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  • The Future of Addictive Design + Going Deep at DeepMind + HatGPT

    1 DAY AGO

    1

    The Future of Addictive Design + Going Deep at DeepMind + HatGPT

    Last week, two separate juries held social media companies liable for harming young users. We unpack what these landmark decisions mean — not only for the future of social platforms like Meta and YouTube, but also for A.I. chatbots. Then, Sebastian Mallaby, the author of “The Infinity Machine,” joins us to talk about the three years he spent with Demis Hassabis and those closest to Google DeepMind. And finally, we catch up on some of our favorite tech headlines from the week with a round of HatGPT.   Guest: Sebastian Mallaby, author of “The Infinity Machine: Demis Hassabis, DeepMind and the Quest for Superintelligence.”   Additional Reading: Juries Take the Lead in the Push for Child Online Safety An A.I. Agent Was Banned From Creating Wikipedia Articles, Then Wrote Angry Blogs About Being Banned I Met Olaf — the Frozen Robot who Might be the Future of Disney Parks Claude’s Code: Anthropic Leaks Source Code for A.I. Software Engineering Tool What’s With All the A.I. Videos of Cheating Fruit? This Company Is Secretly Turning Your Zoom Meetings into A.I. Podcasts North Korean Hackers Suspected in Axios Software Tool Breach   We want to hear from you. Email us at hardfork@nytimes.com. Find “Hard Fork” on YouTube and TikTok. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also subscribe via your favorite podcast app here https://www.nytimes.com/activate-access/audio?source=podcatcher. For more podcasts and narrated articles, download The New York Times app at nytimes.com/app. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

    1 day ago

    •
    1hr 9min
  • Ep 748: Plugins, Microsoft’s AI Comeback and New AI Video. 7 New AI Features You Should be Tracking

    1 DAY AGO

    2

    Ep 748: Plugins, Microsoft’s AI Comeback and New AI Video. 7 New AI Features You Should be Tracking

    Half of consumer question the authenticity of what they see online. 🤔 That's the reality of the business world that your company is blindly spraying a gajillion AI-generated artifacts into.  Sure, enterprises want to 'do the right thing' when it comes to ethical and responsible AI.  But it's easier said than done when the tech is outpacing the guardrails.  Don't worry, we'll break it all down for you and leave you with the 5-step playbook to turn responsible AI from a checkbook needing your approval to a competitive advantage.  Responsible AI Playbook: What It Means and 5 Moves to Ensure Your AI Strategy Survives - An Everyday AI Chat with Jordan Wilson Newsletter: Sign up for our free daily newsletter More on this Episode: Episode Page Join the discussion on LinkedIn: Thoughts on this? Join the convo on LinkedIn and connect with other AI leaders. Upcoming Episodes: Check out the upcoming Everyday AI Livestream lineup Website: YourEverydayAI.com Email The Show: info@youreverydayai.com Connect with Jordan on LinkedIn Topics Covered in This Episode: ChatGPT Codex Plugins Return OverviewChatGPT Codex Super App IntegrationGemini AI Chat Memory Import ToolsSlackbot AI Agent Skills ExpansionPerplexity AI Deep Research Feature UpgradeMicrosoft Copilot Critique and Counsel ModelsMicrosoft Copilot Cowork Workflow AutomationGoogle VEO 3.1 Lite AI Video Launch Timestamps: 00:00 Explaining the weekly AI setup 06:09 Merging GPT tools into super app 09:40 Transferring chat history to Gemini 10:38 Google's free Gemini trial 15:50 AI tools streamline knowledge work 17:15 AI tools for research and workflows 22:11 How Microsoft's Cowork works 25:56 How AI video tools work 27:53 Wrapping up and feedback request Keywords:  ChatGPT plugins, OpenAI, Codex, plugin directory, Gmail plugin, Google Drive integration, Slack plugin, Figma plugin, Notion plugin, reusable workflows, app integration, ChatGPT apps, ChatGPT skills, connectors, super app, Anthropic Claude, knowledge work utility, local file access, terminal access, engineering teams, Gemini, chat history import, chatbot memory, personalization layer, modular memory system, Google Drive, Box, SharePoint, zip uploads, Claude CoWork, Slackbot, Slack AI features, Sales Send Everyday AI and Jordan a text message. (We can't reply back unless you leave contact info) Start Here ▶️ Not sure where to start when it comes to AI? Start with our Start Here Series. You can listen to the first drop -- Episode 691 -- or get free access to our Inner Cricle community and all episodes: StartHereSeries.com  Also, here's a link to the entire series on a Spotify playlist.

    1 day ago

    •
    30 min
  • Lockheed Martin

    30/05/2023

    3

    Lockheed Martin

    Today we bring you two absolutely incredible stories. The first is Lockheed’s legendary Skunk Works division — the elite team of aviation geniuses who produced some of the greatest airplanes in history: the U-2, the Stealth Fighter, and the incomparable SR-71 Blackbird. The second story is arguably even more important, but not widely known! It's the secret and true origins of Silicon Valley — and Lockheed’s primary role in it. We take you from WWII to the Cold War, all the way to today to unpack and analyze the industry dynamics of defense contractors in the modern era. Tune in and prepare to be blown away by what you’ll learn about the history of our industry! Links: Ben Rich’s Skunk WorksKelly’s 14 Rules of Skunk WorksLMSC’s “Seven Tenets”Steve Blank’s Secret History of Silicon ValleyEpisode sourcesCarve Outs: Nier: AutomataThe Blackbird speed check storyEGO Lawn Tools (just in time for Fathers’ Day!) Sponsors: WorkOS: https://bit.ly/workos25Intapp: https://bit.ly/intappcelesteSentry: https://bit.ly/acquiredsentryAnthropic: https://bit.ly/acquiredclaude25 More Acquired! Get email updates with hints on next episode and follow-ups from recent episodesJoin the SlackSubscribe to ACQ2Merch Store!© Copyright 2015-2025 ACQ, LLC ‍Note: Acquired hosts and guests may hold assets discussed in this episode. This podcast is not investment advice, and is intended for informational and entertainment purposes only. You should do your own research and make your own independent decisions when considering any financial transactions.

    30/05/2023

    •
    3h 40m
  • LVMH

    21/02/2023

    4

    LVMH

    We tell the full history of LVMH, and how Bernard Arnault turned a $15m investment in a bankrupt French textile company into the world’s largest individual fortune. It’s a story that’s equal parts Berkshire Hathaway, Steve Jobs and Barbarians at the Gate… and wholly under-appreciated for the genius business model innovations that enabled it. Whatever industry you operate or invest in, there’s so much to be learned from Bernard and LVMH’s complete reshaping of the luxury sector over the past three and a half decades. And oh yeah, it also involves Nazi spies, Italian family murders, Rupert Murdoch, Rihanna becoming a billionaire, Jay-Z’s champagne feuds and Beyoncé wearing a 128 carat diamond. Tune in! :)  Links: Bryan Burrough in Vanity Fair: Gucci and Goliath Episode sourcesCarve Outs: The Gamecraft PodcastDoug DeMuro buys a Carrera GT The Peloton Tread The Eureka Theory of History Is Wrong Sponsors: WorkOS: https://bit.ly/workos25Intapp: https://bit.ly/intappcelesteSentry: https://bit.ly/acquiredsentryAnthropic: https://bit.ly/acquiredclaude25 More Acquired! Get email updates with hints on next episode and follow-ups from recent episodesJoin the SlackSubscribe to ACQ2Merch Store!© Copyright 2015-2025 ACQ, LLC

    21/02/2023

    •
    3h 34m
  • AI is the Next Free Speech Battleground

    31/07/2025

    5

    AI is the Next Free Speech Battleground

    Imagine a future where the most persuasive voices in our society aren't human. Where AI generated speech fills our newsfeeds, talks to our children, and influences our elections. Where digital systems with no consciousness can hold bank accounts and property.  Where AI companies have transferred the wealth of human labor and creativity to their own ledgers without having to pay a cent. All without any legal accountability. This isn't a science fiction scenario. It’s the future we’re racing towards right now. The biggest tech companies are working right now to tip the scale of power in society away from humans and towards their AI systems. And the biggest arena for this fight is in the courts. In the absence of regulation, it's largely up to judges to determine the guardrails around AI. Judges who are relying on slim technical knowledge and archaic precedent to decide where this all goes. In this episode, Harvard Law professor Larry Lessig and Meetali Jain, director of the Tech Justice Law Project help make sense of the court’s role in steering AI and what we can do to help steer it better. Your Undivided Attention is produced by the Center for Humane Technology. Follow us on X: @HumaneTech_. You can find a full transcript, key takeaways, and much more on our Substack. RECOMMENDED MEDIA “The First Amendment Does Not Protect Replicants” by Larry Lessig More information on the Tech Justice Law Project Further reading on Sewell Setzer’s story Further reading on NYT v. Sullivan Further reading on the Citizens United case Further reading on Google’s deal with Character AI More information on Megan Garcia’s foundation, The Blessed Mother Family Foundation RECOMMENDED YUA EPISODES When the "Person" Abusing Your Child is a Chatbot: The Tragic Story of Sewell Setzer What Can We Do About Abusive Chatbots? With Meetali Jain and Camille Carlton AI Is Moving Fast. We Need Laws that Will Too. The AI Dilemma   Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

    31/07/2025

    •
    49 min
  • Why Leonardo was a saboteur, Gutenberg went broke, and Florence was weird – Ada Palmer

    6 MAR

    6

    Why Leonardo was a saboteur, Gutenberg went broke, and Florence was weird – Ada Palmer

    Renaissance history is so much wilder and weirder than you would have expected. Very fun chatting with Ada Palmer (historian, novelist, and composer based at the University of Chicago). Some especially fascinating things I learned from the conversation and her excellent book, Inventing the Renaissance: Not only did Gutenberg go bankrupt in the 1450s (after inventing the printing press), but so did the bank that foreclosed on him, and so did his apprentices. This is because paper was still very expensive, and so you had to make this big upfront CAPEX decision to print a batch of 300 copies of a book - say the Bible. But he’s in a small landlocked German town where only priests are allowed to read the Bible - so he sells maybe 7 copies. It’s only when this technology ends up in Venice, where you can hand 10 copies to each of 30 ship captains going to 30 different cities, that it starts taking off. Speaking of which, the printing revolution wasn’t just one single discrete event, just as the computer revolution has been this whole century of going from mainframes -> personal computers -> phones -> social media, each with different and accelerating social impact. Books came first, but they’re slow to print, and made in small batches. The real revolution is pamphlets - much faster, much harder to censor. Pamphlet runners are how you can have Luther’s 95 Theses go from Wittenberg to London in 17 days. So much other wild stuff from this episode. For example, did you know that the largest and best-funded experimental laboratory in 17th century Europe was very likely the Roman one run by inquisitors? Ada jokes that the Inquisition accidentally invented peer review. The focus of the Inquisition is really misunderstood - it was obsessed with catching dangerous new heretics like Lutherans and Calvinists - it only executed one person for doing science. And this leads Ada to make an observation that I think is really wise: the authorities and censors are always worried about the exact wrong things given 20/20 hindsight. When Inquisition raids an underground bookshop during the French Enlightenment, they don’t mind the Rousseau, Voltaire, and Encyclopédie, but they lose their minds about some Jansenist treatises about the technical nature of the Trinity. More broadly, a lesson for me from this episode is that it’s just really hard to shape history in the specific way that you want to impact things. One of the most famous medieval scholars is this guy Petrarch. He survives the Black Death in the 1340s, watches his friends die to plague and bandits, and says: our leaders are selfish and terrible, we need to raise them on the Roman classics so they’ll act like Cicero. So Europe pours money into finding ancient manuscripts, building libraries, and educating princes on classical virtues. Those princes grow up and fight bigger, nastier wars than ever before with new deadlier technology. And this, combined with greater urbanization and endemic plague, results in European life expectancy decreasing from 35 in the medieval period to 18 during the Renaissance (the period which we in retrospect think of as a golden age but which many people living through it thought of as the continuation of the dark ages that had persisted since the fall of Rome). Anyways, the libraries Petrarch inspires stick around, the printing press makes them accessible to everyone, and 200 years later a generation of medical students is reading Lucretius and asking “what if there are atoms and that’s how diseases work?” which eventually leads to germ theory, vaccines, and a cure for the Black Death (Ada has longer more involved explanation of how cosplaying the Romans results through a series of many steps to the scientific revolution). Petrarch wanted to produce philosopher-kings that shared his values. Instead he created a world that doesn’t share his values at all but can cure the disease that destroyed his. Watch on YouTube; read the transcript. Sponsors * Jane Street is still waiting on someone to solve their backdoor puzzle… They’re accepting submissions until April 1st and have set aside $50,000 for the best attempts. Separately, applications are live for Jane Street’s summer ML internships in NY, London, and Hong Kong. Go check all of this out at janestreet.com/dwarkesh. * Labelbox can help ensure your agents don’t need to rely on overspecified prompts. They tailor real-world scenarios to whatever domain you’re focused on, and they make sure the data you train on rewards real understanding, not just instruction-following. Learn more at labelbox.com/dwarkesh * Mercury’s personal accounts let you add users, issue cards, and customize permissions. This is super useful for sharing finances with a partner, a roommate… or even an OpenClaw agent. And, if you’re already a Mercury Business user, your personal account is free! See terms and conditions below, and learn more at mercury.com/personal-banking Eligible Mercury Business users who apply for and maintain a Mercury Personal account may have their Mercury Personal subscription fee waived provided they remain a user on an active Mercury Business account in good standing. Standard Mercury Platform Subscription fees will apply if they no longer meet eligibility requirements, including but not limited to no longer being associated with an eligible Mercury Business account, or if the program is modified or terminated. Mercury may modify or discontinue this offering at any time and will provide notice as required by law. See Subscription Terms for full details. * To sponsor a future episode, visit dwarkesh.com/advertise. Timestamps (00:00:00) - How cosplaying Ancient Rome led to the Renaissance (00:28:49) - How Florence’s weird republic worked (00:38:13) - How the Medicis took over Florence (00:58:12) - Why it was so hard for Gutenberg to make any money off the printing press (01:17:34) - Why the industrial revolution didn’t happen in Italy (01:23:02) - The Library of Alexandria isn’t where most ancient books were lost (01:41:21) - The Inquisition accidentally invented peer review Get full access to Dwarkesh Podcast at www.dwarkesh.com/subscribe

    6 Mar

    •
    2h 2m
  • Folge 239 - Balkonkraftwerke: Neue Norm sorgt für Sicherheitsstandard

    2 DAYS AGO

    7

    Folge 239 - Balkonkraftwerke: Neue Norm sorgt für Sicherheitsstandard

    Die Energie der Sonne einfach im eigenen Stromnetz nutzen zu können, ist dank Steckersolaranlagen, sogenannten Balkonkraftwerken, auch für Mietende nicht mehr nur Wunschdenken. Eine neue Norm löst technische Fallstricke.

    2 days ago

    •
    41 min
  • MTN’s Divyesh Joshi on the strategy behind Pi

    3 DAYS AGO

    8

    MTN’s Divyesh Joshi on the strategy behind Pi

    MTN South Africa has launched Pi, a digital-only mobile operator that runs on MTN’s network but operates as a standalone brand, offering contract-free mobile and home 5G connectivity through a single app, with no call centres, no credit checks and no lock-in. In this episode of the TechCentral Show, TechCentral editor Duncan McLeod talks to Divyesh Joshi, chief commercial officer at MTN South Africa, about the thinking behind the launch and what it signals about the direction of the local telecommunications market. Pi’s pricing is aggressive: R79/month for 500 voice minutes and R199/month for 20GB of mobile data, for example, alongside home fixed-wireless broadband plans. McLeod asks whether Pi is essentially MTN’s fightback against Telkom, which has been quietly gaining prepaid market share with competitive data pricing – and whether the launch is also a response to mobile virtual network operators like Melon Mobile. The conversation explores what Pi means for MTN’s margins, particularly on voice, and whether the aggressive pricing on calls is an admission that voice has become a commodity in a market where many consumers have shifted to WhatsApp for calls. McLeod also asks whether Pi represents MTN’s attempt to get ahead of a structural shift in how people consume telecoms services – drawing a parallel with MultiChoice’s failure to adapt quickly enough to changing market demands in the video entertainment space. A key question is what happens to MTN’s existing SuperFlex product, which targets a similar customer base. Is Pi going to cannibalise MTN’s own subscribers? Finally, McLeod and Joshi discuss MTN’s new eSim-based roaming deals, which offer data at R12/GB in markets like China and France – though curiously, roaming in eSwatini, where MTN has a subsidiary, costs R85/GB. Don’t miss the conversation!

    3 days ago

    •
    22 min
  • Die andere Seite der KI-Medaille: Brain Fry, Arbeitsmarkt-Druck und Adaptionsprobleme

    1 DAY AGO

    9

    Die andere Seite der KI-Medaille: Brain Fry, Arbeitsmarkt-Druck und Adaptionsprobleme

    In dieser Folge sprechen Felix Schlenther und Elisabeth L’Orange über die andere Seite der KI‑Medaille: Welche Effekte hat GenAI auf unser Gehirn (Alpha‑Band, „Brain Fry“), warum sinkt das Beschäftigungswachstum bei Entry‑Level‑Jobs, und weshalb scheitert KI‑Adoption in Unternehmen oft an Daten, Prozessen und Menschen. Außerdem: parasoziale Beziehungen mit Chatbots, Social‑Media‑Algorithmen, Regulierung – und ganz konkrete Maßnahmen, um kritisch denkend zu bleiben. Im AI FIRST Podcast thematisiert Elisabeth L’Orange: - Brain Fry & kognitive Ermüdung - Warum Multitasking und „Tool‑Overload“ Produktivität senken - Gen Z, Lernen & kritisches Denken - Adoption-Realität vs. Hype (ROI, Skills, Datenqualität) - Praktische Regeln für gesunde KI‑Nutzung Erwähnte Quellen: - Your Brain on ChatGPT: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2506.08872v1 - When using AI leads to "Brain Fry"?: https://hbr.org/2026/03/when-using-ai-leads-to-brain-fry - https://hbr.org/2026/02/ai-doesnt-reduce-work-it-intensifies-it Zum Gast: Elisabeth L’Orange Zum Host: Felix Schlenther Zum Podcast: Tech & Tales

    1 day ago

    •
    52 min
  • Wie wir unser KI-Betriebssystem aufgebaut haben

    20 MAR

    10

    Wie wir unser KI-Betriebssystem aufgebaut haben

    In der letzten Folge habe ich folgende These aufgestellt: KI ist kein Tool und kein Mitarbeiter mehr - KI muss zum Betriebssystem des Unternehmens werden. Die Resonanz war überwältigend. In dieser Solo-Folge liefere ich den kompletten Bauplan: Wie haben wir bei AI FIRST unser eigene KI-Betriebssystem aufgebaut? Von der Architektur über die Agentenkette bis zum wichtigsten Mindset-Shift: arbeite am System, nicht im System. In dieser Folge spreche ich über: - Die 6 Bausteine des KI-Betriebssystems: OS-Agent, Skills, Kontext, Tools, Governance und Lernschleife - Warum ein einziger OS-Agent 25 spezialisierte KI-Agents ersetzt - Die Ampellogik der Governance: Was KI autonom darf (Grün), wo sie menschliche Freigabe braucht (Gelb) und was sofort geblockt wird (Rot) - Die 5-Agent-Kette für Automation: Von der Dokumentation über die Aufgabenextraktion bis zum Feedback-Logger - Wie sich das System selbst erweitert, wenn kein passender Skill existiert – und warum ein Human-in-the-Loop trotzdem unverzichtbar bleibt - Technische Voraussetzungen: Warum AI FIRST auf Notion setzt und wie Claude, Langdock und Copilot Cowork in dieselbe Richtung gehen - Der wichtigste Mindset-Shift: Am System arbeiten, nicht im System – und warum das der Schlüssel zur KI-Adaption im Unternehmen ist Zum Host: Felix Schlenther⁠⁠⁠⁠

    20 Mar

    •
    54 min

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  • São Tomé and Príncipe
  • Saudi Arabia
  • Senegal
  • Seychelles
  • Sierra Leone
  • South Africa
  • Sri Lanka
  • Tajikistan
  • Tanzania, United Republic Of
  • Tunisia
  • Turkmenistan
  • United Arab Emirates
  • Uganda
  • Yemen
  • Zambia
  • Zimbabwe

Asia Pacific

  • Afghanistan
  • Australia
  • Bhutan
  • Cambodia
  • 中国大陆
  • Fiji
  • 香港
  • Indonesia (English)
  • 日本
  • Kazakhstan
  • 대한민국
  • Kyrgyzstan
  • Lao People's Democratic Republic
  • 澳門
  • Malaysia (English)
  • Maldives
  • Micronesia, Federated States of
  • Mongolia
  • Myanmar
  • Nauru
  • Nepal
  • New Zealand
  • Pakistan
  • Palau
  • Papua New Guinea
  • Philippines
  • Singapore
  • Solomon Islands
  • 台灣
  • Thailand
  • Tonga
  • Turkmenistan
  • Uzbekistan
  • Vanuatu
  • Vietnam

Europe

  • Albania
  • Armenia
  • Österreich
  • Belarus
  • Belgium
  • Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • Bulgaria
  • Croatia
  • Cyprus
  • Czechia
  • Denmark
  • Estonia
  • Finland
  • France (Français)
  • Georgia
  • Deutschland
  • Greece
  • Hungary
  • Iceland
  • Ireland
  • Italia
  • Kosovo
  • Latvia
  • Lithuania
  • Luxembourg (English)
  • Malta
  • Moldova, Republic Of
  • Montenegro
  • Nederland
  • North Macedonia
  • Norway
  • Poland
  • Portugal (Português)
  • Romania
  • Россия
  • Serbia
  • Slovakia
  • Slovenia
  • España
  • Sverige
  • Schweiz
  • Türkiye (English)
  • Ukraine
  • United Kingdom

Latin America and the Caribbean

  • Anguilla
  • Antigua and Barbuda
  • Argentina (Español)
  • Bahamas
  • Barbados
  • Belize
  • Bermuda
  • Bolivia (Español)
  • Brasil
  • Virgin Islands, British
  • Cayman Islands
  • Chile (Español)
  • Colombia (Español)
  • Costa Rica (Español)
  • Dominica
  • República Dominicana
  • Ecuador (Español)
  • El Salvador (Español)
  • Grenada
  • Guatemala (Español)
  • Guyana
  • Honduras (Español)
  • Jamaica
  • México
  • Montserrat
  • Nicaragua (Español)
  • Panamá
  • Paraguay (Español)
  • Perú
  • St. Kitts and Nevis
  • Saint Lucia
  • St. Vincent and The Grenadines
  • Suriname
  • Trinidad and Tobago
  • Turks and Caicos
  • Uruguay (English)
  • Venezuela (Español)

The United States and Canada

  • Canada (English)
  • Canada (Français)
  • United States
  • Estados Unidos (Español México)
  • الولايات المتحدة
  • США
  • 美国 (简体中文)
  • États-Unis (Français France)
  • 미국
  • Estados Unidos (Português Brasil)
  • Hoa Kỳ
  • 美國 (繁體中文台灣)