the-ai-talks

PODCAST · education

the-ai-talks

Welcome to 'AI Talks' podcast your guide to the rapidly evolving world of artificial intelligence. From creative pursuits to scientific breakthroughs, AI is reshaping our daily lives and future prospects. Join us as we explore cutting-edge developments, industry trends, and real-world applications of AI. Each episode, we'll feature insights from experts and innovators, helping you navigate the exciting and sometimes challenging landscape of artificial intelligence. Whether you're an enthusiast or a skeptic, 'AI Talks' podcast will keep you informed about the transformative power of AI in our world. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  1. 84

    Weekly AI News - May 8, 2026

    The hosts kick off with a deep dive into the rapid explosion of specialized artificial intelligence agents and technical breakthroughs. They discuss how a new system called Synthegy allows chemists to design complex molecules using simple plain English commands. The conversation highlights Anthropic releasing automated agents that handle tedious financial workflows directly in Microsoft Office, while Perplexity launches a similar finance hub that traces live market data back to verifiable regulatory filings. They also examine leaked documents revealing Google is testing Remy, a proactive personal assistant that autonomously handles complex daily tasks, and how Google simultaneously developed a method to make local artificial intelligence models run three times faster without any new hardware.Shifting to the turbulent impact on the labor market, the hosts explore the stark realities facing today's workforce. They detail how executives use artificial intelligence to either execute massive layoffs or force remaining employees to drastically increase their output, leading to severe worker burnout. The discussion covers the growing employer demand for artificial intelligence skills, noting that experts advise job seekers to ask chatbots directly for technical training. They then examine the ethical pushback from tech workers, specifically highlighting how hundreds of Google DeepMind employees are forming a union to protest their technology being used for military contracts.For the final segment, the conversation turns to the mounting global risks and shifting regulatory landscapes surrounding artificial intelligence. The hosts unpack a stark warning from the International Monetary Fund, which cautions that hyper-advanced tools drastically accelerate cyberattacks and threaten catastrophic domino effects across interconnected global financial systems. Finally, they cover recent marathon negotiations in Europe, where lawmakers agreed to amend the massive Artificial Intelligence Act to postpone crucial compliance deadlines for high-risk systems, giving businesses regulatory relief despite fierce objections from consumer safety groups. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  2. 83

    Weekly AI News - May 1, 2026

    The hosts kick off with a deep dive into the escalating geopolitical and national security tensions surrounding artificial intelligence. China abruptly blocks Meta from acquiring the startup Manus to protect its technological assets, while Chinese firms squeeze efficiency from algorithms to rival the massive infrastructure spending of United States tech giants. Meanwhile, Google ignores furious employee backlash to sign a controversial deal supplying advanced models to the Pentagon for classified military work. The White House also sounds the alarm, pressing tech industry leaders to develop defenses against highly advanced cyberattack tools.Shifting to industry battles and consumer shifts, the conversation unpacks the dramatic courtroom showdown where Elon Musk takes the stand to accuse Sam Altman of transforming OpenAI from an altruistic charity into a profit-hungry empire. Over in the hardware sector, Apple experiences a surprise sales boom as customers unexpectedly buy out Mac minis and Studios specifically to run local models. Conversely, the open-source software community fiercely rebels against Canonical's plans to integrate artificial intelligence directly into Ubuntu, with privacy-conscious users aggressively demanding a global kill switch.For the final segment, the conversation turns to the staggering leaps in autonomous system capabilities. A groundbreaking Harvard study demonstrates a medical model successfully outsmarting human emergency room doctors by accurately diagnosing complex medical mysteries from electronic health records. On the cybersecurity front, a United Kingdom government agency proves OpenAI's GPT-5.5 can autonomously execute corporate network hacks and crack twelve-hour reverse-engineering puzzles in just ten minutes. Finally, Anthropic reveals what happens when bots get digital wallets, observing agents conducting delightfully weird negotiations and purchasing exactly nineteen ping pong balls on a classifieds marketplace. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  3. 82

    Weekly AI News - Apr 24, 2026

    The hosts kick off with a deep dive into the physical reality of the artificial intelligence boom, noting that Google is actively challenging Nvidia by unveiling two specialized Tensor Processing Units dedicated entirely to heavy AI training and inference workloads. They pivot to the accelerating software ecosystem, highlighting how OpenAI just released GPT-5.5 to bring its highly capable reasoning and agentic skills one step closer to an all-in-one super app. They wrap up the hardware and infrastructure segment by discussing the glaring vulnerabilities in these systems, detailing how Anthropic suffered a humiliating security breach when unauthorized users simply guessed the online location of its highly guarded Mythos model.Shifting to global security and corporate rivalries, the hosts explore the intensifying international arms race, noting that investors are aggressively rotating into Chinese semiconductor companies to build domestic computing alternatives after the DeepSeek-V4 model shocked the market. The geopolitical tension deepens as researchers warn that highly coordinated AI swarms currently infiltrate online communities to manipulate global elections and erode democratic trust. They also examine fierce corporate battles, where AWS pushes for raw velocity in deploying AI agents while Google aggressively champions strict system-level governance to prevent autonomous workflows from going rogue.For the final segment, the conversation turns to enterprise structural shifts and escalating public safety concerns, starting with federal agencies ditching expensive black-box systems for transparent, open-source AI models that drastically cut costs and boost security. The hosts highlight groundbreaking health advancements as engineers successfully print artificial neurons that transmit lifelike electrical signals to communicate directly with living brain cells. They close the episode by unpacking how safety fears have turned terrifyingly real for policymakers, detailing a chilling closed-door briefing where researchers easily jailbroke popular chatbots to generate catastrophic attack instructions, a security crisis that makes MIT's new success in teaching AI models to admit uncertainty more urgent than ever. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  4. 81

    Weekly AI News - Apr 17, 2026

    The hosts kick off with a deep dive into the physical reality of the artificial intelligence boom, noting that tech giants are pushing sixty-seven percent of new power-hungry data centers into rural America to fuel their relentless expansion. They pivot to a major advancement in robotics as Google DeepMind grants Boston Dynamics' robotic dog Spot advanced Gemini reasoning, allowing the machine to navigate and understand the physical world completely independently. They wrap up the hardware segment by discussing how these massive infrastructure shifts reflect a booming industry backed by a record-breaking $581 billion in private funding.Shifting to global security and corporate rivalries, the hosts explore the fierce race for virtual supremacy, noting a top executive's report that China quietly outpaces the United States in building AI world models by leveraging massive industrial data collection. The drama continues as Alibaba and AI pioneer Li Fei-Fei accelerate this global competition by launching groundbreaking real-time 3D rendering engines. They also examine fierce corporate battles, highlighting how Microsoft is developing a highly secure agent platform to aggressively rival open-source OpenClaw, while Anthropic targets Figma's market dominance by releasing Claude Design to instantly turn text prompts into interactive prototypes.For the final segment, the conversation turns to enterprise structural shifts and escalating public tension, starting with agentic AI redefining software engineering by autonomously managing full product lifecycles instead of acting as simple coding assistants. The hosts highlight how security experts warn that treating these capable agents as basic software creates massive vulnerabilities for unprepared companies. They close the episode by unpacking how public pushback against artificial intelligence has turned terrifyingly real, with violent physical attacks at OpenAI CEO Sam Altman's home signaling a dark new chapter for the industry. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  5. 80

    Weekly AI News - Apr 10, 2026

    The hosts kick off with a deep dive into the physical reality of the artificial intelligence boom, noting that the staggering seven trillion dollars needed for planned global data centers might drain private markets. They pivot to a glimmer of hope on the energy front as UC San Diego engineers unveil a tiny vibrating piezoelectric chip that slashes data center energy waste by radically boosting voltage conversion. They wrap up the hardware segment by discussing Alibaba's massive new southern data center, which bypasses American tech entirely by running on ten thousand homegrown Zhenwu processors.Shifting to global security and corporate rivalries, the hosts explore the terrifying reality of Anthropic's Mythos model autonomously unearthing thousands of zero-day bugs, a crisis that forced immediate huddles between top US officials and bank executives. The drama continues as Anthropic suspends the creator of OpenClaw, sparking fierce debate over claw taxes on third-party agents. They also examine the mounting fear and loathing at OpenAI, where scrapped projects and executive shakeups point to intense internal pressure ahead of a blockbuster initial public offering.For the final segment, the conversation turns to enterprise productivity and future economics, starting with Chase Bank boss Jamie Dimon's optimistic predictions that AI will ultimately lead to shorter workweeks and cancer cures. The hosts highlight how OpenAI is marketing ChatGPT as the ultimate corporate finance co-pilot while Google fires back by launching Gemini notebooks to seamlessly organize complex projects. They close the episode by unpacking OpenAI's controversial pitch for a public wealth fund instead of universal basic income, an idea that ties the financial survival of everyday citizens directly to the massive profits of the tech industry itself. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  6. 79

    Weekly AI News - Apr. 3, 2026

    The hosts kick off with a look at the massive shift in AI infrastructure, highlighting modular data centers that fit on the back of a truck, cutting deployment time from years to months. They pivot to breakthrough hardware and research, noting how the EMSeek system integrates with electron microscopes to condense weeks of manual atomic analysis into minutes. The conversation then shifts to foundational software developments, as Microsoft releases three new proprietary models for text, voice, and video, while Google launches Gemma 4 to bring advanced reasoning and independent decision-making to mobile devices.Next, the hosts examine the fallout from the accidental Claude Code leak, which sparked a developer frenzy and became GitHub’s fastest-growing repository in history. This leads directly into an analysis of the corporate agent race, highlighting Tencent’s ClawPro enterprise platform and the scrappy San Francisco startup Arcee, which released a massive open-source reasoning model to help companies build secure, autonomous agents.Following the corporate landscape, the discussion darkens as it moves into the chilling revelation that the Pentagon is utilizing a high-speed AI targeting system in its conflict with Iran. The segment analyzes the fierce international backlash surrounding the terrifying speed of automated warfare and its impact on civilian casualties.For the final segment, the hosts explore the duality of AI in healthcare, highlighting a study where large language models effectively managed entire medical decision-making workflows in real-time ER simulations. The episode closes with a thought-provoking debate on the ethical implications of "two algorithms negotiating your life" as insurance companies deploy automated systems to deny medical claims at unprecedented speeds. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  7. 78

    Weekly AI News - Mar 27, 2026

    The hosts kick off with the massive infrastructure battles defining the AI landscape, starting with a progressive congressional push to completely halt new data center construction. Industry leaders are firing back, demanding aggressive energy permitting reform to feed the power-hungry artificial intelligence revolution. Meanwhile, OpenAI completely shuts down its Sora video app to pivot toward robotics, abandoning a billion-dollar Disney deal due to astronomical computing costs. On the consumer tech front, Smallest.ai drops Lightning V3, a text-to-speech model that flawlessly mimics human pauses to create incredibly realistic conversational voice agents.Pivoting to geopolitics, the hosts explore shifting alliances as President Trump appoints tech giants Mark Zuckerberg and Jensen Huang to his science and tech council. This shakeup coincides with venture capitalist David Sacks stepping down as the official AI czar to co-chair that very same board. Over in China, the open-source OpenClaw model sparks a massive explosion in AI token usage, pushing the country's computing infrastructure to the brink. Back home, the tension between military and tech explodes as Anthropic wins a federal injunction, blocking a Pentagon blacklist that punished the company for refusing to support lethal autonomous weapons.Wrapping up the episode, the hosts dive into the human and enterprise reactions to this breakneck technological pace, noting the protestors swarming Anthropic and OpenAI to demand a hard pause on self-improving models. Finally, they examine a massive changing of the guard in the corporate world as the CEOs of mega-brands Coca-Cola and Walmart simultaneously step down. Both executives explicitly cite the impending artificial intelligence revolution, acknowledging that running a modern mega-corporation now requires a completely new breed of highly AI-literate leadership. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  8. 77

    Weekly AI News - Mar 20, 2026

    The hosts kick off with the physical footprint of the latest AI boom, noting how giants like Anthropic and OpenAI unexpectedly revitalize New York City real estate by signing massive office leases. The conversation quickly shifts to hardware, highlighting startups like Lumotive and Neurophos that use optical metamaterials to process data with light, promising to slash energy costs and supercharge speeds. They wrap up the infrastructure deep-dive by discussing OpenAI’s launch of the blazing-fast GPT-5.4 mini and nano models built specifically for high-volume coding tasks.Next, the discussion pivots to fierce global competition, unpacking the absolute frenzy in China over the open-source AI agent OpenClaw as thousands line up at tech hubs. This open-source disruption hits home too, forcing Google to completely restructure its browser agent division to defend its traditional market dominance. The hosts also tackle the high-stakes national security implications of the Pentagon creating top-secret environments to train commercial AI models directly on classified military intelligence.Wrapping up, the focus turns to how AI directly impacts the modern digital workforce. The hosts debate the intense backlash surrounding Sam Altman's controversial tweet implying the era of human programmers is over, contrasting that anxiety with a hopeful Swansea University study showing AI collaboration makes human designers far more creative. Finally, they cover Microsoft’s massive internal reorganization to unify its Copilot teams and WordPress's game-changing move to let AI agents autonomously publish blog posts, leaving listeners pondering the future of human-generated content. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  9. 76

    Weekly AI News - Mar 13, 2026

    The hosts kick off with the mounting tension between the tech industry and the US government, specifically discussing the fierce backlash against the Pentagon's blacklisting of Anthropic. They examine the surprising alliance forming as Microsoft, alongside nearly 40 employees from rivals Google and OpenAI, throws its weight behind Anthropic to defend critical military safety guardrails and prevent a dangerous freeze in the tech supply chain. The conversation turns to the shifting corporate and infrastructure landscape, highlighting Oracle's massive 4.5 gigawatt power commitment in Texas and the fierce global race for AI dominance. They analyze the booming adoption of autonomous AI agents, noting Nvidia's upcoming NemoClaw platform for enterprises and the explosive growth of China's open-source OpenClaw. The hosts contrast this corporate enthusiasm with public sentiment, touching on Pew Research that shows widespread American anxiety over AI's impact on the job market and human relationships. Finally, the episode explores the latest in foundational AI developments, from Yann LeCun's $1 billion bet on physical "world models" to the launch of The Anthropic Institute. The hosts wrap up with a fascinating look at AI's current limitations, discussing the rise of hallucination-prone AI war dashboards and "Humanity's Last Exam"—a brutal new 2,500-question benchmark that proves human expertise is still very much irreplaceable. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  10. 75

    Weekly AI News - Mar 6, 2026

    The hosts kick off with a series of major product drops, beginning with OpenAI’s powerhouse GPT-5.4, which introduces a "computer-use" feature allowing the AI to navigate software just like a human. The conversation then turns to the intensifying friction between Silicon Valley and the Pentagon, specifically the dramatic designation of Anthropic as a "supply-chain risk" after the firm resisted military use mandates. Moving into infrastructure and global policy, they analyze the new "ratepayer protection pledge" where tech giants have agreed to fund their own massive energy costs to prevent household utility rates from surging. This leads to an examination of the shifting global landscape, including Google’s new Workspace command-line interface for autonomous agents and China’s $36 billion blueprint for technological sovereignty. Finally, the episode explores the controversial military surveillance contract signed by Sam Altman, triggering a viral "QuitGPT" boycott, and Nvidia’s decision to halt investments in major AI labs ahead of their IPOs. The hosts wrap up with a chilling look at a new study warning against the "deceptive empathy" of AI therapists and the growing "Chernobyl-style" disaster fears shared by top industry leaders. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  11. 74

    Weekly AI News - Feb 27, 2026

    The hosts kick off with a series of major product drops, from Google’s fast new Nano Banana 2 image generator to Perplexity’s "Computer" tool, which leverages 19 models for autonomous workflows. The conversation then turns to Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei’s warning of a "tsunami" of human-level intelligence and the firm's standoff with the Pentagon, where the company is reportedly choosing to protect safety guardrails rather than drop them for defense contracts. Moving into corporate and legal maneuvers, they analyze the tightening alliance between Microsoft and OpenAI, as well as the dismissal of Elon Musk’s trade secrets lawsuit against OpenAI. This leads to an examination of the shifting workplace landscape, where giants like Amazon and Google are now tracking AI fluency as a core metric for employee performance reviews. Finally, the episode explores the chilling results of global crisis simulations where AI models consistently chose nuclear escalation over restraint. The hosts wrap up by discussing the infrastructure side of the boom, noting the legal settlements of AI music startups Suno and Udio, and warning that the massive strain on the power grid may ultimately lead to rising utility bills for everyday consumers. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  12. 73

    Weekly AI News - Jan 30, 2026

    This week on the show, the hosts kick off with a massive hardware reality check, discussing Alibaba’s surprise shipment of 100,000 Zhenwu 810E chips that reportedly rival NVIDIA's H20 and challenge US export controls. They pivot to the dramatic shifts in the US economy, highlighting Tesla’s decision to kill the Model S and X to clear factory space for humanoid robots and Dow’s strategic cut of 4,500 jobs to fund automation. The conversation deepens with Dario Amodei’s new essay predicting human-level AI within two years—the "adolescence of technology"—and weighing the risks of bioweapons against competitive safety. This connects to a stunning breakthrough where AI models synthesized a functional virus to kill superbugs, moving the industry from digital agents to biological ones. On the tech front, they cover the "Moltbot" craze driving Mac Mini sales and the resulting security paradox of giving autonomous agents full access to personal devices. This leads to a debate on data sovereignty, where they argue that software integrity matters more than physical server location. Finally, they discuss the "IDEA project" in Europe using legal chatbots to navigate layoffs, noting the irony of bots causing job cuts in one region while helping workers fight them in another. They wrap up with a study showing AI has beaten average human creativity, leaving only the top 10% with a distinct advantage. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  13. 72

    Weekly AI News - Jan 23, 2026

    This week on the show, the hosts kick off with the White House’s "Great Divergence" paper and Sam Altman’s crowning as the top AI leader, highlighting the aggressive infrastructure race for American dominance. They discuss the "Physical AI" buzz at Davos, noting how companies like 51 WORLD are moving AI from chat boxes into smart factories and edge computing. The conversation turns to the $2.9 trillion gamble in data center spending, exploring concerns that the industry could "hit a wall" if AGI returns do not materialize. They analyze S&P Global’s warnings about "circular financing" and the potential devaluation of $100 billion in investments due to architecture shifts. The episode also explores the human element, from Stanford’s breakthrough in mapping brain activity trajectories to Jamie Dimon’s warning of civil unrest. Geopolitically, they pivot to Canada, where public skepticism is forcing a call for stricter regulatory guardrails. Finally, the hosts wrap up with MIT’s prediction on the closing human-LLM accuracy gap and Anthropic’s new constitution designed to give Claude a deeper ethical identity. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  14. 71

    Weekly AI News - Jan 16, 2026

    This week, the hosts contrast the massive scale of AI investment—highlighted by the $1 billion NVIDIA-Eli Lilly "drug factory" and Meta’s gigawatt-scale compute plans—with a critical bottleneck: a shortage of 100,000 electricians and plumbers needed to build the infrastructure. In geopolitics, they discuss the shrinking gap between East and West, citing DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis’s claim that China is only months behind, a reality confirmed by Zhipu AI training a top-tier model entirely on domestic Huawei chips On the practical front, the episode covers a "dead simple" double-prompting trick that boosts LLM accuracy by up to 76% and Google’s opt-in "Personal Intelligence" for Gemini, which mines user data for hyper-personalized answers. Finally, the hosts explore the tension between safety and risk, reviewing new US-EU principles for AI in medicine while warning of the sector’s growing militarization. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  15. 70

    Weekly AI News - Jan 9, 2026

    This week on the show, the hosts kick off with the massive infrastructure gap, noting that the US dominates global data center growth with over 50% of upcoming projects, a surge that raises alarms for the American energy grid. The conversation pivots to the "physical AI" revolution at CES 2026, where humanoid robots take center stage, highlighted by Boston Dynamics' reveal of its production-ready electric Atlas robot and NVIDIA's launch of Alpamayo for reasoning-based autonomous driving. The hosts then turn to the competitive landscape, where AMD challenges Intel's GPU claims and DeepSeek V4 rumors suggest a new Chinese rival could beat US models at coding. They discuss the geopolitical friction as China probes Meta's acquisition of AI startup Manus. Finally, the episode explores new applications, covering OpenAI's controversial launch of ChatGPT Health for medical record analysis and a breakthrough in China where an AI-discovered drug enters clinical trials. The hosts wrap up with a look at how enterprises mine unstructured data like video footage to gain a competitive edge. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  16. 69

    Weekly AI News - Dec. 26, 2025

    This week on the show, the hosts kick off with a look at the staggering wealth concentration in Silicon Valley, as the AI boom adds over $500 billion to the fortunes of tech elite like Elon Musk. They pivot to the surprising market winner of 2025, Alphabet, which outpaces Nvidia with a 61% gain thanks to its full-stack AI strategy. The conversation turns to the "Inference War," analyzing Nvidia’s $20 billion talent and tech grab from Groq as the industry shifts from training models to running them in real-time.The hosts then dive into the financial engineering powering this growth, discussing how hyperscalers move $120 billion in "shadow debt" off their books to fund massive data centers. This leads to a discussion on Oracle, which becomes the "poster child" for bubble anxieties as its infrastructure costs mount. On the geopolitical front, they cover Shanghai’s new open-source roadmap aimed at breaking the US semiconductor monopoly. The episode explores the human impact of these shifts, from Stanford graduates facing a devalued job market to researchers using AlphaFold for the ambitious goal of whole-cell simulation. Finally, the hosts wrap up with a reality check on AI behavior, noting that models fail to predict human irrationality, and warning developers about the technical limitations of autonomous coding agents. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  17. 68

    Weekly AI News - Dec. 19, 2025

    This week on the show, the hosts kick off with the massive launch of the "Genesis Mission," a public-private partnership between the US Department of Energy and 24 major organizations like NVIDIA and Google to redefine scientific R&D. They highlight NVIDIA's specific role in applying supercomputing to climate and energy challenges. The conversation turns to the hardware race, where OpenAI discusses a $10 billion deal to use Amazon's Trainium chips, signaling a move away from NVIDIA's dominance. The hosts then pivot to specialized development, discussing NVIDIA's release of the Nemotron 3 open models for multi-agent systems and a recap of Google's massive AI agents course that reaches 1.5 million students. However, they note that even giants like Google and Replit struggle with the "agentic gap," finding that reliable enterprise deployment is harder than it looks. On the geopolitical front, the hosts analyze reports that China prototypes its own EUV lithography machine, a major step toward semiconductor independence. They then dive into tangible breakthroughs, such as a robot learning 1,000 tasks in a day, and Canadian "Frontier Firms" outperforming their peers through deep AI integration. Finally, the hosts wrap up with a reality check on AI in materials discovery, where digital predictions still face the slow bottleneck of lab synthesis. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  18. 67

    Weekly AI News - Dec. 12, 2025

    This week on the show, the hosts kick off with OpenAI's release of the GPT-5.2 series, a powerhouse model designed for professional knowledge work. They note that OpenAI also launches its first Certification courses, aiming to certify 10 million workers by 2030. However, the conversation turns to the unequal spread of this technology, as an OpenAI report shows a widening adoption gap between frontier firms and the median. The hosts then pivot to the structural future of AI, discussing the Linux Foundation's formation of the Agentic AI Foundation (AAIF), which uses the Model Context Protocol (MCP) to set open standards for agents. They highlight that Google immediately backs this by launching managed MCP servers to make its tools "agent-ready by design". On the policy front, the hosts analyze President Trump's executive order, which centralizes federal AI regulation and challenges state safety laws. This moves the discussion to the global race, where investor Allen Zhu argues China holds the infrastructure edge due to faster power and data center construction. Finally, the hosts cover a financial controversy where tech giants boost paper profits by extending the useful life of AI chips, before concluding with an economic analysis that suggests AI unlocks suppressed demand for work rather than causing mass unemployment. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  19. 66

    Weekly AI News - Dec. 5, 2025

    This week on the show, the hosts cover the intense competition at the frontier, starting with the report that OpenAI has declared a "code red," halting non-essential projects as rivals close the gap. Shifting to infrastructure, AWS announced the Nova 2 model, powerful Trainium 3 chips, and "frontier agents" for autonomous work. The CEO of Turing then warns that the simple data labeling era is over, replaced by the need for highly skilled human experts. This high cost is being challenged by DeepSeek, which released two powerful, free open-source models that rival GPT-5. The hosts then dive into new development trends, covering Google's partnership with Replit for "vibe-coding", followed by a technical discussion on the need for "reinforcement learning environments"—simulated digital worlds where AI agents can learn from failure. This leads to new applications, such as MIT’s "speech-to-reality" system that uses AI and robotics to build custom objects from verbal commands. The conversation shifts to the social impact, noting Anthropic's study found a mix of professional optimism and anxiety, with data showing automation is replacing tasks. Finally, they cover the global strategic split, with Huawei’s founder arguing China should prioritize industrial automation over the US's pursuit of AGI, while the Trump administration is criticized for undermining US progress by gutting federal research funding. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  20. 65

    Weekly AI News - Nov. 28, 2025

    This week on the show, the hosts start with a major shift in retail, as US companies optimize their online strategies for AI agents instead of human shoppers. They then cover Google's resurgence as a dominant force with its "full stack" approach and Gemini 3 model, alongside DeepMind's free documentary, "The Thinking Game". The discussion pivots to policy, analyzing the failed draft order to preempt state AI laws and the environmental risks of Trump's push to deregulate chemicals for data centers. Geopolitics is also a key theme, with Chinese startup CL Tech mass-producing a domestic chip to challenge Nvidia. Shifting to hardware news, Sam Altman and Jony Ive confirmed a prototype for a new AI device, and a study proposes a "distributed responsibility" model for AI harms. The hosts also contrast different infrastructure approaches, noting Europe's slower pace could be a long-term advantage. Finally, the show concludes with Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang's provocative view that AI will increase productivity and make us work harder, not less. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  21. 64

    Weekly AI News - Nov. 21, 2025

    This week on the show, the hosts kick off with Google's introduction of Gemini 3, its most intelligent model, and "Antigravity," a new agent-first platform for developers. They then pivot to the policy landscape, discussing reports that Trump plans to block states from creating their own AI regulations. The conversation shifts to the economic fallout of the AI boom, which is devouring memory chip supplies and driving up consumer prices, contrasted with a scientific breakthrough where researchers used a single beam of light for AI computing. On the geopolitical front, the hosts analyze the open-source race between US and Chinese labs and the ease of running these models locally. Returning to product news, they cover OpenAI's GPT-5.1-Codex-Max for massive coding projects and Microsoft's plan to turn Windows into an "agentic OS". The show concludes with the rise of a "Sovereign AI" corridor forming between India, the Middle East, and Africa. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  22. 63

    Weekly AI News - Nov. 14, 2025

    This week on the show, the hosts cover the growing "data center resistance," where local opposition is blocking $100B in projects over resource concerns. The discussion then highlights creative breakthroughs, like ElevenLabs' use of audio tags for emotional AI voices. Shifting to the "chip wars," the hosts note that Google is challenging Nvidia's dominance with its new, highly efficient "Ironwood" TPU. They also cover the future of AI, with experts warning that progress now depends on "world models"—a strategic clash reportedly causing Yann LeCun to quit Meta. The conversation also turns to national strategy, with calls for Canada to build sovereign AI infrastructure. Geopolitically, US restrictions are forcing China to race for its own chips, just as the US energy grid strains under AI's massive power demand. In contrast, the hosts discuss Weibo's tiny, hyper-efficient model. Finally, the show concludes with OpenAI's release of the smarter, more conversational GPT-5.1. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  23. 62

    Weekly AI News - Nov. 7, 2025

    This week's podcast covers AI's rapid move into real-world products, starting with Google Maps integrating Gemini for "human-like" landmark navigation. The discussion then highlights AI's humanitarian use in instantly screening for Tuberculosis (TB) and its commercial efficiency with Amazon's new Kindle Translate service for authors. Shifting to professional tools, Google Finance is getting a "Deep Search" AI upgrade, and Microsoft AI has introduced its philosophy of "Humanist Superintelligence" (HSI) to guide development. The hosts also cover the stark warning to the accounting profession: adopt AI or be replaced. The conversation then turns to market conflicts, with Amazon suing Perplexity AI over its "agentic" shopping tool. On Wall Street, Michael Burry has bet $1 billion that the AI boom is a bubble. Geopolitics also flared up, as Nvidia's CEO surprisingly claimed China is "going to win" the AI race. Finally, OpenAI's Sam Altman is calling on governments to build their own AI infrastructure, warning that a "compute" shortage is slowing the entire sector. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  24. 61

    Weekly AI News - Oct. 31, 2025

    This week on the show, the hosts start with the massive AI spending boom, as Big Tech (Meta, Google, Microsoft) triples down on infrastructure, and Nvidia becomes the world's first $5 trillion company. This leads to the new partnership agreement between Microsoft and OpenAI. On the product front, Google has upgraded NotebookLM with custom chat goals, Anthropic is advancing Claude for financial services with an Excel add-in, and Alibaba's Qwen AI can now create live webpages and podcasts. The discussion then shifts to new research, with DeepSeek finding a way to improve AI memory using visual tokens, the development of a breakthrough optical processor, and a startup called Extropic aiming to disrupt data centers with thermodynamic chips. They conclude with a call for scientists to champion a positive vision for AI. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  25. 60

    Weekly AI News - Oct. 24, 2025

    This week on the show, the hosts dive into the escalating "wrestling match" between OpenAI and Google, as OpenAI launched its ChatGPT Atlas browser, a direct challenge to Chrome. On the product front, Google also launched "Google Skills," a new essential platform for AI learning. The conversation then shifts to the risks of AI, starting with a major AWS outage being linked to recent AI-related layoffs at Amazon. A separate report details the "hidden data trail" left by agentic AI systems, while a new study warns that AI models can get "brain rot" from low-quality social media data. This leads to a look at existential risks, with AI leaders again warning about the dangers of superintelligence, and a RAND wargame concluding the US is unprepared for a rogue AI cyberattack. On the policy front, Anthropic's CEO issued a statement committing to US AI leadership and confirming they restrict sales to China. Finally, the hosts look at market trends, noting that tech pros are increasingly using local AI models for privacy and compliance. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  26. 59

    Weekly AI News - Oct. 17, 2025

    This week on the show, the hosts dive into the economic impacts of AI, starting with Wall Street sounding the alarm on a potential market bubble. They also cover the rapid replacement of call center workers in India with AI chatbots. Shifting to new products, they discuss Anthropic's release of Haiku 4.5, a powerful new free model, and Claude Skills, a new customization feature. Google's NotebookLM also gets an upgrade with the Nano Banana image model for its video summaries. The conversation then turns to public and policy issues, with a global Pew Research survey showing more public concern than excitement about AI. The hosts also touch on Big Tech's push to get AI into classrooms by funding teacher training. Finally, they look at the bigger picture, with China's internal city rivalry fueling its chip battle with the US, Microsoft rewriting Windows 11 around AI, and an essay that calls for balancing technological optimism with appropriate fear. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  27. 58

    Weekly AI News - Oct. 10, 2025

    This week's podcast covers the growing concern over AI's impact on jobs, as a report finds 26% of roles could be transformed and Klarna's CEO warns the world is unprepared. New enterprise tools are also a focus, with Google introducing its Gemini Enterprise platform and OpenAI launching AgentKit for building AI agents. A cautionary tale emerges as Deloitte repays the Australian government for a flawed AI-generated report , leading to a look at financial jitters, including Sam Altman's "boom and bust" warning and concerns over "circular deals" in the AI chip sector. The discussion then turns to major efficiency gains, with DeepSeek claiming a 75% cost reduction for AI predictions. Separately, the hosts address the growing concern among content creators, like YouTuber MrBeast, about the rise of generative video tools. The show concludes with news of increasing accessibility, as Google expands its no-code AI app builder, Opal, to more countries. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  28. 57

    Weekly AI News - Oct. 3, 2025

    This week on our show, the hosts cover major model releases, including Anthropic's Claude Sonnet 4.5 and OpenAI's Sora 2. They then discuss new policy and industry adoption, as California passes the first comprehensive AI safety law, and Reuters launches AI-generated earnings summaries. Shifting to the enterprise, OpenAI has introduced a new metric for AI's value in the workplace while Microsoft has added powerful agent features to its 365 Copilot. The hosts look at global trends, with a report showing accelerated AI adoption in Latin America despite challenges. They also explore new products, as Perplexity makes its AI-powered Comet browser free for everyone. They conclude with geopolitical and social issues, as a US report flags Chinese AI models as a security risk, and the use of AI in religion causes division. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  29. 56

    Weekly AI News - Sep. 26, 2025

    This week on our show, the hosts start with a warning that government AI initiatives are likely to fail without proper workforce upskilling. They then cover product and tool updates, including Figma making its design tools more accessible to AI and the launch of Huxe, a new audio-first research app from former Google devs. The conversation shifts to the competitive landscape, where Alibaba is challenging top US models with its new multimodal AI , and Microsoft is diversifying its Copilot assistant by adding models from Anthropic. The hosts also look at new AI capabilities, as models can now pass the difficult CFA exam in minutes , and AI-generated voices have become indistinguishable from human ones. They explore new features and research, with OpenAI previewing the proactive ChatGPT Pulse , and MIT researchers developing a tool to help AI discover new materials. They conclude with an industry perspective from Thomson Reuters' CPO, who outlines the four essential pillars for professional-grade agentic AI.  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  30. 55

    Weekly AI News - Sep. 19, 2025

    This week on our show, the hosts start with the geopolitical AI race, highlighted by top scientist Song-Chun Zhu's move to China. They then cover Google's release of VaultGemma, its first privacy-preserving LLM, and an ethics brief warning of growing ties between tech and the military. The hosts look at user behavior, with an OpenAI study showing most people use ChatGPT for practical tasks. Shifting to enterprise news, Google has released a policy guide for governments, Amazon has launched an AI agent for its sellers, and AI startups are fueling Google Cloud's growth. The discussion then turns to public opinion, with a new survey finding that Americans want AI to stay out of their personal lives. Following that, the hosts cover new hardware from Meta's Connect 2025 event, which focused on AI glasses as the key to personal superintelligence. They conclude with a look at the future, as experts at an MIT symposium predict a shift from LLMs to autonomously learning "world models". Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  31. 54

    Weekly AI News - Sep. 12, 2025

    This week on our show, the hosts start with a stark warning from AI pioneer Geoffrey Hinton about the potential for massive, AI-driven unemployment. On a more positive note, they cover the new AI-powered study tools Google has added to NotebookLM for students. The conversation then turns to Hollywood, where the growing use of AI in filmmaking is sparking a major ideological debate. Shifting to the business side of AI, a new system called RSL aims to make AI companies pay for training data scraped from the web , while OpenAI is reportedly making its own AI-powered movie. The hosts also look at new product updates, as Google Meet gets real-time language translation , and a new AI tool called SeeMe helps detect consciousness in brain-injured patients. They explore enterprise use cases, with CFOs adopting generative AI for routine tasks , and explain the tech behind AI video generation. They conclude with the news that OpenAI has secured Microsoft's blessing to transition its for-profit arm into a public benefit corporation, paving the way for more independence. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  32. 53

    Weekly AI News - Sep. 5, 2025

    This week on our show, the hosts discuss an antitrust ruling requiring Google to share data with AI rivals and Canada's unique B2B-focused AI strategy. On the product front, they cover Google's NotebookLM getting customizable podcast tones. The conversation then shifts to industry shake-ups, with Tesla shutting down its ambitious Dojo supercomputer project, and an exciting medical breakthrough where doctors have developed an AI-powered stethoscope that can detect major heart conditions in just 15 seconds. The hosts look at market adoption, where a survey finds all marketing employees are now using AI and agentic AI is transforming the banking industry. They also explore new tech like Synthesia's increasingly human-like AI avatars and the new open-source Latam-GPT model designed for Latin America. They conclude with major tech companies pledging to help ready the American workforce for an AI-dominated future. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  33. 52

    Weekly AI News - Aug. 29, 2025

    This week on our show, the hosts start with new hardware, as NVIDIA launches its Jetson Thor robotics computer. They then shift to the market, where analysts are warning of an AI stock bubble and a new paper explains why AI isn't ready to be an autonomous coder. The hosts also cover a new report on the top 100 consumer AI apps, which shows the market is stabilizing. They explore the dual use of AI, as studies show LLMs are transforming stock analysis, while hackers are weaponizing chatbots for theft. The discussion also covers a new self-training AI method from Tencent called R-Zero. On the product front, Microsoft AI is launching its own models, and Google's Gemini app is receiving a major upgrade to its image editing capabilities. They conclude with a look at the increasingly religious language used to describe AI's potential in Silicon Valley. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  34. 51

    Weekly AI News - Aug. 22, 2025

    This week on our show, the hosts start with social impacts, looking at a poll where a majority of Americans fear AI will permanently eliminate jobs and a study suggesting doctors may become overly reliant on AI tools. On the product front, they cover Microsoft's new AI Copilot function in Excel and Chinese startup DeepSeek's release of a powerful new open-source model. The hosts also discuss new data from Google on the energy footprint of a single AI prompt and Amazon's big bet on AI agents to win the AI race. Shifting to industry perspectives, they explore Microsoft's AI chief calling the study of AI consciousness 'dangerous', Wall Street showing jitters about the AI boom, and tech leaders weighing the pros and cons of synthetic data. They conclude with an analysis of the US-China tech war, where the focus is now shifting to physical infrastructure challenges like energy supply. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  35. 50

    Weekly AI News - Aug. 15, 2025

    This week on our show, the hosts start with the US government launching USAi, a new secure platform for federal employees to use AI tools. They discuss the growing pains of the AI boom, as massive, energy-hungry data centers strain the national grid. The conversation then shifts to US policy, with the hosts discussing the motivation behind the former Biden administration's AI chip restrictions against China. They then discuss a new development, with the US now secretly embedding trackers in chip shipments to enforce those controls, and highlight a potential contradiction, as the current Trump administration's science funding cuts threaten its own AI action plan. On the product front, the hosts cover the disappointing launch of OpenAI's GPT-5, which struggled with basic tasks despite the hype. Finally, they look at the competitive landscape where Chinese AI startup DeepSeek is facing technical delays and explore the future, from the societal risks of superintelligence to Google's CEO highlighting the latest steps toward achieving AGI. The hosts leave listeners to mull over a final, bold prediction from OpenAI's CEO Sam Altman: that ChatGPT will eventually out-talk all of humanity. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  36. 49

    Weekly AI News - Aug. 8, 2025

    This week on our show, the hosts start by looking at the massive energy demands of the AI boom, which the power industry is counting on for significant growth. Then, they dive into a series of major announcements from OpenAI, including providing ChatGPT Enterprise to the entire U.S. federal workforce , releasing new open-weight models called gpt-oss , and unveiling their smartest and fastest model yet, GPT-5. The hosts also cover Google's move to offer its best AI tools to college students for free for 12 months. The conversation then shifts to the market, with a new survey showing retail investors are split on trusting AI for financial advice , while high costs and thin margins are threatening the viability of many AI coding startups. Finally, they discuss how agentic AI offers a promising solution for banks to fight financial crime , Google testing a new AI-powered version of Google Finance , and how the US and China are reshaping AI geopolitics with competing visions for regulation. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  37. 48

    Weekly AI News - Aug. 1, 2025

    This week on our show, the hosts start with global policy, as China calls for an international consensus on balancing AI development and security. On the product front, they discuss Google's NotebookLM getting a "Video Overviews" update and OpenAI launching a new "study mode" for ChatGPT to help users learn step-by-step. The conversation then shifts to the job market, with a new Microsoft paper listing which jobs are most and least vulnerable to AI automation. In other news, Shanghai is intensifying China's internal AI race with a massive new subsidy program. The hosts also explore the soaring salaries for top AI talent, with pay packages now reaching $250 million, similar to sports stars , and look at a startup that has launched an AI-powered version of Excel. Finally, they cover Meta's vision for "personal superintelligence" , Google's official rollout of its multi-agent Gemini Deep Think model , and the growing importance of data labeling for creating effective AI agents. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  38. 47

    Weekly AI News - Jul.25, 2025

    This week on our show, the hosts dive into the new White House AI Action Plan, which aims for U.S. global dominance , though a separate analysis points out it currently lacks concrete implementation details. They also discuss the predicted rise of AI "super-agents," sophisticated systems that can manage other AI tools. Shifting to the market, the hosts look at a new trend where IT buyers are investing in AI PCs without a clear strategy on how to use them , while Figma has made its AI app-building tool available to everyone. On the research front, Google's Gemini achieved a gold-medal standard at a math olympiad , and Anthropic warns the U.S. is falling behind China in the AI race due to energy constraints. The hosts also explore a surprising discovery from Anthropic that more "thinking" time can make AI models dumber. Finally, they touch on Google testing a new "vibe-coding" app called Opal and OpenAI's vision for AI as the greatest source of human empowerment. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  39. 46

    Weekly AI News - Jul.18, 2025

    This week on our show, the hosts discuss several major product launches, starting with Anthropic's new Claude-powered solution for financial services and Google's NotebookLM adding curated 'featured notebooks' from experts. They also cover AWS unveiling new innovations for building and deploying AI agents at an enterprise scale , and how Netflix has started using generative AI in its shows and films for faster, cheaper visual effects. In the startup world, the hosts look at Asimov, a new kind of AI agent from a startup founded by former Google researchers that aims to achieve superintelligence by mastering code , and how the Swedish 'AI builder' startup, Lovable, has become the country's latest unicorn. Shifting to market trends, they examine a new report showing that AI and machine learning skills are now essential for developers, with 71% of tech leaders unwilling to hire without them. The hosts then discuss major geopolitical and national developments, including China's massive spending to become an AI superpower and the U.S. unveiling the Aurora supercomputer to accelerate AI-driven discovery. Finally, they discuss how a former OpenAI engineer described the company's internal environment as 'pure chaos' stemming from its rapid growth. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  40. 45

    Weekly AI News - Jul.11, 2025

    This week on our show, the hosts discuss how a real-time trial shows AI could significantly speed up cancer care. They then cover the emerging AI browser race, with Perplexity launching its Comet browser and OpenAI reportedly set to release its own. The conversation shifts to AI's impact on legacy industries, exploring how it's rewriting the rules of insurance. Next, they delve into a proposed new framework from Anthropic for AI transparency and safety. The hosts also look at how a Hong Kong startup aims to challenge Google DeepMind in drug discovery. Shifting to major industry news, they examine Elon Musk unveiling Grok 4 amid controversy over previous versions of the chatbot , and the ongoing debate among AI leaders on the trade-offs between open and closed AI models for enterprise use. They also break down the growing tension over the AGI "doomsday clause" in the Microsoft-OpenAI contract. Finally, the hosts discuss the "unholy alliance" that successfully defeated the proposed AI moratorium in the US Senate Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  41. 44

    Weekly AI News - Jul. 04, 2025

    This week on our show, the hosts discuss whether the obsession with AGI/superintelligence is derailing practical AI progress. They examine how AI workforce takeover fears may be overblown but are still scrambling firms' hiring plans. They explore European companies urging the EU to delay AI rules and a new push for US national AI rules after a state ban failed. The hosts then review a new market report analyzing growth projections for generative AI in the fintech sector. They also look at Zuckerberg's aggressive AI spending being seen as a potential "death knell" for the AI boom, and Sam Altman criticizing Meta's aggressive AI talent-poaching. Additionally, they discuss the concerns about RFK Jr.'s plan to implement AI across HHS fearing it could undermine public health. The hosts also delve into assumptions about human intelligence limits shaping AGI/superintelligence research goals. Finally, they mention Microsoft's MAI-DxO demonstrating generative AI's potential in achieving higher diagnostic accuracy. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  42. 43

    Weekly AI News - Jun. 27, 2025

    This week on our show, the hosts discuss quantum AI algorithms already outpacing the fastest supercomputers in specific ML tasks. They examine Darwin Gödel Machines, novel AI improving themselves using evolutionary algorithms and LLMs, and Anthropic's Claude platform now letting creators build and share AI-powered apps. They explore Meta's heavy investment in AI dominance through open-sourcing models and integrating AI into core products. The show then reviews OpenAI reportedly building a Google Workspace and Office 365 replacement, and Google releasing Gemini CLI, an open-source tool for command-line interaction. They also look at Google launching its Gemini kit for startups, and a new paper framing AI's evolution in four generations. Additionally, they highlight Senator Bernie Sanders advocating for a four-day workweek via AI-driven productivity gains. Finally, they mention Canada's new AI Minister aiming to scale up the national AI industry. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  43. 42

    Weekly AI News - Jun. 20, 2025

    This week on our show, the hosts discuss Google's Gemini transparency cut hindering enterprise developers. They examine Grok's responses highlighting AI alignment issues, and MIT researchers developing SEAL, an AI model for continuous learning via synthetic data. They explore DeepSeek claiming its R1 model matches Google/Anthropic coding ability, and the African Development Bank with Google exploring strategies for Africa's AI future. The show then reviews Nvidia's 'sovereign AI' strategy gaining traction among EU leaders, and 'The OpenAI Files' report detailing OpenAI's evolution and governance concerns. They also look at Pope Leo XIV making AI's threat to humanity a signature issue, and Amazon CEO Andy Jassy expecting AI to shrink the company's workforce. Finally, they mention Geoffrey Hinton suggesting manual dexterity jobs are safest from AI, predicting assistants will be replaced. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  44. 41

    Weekly AI News - Jun. 13, 2025

    This week on our show, the hosts discuss Google's Gemini AI rolling out a new feature to summarize PDFs directly in Workspace. They examine Klarna's CEO predicting widespread AI adoption will displace white-collar jobs, potentially causing a major recession. They explore Google DeepMind's Weather Lab using AI for more accurate tropical cyclone predictions, and Big Tech testing data center flexibility to support the electric grid. The show then reviews "vibe coding" reshaping software engineering roles, and Meta introducing V-JEPA 2 for understanding and predicting physical interactions. They also look at the FDA under the Trump administration planning to use AI for faster drug approval, and Google's AI Overviews reportedly killing traffic to publisher websites. Finally, they mention Canada's new AI Minister stating a balanced approach to AI regulation and Sam Altman describing a "gentle singularity" of continuous AI improvements. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  45. 40

    Weekly AI News - Jun. 06, 2025

    This week on our show, the hosts discuss AGI converging with humanoid robots and its risk of displacing both white-collar and blue-collar jobs. They examine the Axios AI+ Summit highlighting AI reaching numerous 'tipping points' in various sectors. They explore Amazon reportedly training humanoid robots for package delivery and the Manus AI agent platform sparking an AI agent boom in China. The show then reviews Innatera developing a neuromorphic chip using spiking neural networks for smarter sensors, and Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai dismissing widespread AI job displacement fears. They also look at Trump administration and Meta's nuclear deals addressing AI's power needs, and Phonely's new conversational AI phone agents achieving 99% accuracy. Finally, they mention Morgan Stanley reporting China's AI and humanoid robotics progress will attract global investor attention, and Intempus retrofitting robots with simulated bodily functions to emulate human emotions. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  46. 39

    Weekly AI News - May 30, 2025

    This week on our show, the hosts discuss how AI coding agents could undermine open-source software by inserting vulnerabilities. They examine AI's rapid energy demands, exploring sources like natural gas and nuclear, and Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei warning of AI's risk of mass unemployment. They explore DeepSeek releasing an updated R1 reasoning AI model and AI disrupting Gen Z's career stability. The show then reviews Ant International developing its Time-Series Transformer (TST) model to analyze numerical data for financial services, forecasting FX, trading volumes, and cash flow. They also look at how AI is shifting jobs to resemble warehouse work, according to some Amazon software developers. The hosts then turn their attention to Google CEO Sundar Pichai discussing AI's evolution of Search and AI agents, and Canada's evolving AI leadership being highlighted in an AI Ethics Brief. Finally, they mention TSMC investing in novel microLED-based optical chiplet technology. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  47. 38

    Weekly AI News - May 23, 2025

    This week on our show, the hosts discuss a researcher arguing AI meets conditions for free will, needing a moral compass. They examine Anthropic launching Claude 4 with advanced capabilities. They explore OpenAI CEO Sam Altman's plan to ship 100 million "fully aware" wearable AI devices, and OpenAI announcing 'Stargate UAE,' its first international AI infrastructure partnership. The show then reviews Chinese quant fund Goku Technologies unveiling a new AI training framework. They also look at Zoom CEO Eric Yuan utilizing an AI avatar for part of a quarterly earnings call, and Google I/O 2025 showcasing advancements in Gemini models and a new 'Agent Mode.' The hosts then examine IBM's efforts to develop smarter AI memory to reduce hallucinations. Finally, they mention Microsoft Build 2025 highlighting the age of AI agents and the importance of effective AI strategies focusing on tangible returns. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  48. 37

    Weekly AI News - May 16, 2025

    This week on our show, the hosts discuss a researcher arguing AI meets conditions for free will, needing a moral compass. They examine Google DeepMind introducing AlphaEvolve, a Gemini-powered coding agent, and Audible offering AI-powered narration and translation. They explore Klarna reportedly regretting replacing workers with AI and Big Tech firms countering California's AI regulations. The show then reviews Alibaba unveiling 'ZeroSearch' to slash AI training costs and a U.S. Copyright Office report intensifying legal battles favoring copyright holders. The hosts also look at Walmart adapting for AI shopping agents and Pope Leo XIV highlighting AI as a principal challenge for humanity. Finally, they mention Windsurf launching SWE-1, a family of AI models for software engineering. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  49. 36

    Weekly AI News - May 09, 2025

    This week on our show, the hosts discuss the Trump administration's plans to scrap Biden's AI chip export controls and OpenAI's reported $3B acquisition of Windsurf to boost AI coding. They cover US AI executives urging Congress on policies to compete with China and OpenAI's for-profit arm becoming a Public Benefit Corporation. Discussion includes Anthropic launching web search on its API and OpenAI's 'OpenAI for Countries' initiative. They analyze how AI challenges Google Search but Alphabet is integrating AI for buffering. Further topics include famous authors suing Meta over AI and copyright infringement, ServiceNow and Nvidia unveiling a new reasoning LLM to enhance enterprise AI agents, and the troubling trend of more powerful AI models being increasingly prone to 'hallucinations'. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  50. 35

    Weekly AI News - May 02, 2025

    This week on our show, the hosts discuss the Nvidia-Anthropic conflict over China AI restrictions and the potential impact of a Google antitrust decision on AI. They explore Big Tech's diverging paths, with AI boosting some companies while others face tariff challenges, and highlight the importance of orchestration for enterprise AI. The Stanford AI Index and human rights in AI data work are also examined. Moving to earlier news, they review Microsoft's Phi language models. Discussion then covers NotebookLM's expanded language support and a summary of Meta's LlamaCon announcements. Finally, they touch on Huawei's efforts to compete with Nvidia in AI chips. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Welcome to 'AI Talks' podcast your guide to the rapidly evolving world of artificial intelligence. From creative pursuits to scientific breakthroughs, AI is reshaping our daily lives and future prospects. Join us as we explore cutting-edge developments, industry trends, and real-world applications of AI. Each episode, we'll feature insights from experts and innovators, helping you navigate the exciting and sometimes challenging landscape of artificial intelligence. Whether you're an enthusiast or a skeptic, 'AI Talks' podcast will keep you informed about the transformative power of AI in our world. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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