
The 'together tech' movement is betting against AI isolation — and it might be onto something
While everyone's chasing AI records, a quieter wave of startups wants to get you off your phone and into the same room as other humans.
Image credit: Image via TechCrunch — AI. Used under fair use for news commentary. · source
Picture this: a group of adults hunched over a table, not staring at screens, but actually looking at each other. Playing a board game. Laughing at something that happened in the room, not on a feed. It sounds almost retro, right?
But here's the thing. Some of the most interesting founders I've been tracking aren't building the next AI assistant or autonomous system. They're building the opposite. They want you to put your phone down.
The anti-AI bet
According to TechCrunch, while AI fundraising keeps smashing records (we're talking billions flowing into foundation models and inference infrastructure), a counter-movement is quietly gaining traction. They're calling it "together tech," which, honestly, I initially thought sounded like marketing fluff. But after digging into what these companies are actually building, I'm less dismissive.
Brynn Putnam, who founded the fitness mirror company Mirror (sold to Lululemon for $500 million in 2020), just raised money for a new startup called Board. The focus? In-person games and social experiences. Not AR. Not AI companions. Just... people in rooms together.
And she's not alone. Cyberdeck creators are going viral on social media with these whimsical, handmade DIY computers that, and I love this, literally encourage users to go outside. Touch grass, as the kids say.
This isn't just backlash
You might be wondering: isn't this just the AI-free browser crowd repackaged? The people who want to go back to flip phones and think smartphones ruined everything?
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