G42 and design firm R/GA launched alpha.G42.ai, described as a generative interface that replaces traditional static websites with adaptive, AI-driven experiences. Instead of fixed pages, the platform uses large language models to generate and curate content in real time based on the user.
What is genuinely interesting
The interface idea is more meaningful than another chatbot. If pages can be assembled on demand, content strategy stops being a list of URLs and becomes a set of ingredients. Done well, this could shorten time-to-information for users with very different intents.
What is not new
Personalised content has been promised for two decades. The web today is full of dynamic pages tuned to user signals. The honest novelty here is mainly the model behind the assembly, not the idea itself.
The hard questions
Three issues will decide whether generative interfaces matter beyond demos. First, SEO. Search engines reward stable, indexable content. A page that looks different to every visitor is hard to rank. Second, accessibility. AI-generated layouts can break screen readers and assistive tech if not built carefully. Third, content provenance. When the page is assembled live, who is responsible for the claim it makes?
What to take from it
For UAE founders and product teams, alpha.G42.ai is a useful prompt. Worth asking: what part of your product would benefit from being generated rather than designed? In most cases, the answer is small — a help center, an onboarding flow — not the homepage. That is fine. Useful experiments rarely replace everything.
Image via Pexels.

