enough for you to immediately know not only the product, but the company that made it as well, even by silhouette and color palette. I don't know why we decided that bland and universal is better than colorful and unique, probably a cultural shift thing. I say: bring back 2000s design, and not even only in hardware. I'm tired of not being able to say if I'm on producthunt or reddit by looking at the webpage without logo.

Gabe Perez

@igor_kirillov1 very true, products were much more distinctive. Even variations of the same product (remember MiniClips?) took several forms which was pretty fun! My inkling is that design shifted from Japan during their bubble/experimental period to Western modernization and this cause a general shift in process.

Those crazy fun designs can still be fun around Japan for more niche, local, or random products!

Cristian Stoian Urzica

I thought I was the only one thinking like that... The games and the pleasure of playing games was bigger in the past. Even the game was not that well made and have poor graphics. I don't know how to call it better, but the games from now days lost their soul. Maybe this modern design play it's role in that.

Kinki

@cristian_stoian_urzica I also like the previous game design. There is no excessive competition for game quality, but to impress players through gameplay and story, which is the soul of the game!

Gabe Perez

@cristian_stoian_urzica I know exactly what you mean. It's like because there was only so much you could do technically and graphically game devs had to be really creative with gameplay mechanics and storytelling.

I do think games like God of War are still maintaining that story telling magic, but you're right. Not even Pokemon feels the same anymore!

Cristian Stoian Urzica
@kinkin indeed, as Gabe said. He said it better than me. I completely agree with you.
Cristian Stoian Urzica
@gabe Indeed, you said it better than I did. I completely agree. That's the reason I see anew cool game, I play it for a few hours then close and forget it.
Rajiv Ayyangar

Oooh interesting question. Have you seen the new Airbnb app? Not hardware, but it’s a bit of both - retro and sleek/modern. A little skeuomorphic.

Gabe Perez

@rajiv_ayyangar I have! You're right that they're blending a bit of both...tbh... took me a bit to get used to. I'm not sure I 100% love it yet on their app. What do you think of it so far?

Nwode Bright

As long as it doesn’t mean slower performance, I’d love a throwback design. Modern stuff feels too serious sometimes.

Gabe Perez

@nwode_bright I don't think design would necessarily impact performance in my opinion. We're at the point in manufacturing where I think a good balanced can be achieved.

Aaron Marco Arias

I agree with you! I miss the diversity of mobile phone designs we had in the 2000s, so I'm really liking the new Motorolas!

Gabe Perez

@aaronmarco Motorola has been crushing it lately! I hear their AI is also...decent!?

Hansel
I am a big fan of the modern, minimalist, and sleek hardware designs myself. But your point about different philosophies is super relevant. Does anyone know of good examples of hardware designs from a region having a distinct aesthetics compared to what we typically see in the US/EU? Would love to see some examples!
Gabe Perez

@hanselh Japan - 100% If you look at some of the designs early Sony was doing, they're so fun. Obsolete Sony is a great Twitter (X) account to follow.

Nika

I'm a huge fan of retro. It would be interesting to see how younger generations, who haven’t experienced it, would adapt. It sounds like a fun experiment! 😀

Viola Caldwell

I remember my old desktop had blue LED lights and a transparent case. That thing looked like a spaceship!

Gabe Perez

@viola_caldwell haha, wait, what desktop did you have!?

Zac Zuo

I am building an AI pen👀✍️Think it will bring some interesting use cases.

Gabe Perez

@zaczuo now I want to know more 👀

Zac Zuo

@gabe So, we all know writing is super intuitive, and AI meeting summaries are already super helpful in tools like granola or Plaud Note.

What I'm building with the AI pen is a way to use that physical act of highlighting during a meeting to guide the AI. Your physical cues directly shape the way that AI understands the meeting, making it deeply personal and focused on the parts you flagged as important. It's about giving AI summaries more, well, "soul".

It’s turning out to be a pretty magical way to get truly personalized insights.

Rajiv Ayyangar

@gabe  @zaczuo is the idea to write on a personal notepad during a meeting? Do others in the meeting have a way to see what you're writing?

Zac Zuo

@gabe  @rajiv_ayyangar Great question! Currently, the AI doesn't analyze the content of your written notes on a notepad for the summary personalization, that's an idea for future integration.

The core mechanism right now is that the pen captures audio, and you use physical buttons on the pen to mark important segments of that audio in real-time. These markers then guide the AI to create a summary biased towards what you felt was key.

This way, you can still jot down notes for your own thinking and focus (which is often what physical note-taking is great for, especially in person!), while easily signaling to the AI what to emphasize in its summary of the audio. The goal is a more focused meeting experience and a truly personal, “soulful” AI summary afterwards.

Priyanka Gosai

Oof, this hit a nostalgia nerve! 😄
I lived for the Gameboy Color and those semi-transparent gadgets they felt like tech with personality.

Today’s sleek AI hardware is beautiful (no doubt), but sometimes it feels too… sterile? There’s something oddly comforting about quirky colors and playful shapes like they invite you to interact.

Would love to see a hybrid functionally modern, but with design that sparks joy. Imagine a Humane Pin in a grape purple shell.

Gabe Perez

@priyanka_gosai1 sterile is kinda accurate - didn't think about it that way. I don't mind the sleekness but I do feel like we need to have fun again

Yi Zheng

I think we need more of that “fun” design thinking from the 2000s.✨

①💡Imagine what the AI Pin could be :

Translucent housing - allowing you to see the “AI Thinking” LEDs inside

Interchangeable colored rings - depending on the mood or occasion

Small pixel display - shows emoji or simple patterns for added intimacy

Haptic feedback - different vibration modes correspond to different AI moods

②Make technology more human, not people more technological.
Balance is important ⚖️:

Retain functionality and ease of use (the benefits of modern design)

Add personality and fun (the charm of retro design)

Give users a choice (not everyone wants the same aesthetic)

Gabe Perez

BLINKING LIGHTS - oh man, remember when we had tech look like sketcher light up shoes haha. Those were fun times.

Yi Zheng

@gabe Yes, visible “color technology.”

I miss the era when tech looked like candy and broke like dreams.

Djamillio Heij
Big fan of minimalism but it would be amazing to see the open AI hardware in tamagotchi or gameboy design .
Gabe Perez

@djamillio_heij I'd love to see some PSP/Gameboy casing come back

Ryan Hoover

The Little Guy project by Daniel Kuntz is wacky.

Zac Zuo

@rrhoover This one has also become a cool "AI hardware infra" for many gadgets recently.

Fredrick James

Honestly, some of that older design had personality. Everything now looks the same sleek, black, minimal. A few bold throwback designs could really shake things up.

Parth Ahir

Bring back the weird. We lost soul chasing minimalism. Those translucent purples and quirky forms weren’t just aesthetics — they made tech feel alive. Today’s devices all look like they’re afraid to be noticed. Maybe it’s time to let hardware have a personality again.