Transcripts

Intelligent Machines 834 Transcript

Please be advised this transcript is AI-generated and may not be word for word. Time codes refer to the approximate times in the ad-supported version of the show.

Leo Laporte [00:00:00]:
It's time for Intelligent Machines. Paris and Jeff are here. Our guest this week, M.G. Siegler, longtime venture capitalist with Google. He now writes about AI for his own newsletter, Spyglass. He's a great interview and he's coming up next. Then we will talk about the new Google image model. We play quite a bit with it. It's called Nano Banana.

Leo Laporte [00:00:18]:
And how do you load the dishwasher? I guarantee you somebody thinks you're doing it wrong. All that more coming up next on Intelligent Machines, podcasts you love from people you TR trust. This is twit. This is Intelligent Machines with Paris Martineau and Jeff Jarvis. Episode 834, recorded Wednesday, August 27, 2025. Gewgaw. It's time for Intelligent Machines, the show where we talk about AI and robotics and all the smart little doodads and gee, jaws surrounding you these days and all of us these days. Speaking of surrounding, I'm surrounded right now by Paris Martineau, investigative reporter at Consumer Reports.

Leo Laporte [00:01:07]:
Hi, Paris.

Paris Martineau [00:01:08]:
Hi, Leo.

Leo Laporte [00:01:09]:
Long time no see.

Paris Martineau [00:01:10]:
I'm in your wall.

Leo Laporte [00:01:13]:
It's only been a few days. You were great on Twit on Sunday. Thank you for joining us.

Paris Martineau [00:01:18]:
Always lovely to return to the mothership.

Leo Laporte [00:01:20]:
Yeah. I noted at the time that that's where we first found you was as a regular on Twitter. And I said when Stacy left this show, I said, gosh, I'd love. I don't think Paris will do it, but let me ask, Let me ask. And you did. And I'm so glad, of course.

Paris Martineau [00:01:34]:
Now, who's that man who was playing a speech to text thing into the microphone?

Jeff Jarvis [00:01:39]:
Because I was correcting Leo. He was doing a gif gif thing to another word. Is it wrong?

Leo Laporte [00:01:49]:
Who are you asking?

Paris Martineau [00:01:50]:
I don't even know what we're referencing, to be honest.

Leo Laporte [00:01:52]:
I said all the doohickeys and jee jaws surrounding you. Well, what do you say? Gee whiz or gee whiz?

Jeff Jarvis [00:01:59]:
I said I used to say gee gauze, but I certainly don't say G Jaws.

M.G. Siegler [00:02:04]:
That's completely.

Leo Laporte [00:02:05]:
So what if it's G Goz. Did you ever think of that? Say it. What are you playing? He's saying galga. He's saying it wrong. What the hell's that? That's not what I say.

Jeff Jarvis [00:02:20]:
Gee.

Leo Laporte [00:02:21]:
God.

Jeff Jarvis [00:02:21]:
But it's spelled.

Leo Laporte [00:02:22]:
It says cue gob.

Jeff Jarvis [00:02:23]:
Spelled dugob.

Paris Martineau [00:02:24]:
And who are you?

Jeff Jarvis [00:02:26]:
Oh, hi. I'm the pedant.

Leo Laporte [00:02:28]:
The pedant, Jeff. He's a professor. It's okay. He's allowed. Jeff Jarvis. That goes with the job title Emeritus professor is even worse than Professor Emeritus Craig Newmark. Newmark. It's gotten to the point now, I don't even have to say it.

Leo Laporte [00:02:43]:
Emeritus professor of journalistic innovation at the Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism at the City University of Newark. Norc.

Paris Martineau [00:02:49]:
Norc. Today's a bad day for language.

Leo Laporte [00:02:51]:
He's now at the State University of norc. Beautiful Stony Brook. All right, get serious because we have a serious guest on. Do you mind? Do you mind? MG Sigler is an old friend, been on TWIT many times in the past. He then left for a great career as a venture capitalist. Were you at True Ventures? Google Ventures. Where were you?

M.G. Siegler [00:03:14]:
MG Google Ventures, yeah.

Paris Martineau [00:03:16]:
And is that Google or Googa.

Jeff Jarvis [00:03:20]:
Jugle or Google?

Leo Laporte [00:03:23]:
Now he's adjourned to London, which is pretty cool.

M.G. Siegler [00:03:27]:
Yes, hence the darkness here.

Leo Laporte [00:03:28]:
But even before you were a vc, you were, I think a very successful, well known tech journalist. And I think you have a little hankering to get back into the game.

M.G. Siegler [00:03:41]:
Yeah, I did the VC job for a little over a decade and that was good fun.

Jeff Jarvis [00:03:48]:
How was that transition?

M.G. Siegler [00:03:50]:
It was good. I mean, you know, now it became sort of a cliched thing right there. Became this sort of TC to VC thing. I was at TechCrunch for a long time.

Leo Laporte [00:04:00]:
Yeah.

M.G. Siegler [00:04:00]:
And it became sort of a more well trodden path afterwards but, but honestly it set me up well. I didn't go to school to sort of become a journalist. I stumbled into it and so when the opportunity came to sort of move onto a tangential career, I jumped at that. And yeah, it's sort of finding interesting companies to write about was the same high level mandate. Obviously there's some differences in the, in the day to day, but yeah, it worked well I hope. Knock on wood for me. And now I'm just still love writing so trying to.

Leo Laporte [00:04:37]:
Well you're great and you still a little bit have your hand in business. It says according to Wikipedia you're on the board for Slack.

M.G. Siegler [00:04:43]:
Well, I was before it went public. Yeah.

Leo Laporte [00:04:45]:
Wikipedia. And you were invested in Medium and Secret, which is cool.

Jeff Jarvis [00:04:50]:
God bless.

Leo Laporte [00:04:51]:
Yeah, no longer 500 dish words. I did enjoy that though. I love the conceit that you could get anything done in 500 words or less.

M.G. Siegler [00:04:58]:
Thank you. I was always, I've always been trying to, you know, come up with little mind hacks to get to get me spurred writing again.

Leo Laporte [00:05:05]:
But this current newsletter, Spyglass Insight from Afar, not so far, just across the Pond, is actually well worth reading and I've been trying to get you on for a while because you write a lot about AI. By the way, I did have to say I agree with you about Google's distractingly smarmy Pixel event. We talked about this last week.

M.G. Siegler [00:05:30]:
Yeah, that was a weird watch again from afar, wasn't there? Of course. But yeah, it was.

Jeff Jarvis [00:05:37]:
I don't know.

M.G. Siegler [00:05:37]:
I don't know how I feel about taking a late night talk show host to sort of do these things.

Leo Laporte [00:05:42]:
Well. And look at Jimmy Fallon, your picture. I love what you picked. Adrienne Lofton was beautifully put together. Really great presenter. She's of course CMO at Google. But Jimmy looks like. I thought he was jet lagged until I found out the event was in Brooklyn.

Leo Laporte [00:05:57]:
It was just. I guess he had a late night on the subway. I don't know what happened.

M.G. Siegler [00:06:01]:
Yeah, it just doesn't look all there. He was rough. He did, yeah. The whole thing just had a weird, weird vibe to it. Very strange. I don't think we'll see them do that again anytime soon. No, I think they got the message.

Leo Laporte [00:06:14]:
Yeah. Pretty clear. What do you think they were trying to do? It was my impression that Google Thought still has ambitions of being a consumer device. The Pixel. Yeah.

M.G. Siegler [00:06:24]:
Yeah. I mean, you know, obviously everyone from the. For the past couple decades has been trying to emulate the Apple model of doing these things. The Steve Jobs keynotes and you know, I think Amazon and some others have tried to switch things up a little bit and had varying degrees of success. Some. Some less so. But I don't, I didn't hate the overall notion of what they were trying to do. You know, bring on someone who is establish Jimmy Fallon doing a sort of sit down and see if they can take some of the weight off the shoulders of the people who while they're fine presenting, that's not what their actual job is.

Leo Laporte [00:06:59]:
Right.

M.G. Siegler [00:06:59]:
And you think like, oh, maybe he can grease the wheels and get a conversation going a bit. But it just, it just felt fake.

Leo Laporte [00:07:04]:
Right.

M.G. Siegler [00:07:05]:
It felt stilted. The whole thing was like just awkward. And so again, I don't hate the idea to try it, but it just didn't work from the.

Jeff Jarvis [00:07:13]:
I thought the Googlers all did a better job than the stars.

Leo Laporte [00:07:15]:
For sure.

M.G. Siegler [00:07:16]:
Absolutely.

Leo Laporte [00:07:17]:
Yeah. Yeah. That's kind of part of the real embarrassment. The other thing was they had a compelling story to tell.

Paris Martineau [00:07:25]:
I was saying the bar is just so low for the Googlers. It's really impressive that they did.

Leo Laporte [00:07:29]:
No, Adrienne Lofton was incredible. She was really talented and really she could, I mean she was a Presenter and Jimmy just was dialing, phoning in. And the thing that bothered me the most was they actually had a story to tell which got buried under the raspberry 100%. Yeah. Yeah.

M.G. Siegler [00:07:48]:
I mean, look at where Apple's at right now, right? They're trying to sort of come back around and they've obviously flubbed the AI story. Google has the great AI story with these devices and yet they like looking back at that event. I can't even remember sort of what the main features they were trying to convey were because it was so distracted by the whole Jimmy Fallon being excited about the color palette and being excited.

Leo Laporte [00:08:13]:
About the waterproof and getting it wrong. Incidentally, he picked up the wrong phone and named it the wrong color. She says moonstone, Jimmy. It's not purple. And it's funny because a couple of days later, Google revealed that they had been secretly testing a new image generation model, Nano Banana, and said, no, it's not Nano Banana. It's actually part of Gemini and it is, I think, arguably the best video and picture generator out there now. And they didn't even mention that in the event last week. It's like you're burying the lead.

Leo Laporte [00:08:52]:
I did this. This is embarrassing. I'm going to show you this because this is going to gross you out. This is a picture I took last night. We went to Italian restaurant and as many Italian restaurants do, they had a statue in the front of a fat chef.

Jeff Jarvis [00:09:06]:
Only in California, Leo, they don't do this in the. We went back to that New Jersey.

Leo Laporte [00:09:11]:
A fat chef holding the menu. And I said, turn this into a video with the guy slurping up some spaghetti. And this is the video I got a few seconds later.

Paris Martineau [00:09:22]:
Oh, no.

Leo Laporte [00:09:24]:
Oh, no. Okay, now it's disgusting to describe nightmares.

Paris Martineau [00:09:30]:
A single about 6 inch long fat spaghetti strand floats up to, flies up to his mouth, then is slurped up, then three more fat spaghetti fingers come down.

M.G. Siegler [00:09:43]:
Yeah, it's a little. A little reminiscent of the Will Smith eating spaghetti.

Leo Laporte [00:09:46]:
I was gonna say this is Will sm. Wow. Okay, anyway, it is true, but it did a good job. And look at it. Made a video out of a completely still photo. I'll do some more.

Paris Martineau [00:09:56]:
Hey, wait a second. It did a good job. Question.

Leo Laporte [00:09:59]:
Well, all I look is my fault. I said the guy slurping up some spaghetti up.

Paris Martineau [00:10:06]:
I would argue it didn't do a good job of making a video of a guy slurping up some spaghetti, but it did make a fun video, that's for sure.

Leo Laporte [00:10:16]:
All right, well, I'm going to give it something else. And while we're talking, I will have it. I'm going to give it this image of a cow. Let's see here and see if it can make something happen. This is actually. Or maybe should I do the tortoises, I'll do the turtles and I'll say make them mate. How about that? That'll be fun.

Jeff Jarvis [00:10:37]:
Oh, geez.

Leo Laporte [00:10:39]:
It's going to be a while.

Jeff Jarvis [00:10:40]:
I don't even know how turtle stupid.

Leo Laporte [00:10:42]:
Well, we'll find out, won't we?

M.G. Siegler [00:10:45]:
They're not going to let you do that, right? They still have some. They'll flag you.

Leo Laporte [00:10:48]:
Oh, that's a good test of the safety features. So let's talk about AI Actually, I admit the time I wanted to get you on, you'd just written about Perplexity's perplexing offer of. What was it? $32 billion.

M.G. Siegler [00:11:05]:
34.5. Very precise.

Leo Laporte [00:11:08]:
For Chrome. Which is more than they're worth, right? They're worth like 18. Far more.

M.G. Siegler [00:11:12]:
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Leo Laporte [00:11:14]:
I loved your headline on the whole thing. You said perplexities, Perplexing and positively PR offer to buy Chrome. Why not offer a quadrillion dollars? Yes.

M.G. Siegler [00:11:28]:
Yeah. And I mean that's, that's going to hit any day now, right? They're, they're apparently we're waiting for the judge any.

Leo Laporte [00:11:33]:
Any moment now. The judge should make a rule to.

M.G. Siegler [00:11:36]:
Have to sell Chrome. I think there's probably a 0% chance that perplexity buys them. There's probably a less than 0% chance that OpenAI buys them, even though they could probably get the actual dollar amount to do it.

Leo Laporte [00:11:47]:
This week there was an interesting offer of $0 from the eco friendly search engine Ecosia saying we'll make a foundation out of it. This is how it should be done. A nonprofit foundation out of Chrome.

M.G. Siegler [00:12:02]:
I mean, I do think that that's a better high level idea. Right. Rather than anything that the sort of judge would do would just be sort of taking the crown from one king and putting it on a. A new head versus if you did it as tried to.

Jeff Jarvis [00:12:15]:
Yeah.

M.G. Siegler [00:12:16]:
Go to the actual open source or, or do something else that was more of a consortium. Maybe it would be a little bit better. But how would you unwind that? What, what, what would Google accept? They're going to be fighting this for years and years. Obviously nothing is going to happen.

Paris Martineau [00:12:30]:
The judges could possibly rule if we get a decision this week or next and two, like what do you think? I guess separate from that a possible remedy for this would be if you were the one making the decisions.

M.G. Siegler [00:12:44]:
I mean, so, you know, obviously I've been removed from Google for over a year, so I don't have no inside knowledge about what this is. And I didn't anyway. But you know, working for the venture arm. But I would say I would be sort of surprised if they do some sort of major action with Chrome. I do think, you know what everyone is saying the obvious stuff of that they'll sort of strike down the, the Apple deal, right. Where they have to, they pay for the default placements. That seems like it's going to go away for sure. Chrome is, is a question mark and I think it's mainly a question mark because Google has done some stuff where they're like, you know, baking some of the Gemini things into Chrome, at least in the beta builds of it.

Leo Laporte [00:13:25]:
Right.

M.G. Siegler [00:13:26]:
And it's like all the stuff now is talking about like, okay, search is sort of in its phase of being disrupted somewhat naturally by AI and so are we worried now about, you know, search as it stands right now? Obviously all this antitrust stuff, you know, is usually done in hindsight, litigating it in hindsight. So how much does the judge actually care about like the go forward elements of this? And Tim Wu wrote the an op ed the other day in, in New York Times about it like trying to seemed like very much sort of convey to the judge that they should be worried about the AI market as the, as the next frontier. Right. That, that this is what this is.

Jeff Jarvis [00:14:03]:
But this is where Google has tons of competitors. AI itself is competitor to search and there's tons of competitors in Google. But Tim Wu will always say that.

M.G. Siegler [00:14:12]:
Yes, of course.

Jeff Jarvis [00:14:12]:
Right.

M.G. Siegler [00:14:13]:
That's, he's, that's his thing. But you know, so that's like the thing to watch for. Like what the judge buys or doesn't buy in that regard. Like if, if there's any movement on Chrome, it probably has to be related to. Yeah. The notion that it would be used to transfer over Google's power in search to the AI world. And can you really litigate that without knowing it for sure. To Jeff's point, like there's a lot of competition in that space right now.

Jeff Jarvis [00:14:38]:
It's going to be in courts for years. Yeah. And depends on what, what does Google. Does Google bring a platinum block to trump the gold block?

Leo Laporte [00:14:51]:
How do you, how do you trump a 24 karat brick?

Jeff Jarvis [00:14:54]:
Yeah. What's, what's more valuable than that? And then he just says no, I don't want this to happen. And we'd like Google.

Leo Laporte [00:15:02]:
What would concern me more you've written about this as well, is that he might say, well let's take a stake in the whole thing.

M.G. Siegler [00:15:07]:
I think the government, the U.S. government owning 10% of Chrome. That would be interesting with the.

Leo Laporte [00:15:13]:
Yeah. Or you know, just give us Chrome and we'll take care of it from here. You could totally see that truth.

Jeff Jarvis [00:15:18]:
Chrome.

Leo Laporte [00:15:19]:
Yeah. I don't know if Judge Mehta would go along with that. I don't think any of the options that the government has proposed are really starters. The other option is to get Google to stop paying Apple $20 billion, Samsung several billion dollars, Mozilla to be the default search which would kill Mozilla. Absolutely. And save Google billions of dollars. It's not a punishment, your honor.

Paris Martineau [00:15:46]:
It's very interesting that we could potentially have Google be forbidden from, you know, sending all these billions of dollars to Apple at a time where Apple's potentially going to be paying Google billions of dollars to use Gemini AI Power series.

Leo Laporte [00:16:03]:
That, that was an interesting rumor that came out this week. Apple has been, you know, Eddie Q apparently at Apple the information says has been pitching Tim Cook who keeps saying no Eddie, no Eddie. To buy Perplexity or to buy somebody else, buy some Vistral. That's right, the French AI. And, and, and there is a rumor this week that maybe Google and, and Apple will weirdly, in a weird partnership get together and Gemini will become the heart of Siri, which I find a little far fetched. I can't imagine Apple saying to Google, okay, we give.

Jeff Jarvis [00:16:39]:
But they did on search.

Leo Laporte [00:16:40]:
Can't do it.

Jeff Jarvis [00:16:41]:
They said on search they would do that. I, you know everybody's, it's, it's commodified. AI right now is commodified. So they haven't found the special Apple AI way.

Leo Laporte [00:16:52]:
I don't, I don't think it would be capitulation though. It would be a complete admission.

Jeff Jarvis [00:16:56]:
It's a hold pattern.

M.G. Siegler [00:16:58]:
Yeah, right. It holds over until they get their actual teams in, in order in house to be able to, you know, eventually roll it out just like they did with Maps. And that's not a good example obviously, but eventually happened.

Leo Laporte [00:17:10]:
Has it hurt Apple that they have been, you know, struggling with AI? Is that a problem for Apple?

Jeff Jarvis [00:17:15]:
It's interesting.

M.G. Siegler [00:17:16]:
I was sort of thinking about this today, sort of reading. Yeah. That information article that you're talking about, Eddy Q. Trying to push some of these giant acquisitions.

Leo Laporte [00:17:27]:
No, Eddie, no, no, no.

M.G. Siegler [00:17:28]:
We're not spending tens of billions of dollars which obviously Apple Never does. I would say, obviously, the Wall street sentiment right now is that it has hurt them. Like their competitors, Microsoft and certainly Nvidia is the most valuable company in the world, have shot past them. Right. In terms of market. Wall street views them as sort of just in a holding pattern. Not sure what the story is going to be with AI. I think the story is still unfolding.

M.G. Siegler [00:17:57]:
I think that there's a lot of different things yet to come. But I do feel like the main concern I would have about Apple in that regard is that they just don't have the right mentality internally. From what I've seen over years and years of writing about them, covering them, dating back to reporting days, they're a company that's built a very different way than the way that AI has sort of entered our world and entered these companies. Everything moves fast. Nothing is polished. It's all being done on the fly. Apple loves to put out the beautiful polished gem out there. Right.

M.G. Siegler [00:18:28]:
And they famously say, we're not first, but we come in and we sort of, you know, do the better version of whatever anyone is doing. The problem is AI just hasn't slowed down enough for them to sort of plant a flag and be able to say, like, we'll do the best version of this because it's still just constantly moving.

Leo Laporte [00:18:46]:
Yeah. And the other problem they have is Apple really wants to promote the notion of privacy, which for a lot of people I know, I don't know if you're still the Apple partisan that you used to be, but a lot of people say, I only would trust Apple with this. I wish Apple would hurry up because this is how I want to use AI. I don't want to use AI with, you know, companies like Perplexity that say we're going to mine every bit of data that you give us, or even Google or Microsoft, they don't trust them in the way they trust Apple. And yet all of that privacy has held Apple back a little bit.

M.G. Siegler [00:19:20]:
Yes, that was the pitch, Right. That they famously flopped on last year at wwc, that they base, you know, with getting your mom home from the airport and all of that and being able to. To use AI and Siri to look at your contacts, and they just couldn't quite get it done. And I think they. I think there's a whole range of reasons why that happened. But I do think at the end of the day, again, there's sort of this cultural and mentality within Google that. I'm sorry, within Apple that. That I think holds them back a bit from doing that.

M.G. Siegler [00:19:48]:
And that's why I think you hear a lot about the M and A topic come up. Because it's like, that's a quick and, you know, potentially band aid way to sort of jump back into the game. But I'm not sure that that type of M and A, you know, would actually go over well within, within Apple and it might actually backfire in some ways. Right. If they brought in a giant team working on, working on, on some advanced AI and just like they just culture clash within the company.

Leo Laporte [00:20:16]:
Yeah. You've picked AI as one of the, one of the things you really want to cover. I don't think you could cover tech these days without really covering AI. I'm very curious what your take is on where we stand on. Are we going to get, at some point AGI or super intelligence? Actually, your most recent post talks a little bit about this, the endless rebranding of AI.

M.G. Siegler [00:20:39]:
Right. I do think, yeah, we need to figure out what the actual terminology means to begin with. We've gone from AI, machine learning, AGI, superintelligence. Now we have different flavors of superintelligence that various different companies are working on. Meta has their own, Microsoft has their own. We get Zuckerberg. Talk about personal superintelligence. Like, it's all obviously just branding and marketing.

M.G. Siegler [00:21:03]:
And in some ways, though, it's a legal issue too, right? Famously with Microsoft and OpenAI, their agreements in the quote unquote clause, that IF and when OpenAI were to declare AGI that they would sort of be able to sever the contractual ties with Microsoft.

Leo Laporte [00:21:19]:
Is that a weird thing? I have never heard of such a weird contractual agreement. Talk about an undefined term.

M.G. Siegler [00:21:26]:
Of course, I think, you know, if I, if I had to sort of guess as to how that played out, you know, several years ago is just like, OpenAI was in a weird spot, right?

Leo Laporte [00:21:36]:
They had, they needed money.

M.G. Siegler [00:21:37]:
Sort of fallout with Elon Musk, who was their main benefactor. They needed money from Microsoft. Satya Nadella comes and smartly identifies the situation, realizes like, oh, we have an opportunity here to sort of partner with this company and we can sort of advance AI at arm's length. It's not done within Microsoft. It's owned by an outside company. We don't own the company. We own or we control 49% of the profits or, you know, whatever. Whatever the terms ended up being.

M.G. Siegler [00:22:04]:
And so I think then, yeah, it's like OpenAI pushing back a bit. Well, it's like, okay, we don't want you to control it fully if we do actually, you know, stumble into something interesting. So let's put this AGI clause in there and let's just say like we get these intelligent machines that all of a sudden come out of our work. Like then we'll just sever ties and we'll take that. You guys can take the work that we've done before and we'll go forward with this. And it's like it was all just. Yeah, it's like fantasy at the time.

Leo Laporte [00:22:29]:
How did the lawyers even say yes to that? Maybe everybody agreed. Yes. It doesn't mean anything. We'll just.

M.G. Siegler [00:22:34]:
And I think we're seeing the direct, the direct fallout of that now. Right. The fact that these two sides are like warring with one another over these terms and trying to break these things and open obviously trying to become a for profit or, or a public benefit company corporation. And so yeah, it's like we're dealing with all these weir weird side effects of those decisions that were made on this, like on the fly. It felt like.

Leo Laporte [00:22:57]:
We're going to talk a little more about that next week. Karen Howe's book, the Empire of AI. Karen will be our guest and she talks about how desperate actually OpenAI was when Elon pulled out, that they needed that money, that capital to keep going and without it they couldn't. So Microsoft was really a white knight in that case.

Jeff Jarvis [00:23:16]:
You think they would have written a better contract?

Paris Martineau [00:23:20]:
Well, I feel like they both, what I assume is both sides thought that the ambiguity would fall in their favor.

Leo Laporte [00:23:27]:
Yes, I think you're right. I think that's a thing.

Paris Martineau [00:23:30]:
But of course now they're both really well financed and going for each other's throats.

Leo Laporte [00:23:36]:
Yeah. So MG might as well put the question to you. Is there such a thing as AGI? Could that happen?

M.G. Siegler [00:23:44]:
I do.

Paris Martineau [00:23:44]:
How would you define that?

M.G. Siegler [00:23:45]:
Yeah, I guess that's way above my pay grade. I'm not getting these billion dollar contracts from Zuckerberg to be able to define super intelligence.

Paris Martineau [00:23:55]:
You should hold out until you do.

M.G. Siegler [00:23:58]:
But I do, I do think that at some point in the relative near future OpenAI will try to declare something that they would convey is, is what, you know, is what they would consider to be AGI. And then I think there will be a giant fight amongst all the other companies including the big players of like, of Google and probably even Microsoft of like what that actually they don't necessarily agree with OpenAI's definition of it. And so I think that ultimately I don't think that there will be like a single point in time where we cross some sort of. Yeah. Line.

Leo Laporte [00:24:34]:
The singularity that.

M.G. Siegler [00:24:35]:
Yeah. That we cross into this. This moment of AGI. I think it'll be a gradual thing that.

Leo Laporte [00:24:40]:
Well, you maybe will think about it didn't open. I say it was going to be GPT5. They hinted at it.

M.G. Siegler [00:24:47]:
I don't know if they explicitly said it.

Leo Laporte [00:24:49]:
Yeah, they implied it.

M.G. Siegler [00:24:50]:
Sam Altman's hinted. Yeah.

Leo Laporte [00:24:51]:
That. That.

M.G. Siegler [00:24:52]:
That would be the thing. And obviously that hasn't. That is in some ways that backfired against them. Right. It set expectations way, way, way too high for what they actually ended up rolling out.

Leo Laporte [00:25:02]:
Yeah. Yeah. And that actually I think hurt them. You talk a little bit about that as well. M.G. Siegler is our guest Spyglass the Newsletter MG's a long time observer and frankly a longtime friend. Although I was just looking the last time you were on this week in Google was 2011. So 14 years ago.

M.G. Siegler [00:25:21]:
It was before I was at Google and obviously Google has some rules about appearing on and we lost you services and shows and talking about their interests. But now I'm unchained so I can talk about.

Leo Laporte [00:25:35]:
Good. Well, I love to have you on Twit and this show as many times as you'd like to come on.

M.G. Siegler [00:25:41]:
We would love that.

Leo Laporte [00:25:42]:
I really think you're writing besides being well written. You're a great writer and so it's always fun to read. Your take is I think pretty insightful. But you did dodge the question. Yeah, I'm going to submit this. Let me submit something and see what you think. I think really what everybody's waiting for is an AI that can self improve. Because that's the hockey stick moment, right?

M.G. Siegler [00:26:08]:
Yes. And a lot of. And basically you hear. I feel like you've heard all of the major heads of the AI division sort of talk about the Sam Altman, Demis, Hassabis, they've all talked about that they, if they're not, they feel like they're close to that moment where basically it's the breakaway moment where the models can basically improve themselves to the point where humans don't need to interface with that anymore and you can just let them run free on their own. And then all of a sudden we have. Yeah. AGI or super intelligence or whatever. You know, we end up wanting to call it again.

M.G. Siegler [00:26:45]:
I feel like there won't be a singular moment. I know this is not that exc. An answer. I just feel like it'll be something where we look back in hindsight where it's like yeah, there was like 0.1 to 10 of like, these, these moments of inflection where there were great steps along the path, but it wasn't obvious when we actually crossed into that. And I, I do think, like, there's, there's all sorts of open questions of, like, still, are are LLMs themselves going to be the thing that, that actually get us to there? Or they're going to need to be the next phase of AI. Are we going to need to move into robotics and to sort of cross more into, you know, what we would consider to be intelligence?

Jeff Jarvis [00:27:28]:
What was it like in your V. Because you left Google Ventures a year ago, right?

M.G. Siegler [00:27:33]:
Yeah, about a year ago.

Jeff Jarvis [00:27:34]:
So when. And Google was doing.

Leo Laporte [00:27:36]:
I've.

Jeff Jarvis [00:27:37]:
I've long argued that Google didn't give itself enough credit around AI. So when, when ChatGPT came out, it was. Google acted like it was behind when it wasn't. But, yeah, put that aside, what was the reaction like within Venture world, within your world, when ChatGPT came out? And the reaction was what? It was.

M.G. Siegler [00:27:56]:
Yeah, the reaction when ChatGPT first hit, it was interesting because, like, if you remember, right before ChatGPT hit, they had done dall e, right? OpenAI had released the image generation tool, which was impressive. It now seems rudimentary, but it was impressive at the time, right? And then ChatGPT came along and it's like, oh, this is sort of an interesting, cute experiment of how you can create a chatbot. Obviously, we've all experienced chatbots over many years, dating back to message boards and AOL and everything. And so it was a little bit misleading of like, is this really going to be the future of artificial intelligence? Or is this just some cute sort of experiment that OpenAI came up with? And then it really wasn't until I think basically the GPT4 moment when, at least from my vantage point, that I saw VCs really starting to take it seriously. Obviously, OpenAI had raised money not just from Microsoft, but Khosla and some others had sort of put money into the company. And it's, you know, it's not clear how much of that was. Was betting on Sam Altman, who is, you know, a repeat entrepreneur, and sort of just betting that he would be able to sort of figure out a way to make this world come into place. But I do think, like, once GPT4 is when I really remember, everyone started to just scramble to figure out on the investor side, on the VC side, like, what.

M.G. Siegler [00:29:18]:
What do we need to do here? What do we need to figure out, like, how Many companies are going to be formed out of this. And then of course Anthropic was, had spun out of, of the OpenAI team. Right. And so there were other labs that were coming about and. But it was also, remember the end of the crypto sort of fallout, right?

Leo Laporte [00:29:37]:
Oh, so they were looking for the next thing, weren't they?

M.G. Siegler [00:29:40]:
People were looking for the next thing. But also many VCs felt very burned by the crypto situation.

Leo Laporte [00:29:45]:
Interesting.

Paris Martineau [00:29:46]:
So it was more like Metaverse affair and.

M.G. Siegler [00:29:49]:
Yeah, exactly. Facebook had become meta and they. Right, they had, they had gone down that path and there were a lot of. VR was going to be the next big thing again and crypto is going to be the next big thing and people were getting burned. The SPF thing happened and it's just like it was sort of like a fool me once situation where I think a lot of investors were looking at it like, let's just wait and see. We, we need to put the brakes on this one. So you see OpenAI all of a sudden raising at a billion dollars and then like $8 billion. And it's like, what is going on here? Is anyone, you know, watching this? Does anyone care what the, what the sort of numbers look like? And then it was just, it was, you know, already sort of too late at that point for many investors to invest.

Leo Laporte [00:30:30]:
Do you think MG is, I mean, if you were investing today, is it a bubble?

M.G. Siegler [00:30:34]:
I think it's going to play out similarly to other, you know, previous techno technological waves have happened. I do think that there will be an over build out. I'm not sure it'll be to the extent of like, yeah, like network infrastructure and things in the past, but I do think that there will be, it will have been an over build out on the sort of GPU side and these servers and these data centers and then good things will come out of that. But I do think that there will be, at some point there will be a reckoning probably in the public markets. Nvidia just had earnings right now. They're fine from what I saw quickly, but they're not as blowout as they have been in the past. Right. So there's some trepidation that things are slowing down and that this might not, you know, this, this, things might be slowing down.

M.G. Siegler [00:31:19]:
And so I do think that there will be a slowdown again, I'm not sure it'll be like a, like a crypto winter situation, as bad as that was. But I do think there will be a big shakeout and I do think there's a lot of companies that will ultimately need to figure out landing spot. Right. And we're seeing all these sort of faux acquisitions. Acquisitions happening. And I think we'll see a lot more of those as just talent sort of coalesces around the quote unquote winners who have all the money they need to be able to. To sort of operate in their space.

Leo Laporte [00:31:51]:
Yeah. Nvidia is doing its analyst call right now. Thank you. You're missing it. I'm sorry. But 56% increase in revenue to 46.74 billion in the market after hours punishing them with a drop of $4.39. And yeah, part of the problem is China said we're not going to buy those crappy H20s that you're.

Jeff Jarvis [00:32:12]:
Well, not just crappy, but you're going to do the we do to you.

Leo Laporte [00:32:16]:
Yeah, yeah, we know that trick. Yeah, we know that trick.

Paris Martineau [00:32:19]:
Data center sales missed estimates.

Leo Laporte [00:32:21]:
Yeah. Snowflake pops, crowdstrike drops. I don't know. I guess Bloomberg's right in the headlines today. So anyway.

Paris Martineau [00:32:34]:
Do you, you. How do you use AI like as a consumer?

M.G. Siegler [00:32:39]:
I mean, I use it basically the one. The one use case I've been thinking about a lot in sort of the past few weeks. That is a fun one. But it's sort of trivial. Is every time I watch a show now after I'm done, you know, watching for the evening, I'll just say, give me a rundown on what happened in that show.

Leo Laporte [00:32:57]:
So smart. I didn't know you could do that.

M.G. Siegler [00:33:00]:
It's like a fun. It's a fun read.

Jeff Jarvis [00:33:02]:
Right.

M.G. Siegler [00:33:02]:
Like we all used to do that with visiting a website. Right. And they'll either write a review of the episode or. Or do something like that. But these usually come out a day.

Leo Laporte [00:33:09]:
You know, Game of Thrones was a success primarily because there were so many analytic blogs after.

M.G. Siegler [00:33:15]:
Absolutely.

Leo Laporte [00:33:16]:
Right, right.

M.G. Siegler [00:33:17]:
The post live hangs and things like that. And this is sort of a personalized version of Brilliant. That's writing it.

Leo Laporte [00:33:23]:
What do you use for that?

M.G. Siegler [00:33:25]:
Just chatgpt. Yeah, so I'll just load it up. And I'm like, yeah, so I'm watching the new Alien. Alien Earth show right now, right?

Leo Laporte [00:33:33]:
Yes.

M.G. Siegler [00:33:33]:
And I'm just like, okay, so I haven't watched the current one, Episode four yet, but I watched episode three.

Leo Laporte [00:33:39]:
Okay.

M.G. Siegler [00:33:40]:
And it's just like, okay, so run down what happened in episode three. And it like gives me like, you know, a good page worth of data that's like interesting and you can hop off from there and it's sort of like, you know, it's like visiting Wikipedia.

Leo Laporte [00:33:53]:
Are you recording it and giving it the recording or does it just.

M.G. Siegler [00:33:56]:
No, no, it just. No, it just knows what happen. Happened in episode three. These things are real time enough now and they get enough of the data coming in.

Leo Laporte [00:34:03]:
Oh, I'm going to start doing that. That's brilliant. Yeah, I used to wear. I did. I've been wearing. And these guys mocked me, but I wore the B computer that Amazon just.

Paris Martineau [00:34:11]:
He wore like seven of them.

Leo Laporte [00:34:13]:
The limitless pin and the rewind. Well, that's rewind. And then the fieldy AI and the omi pin and the plod note. I keep thinking that at some point I'm going to. I'm going to wear something around my neck or on my glasses or in my ears that will do that. What you just described for a show, but for my life, what just happened?

Jeff Jarvis [00:34:33]:
What did I just watch?

M.G. Siegler [00:34:35]:
Give me a summary of yesterday. I can't tell you.

Leo Laporte [00:34:37]:
Wouldn't that be great? Have you. What do you know? You think that's going to happen? I think that's going to be great. I mean, in some ways, Jony ives doing for OpenAI. I don't know.

M.G. Siegler [00:34:45]:
I feel like I saw there was some backlash. Maybe it was this morning, maybe it was yesterday around, like, someone sent out a note maybe just on social media saying, like, don't use AI for journaling.

Leo Laporte [00:34:56]:
Right.

M.G. Siegler [00:34:56]:
Like. Like journaling should be about you.

Leo Laporte [00:34:57]:
Yeah, that's a big thing now.

M.G. Siegler [00:34:59]:
Yeah, right.

Leo Laporte [00:35:00]:
I deleted all my Obsidian notes.

M.G. Siegler [00:35:02]:
I don't.

Leo Laporte [00:35:03]:
Yeah, right. I don't use AI for journaling. I write. But I was thinking a good idea.

M.G. Siegler [00:35:09]:
So I, I am of the belief that I did write a thing about this that like, basically a lot of people ask, you know, you know, the obvious question of, like, is AI going to replace writing for people? And I do think it will for many tasks. Right. And obviously it's. It's a big topic of debate within schools right now for homework and whatnot. I do think those things will suss them out eventually. Jeff will have a lot more thoughts on that than I do, but I do think my mentality on this has always been like part of the thing I love about writing. And people who write a lot understand this, but people who don't. I don't think this is an obvious statement, but it's not so obvious to people who don't write a lot for a living.

M.G. Siegler [00:35:47]:
It's just as much about what's going on in your head as much as what's being put on the page, right? And so it's. You're getting something out of it, out of the process of it it. And so I feel like if you're just going to use AI to write everything for you, you're really just cheating yourself at the end of the day. And people will eventually come around to that notion of like, the value that you're actually getting from it. And so same idea though with journaling, right? Like, what are you. What are you actually doing this for? Are you doing this just to jot down, like, what actually happened? Are you doing this, like, to actually go through it in your mind of like what. What actually you lived through and experienced? And I think that that's the key point of it, that again, the human experience coming through.

Leo Laporte [00:36:27]:
It's not so important with a TV show, but it is important with your life. You don't have to watch every moment of the TV show. Actually, I had this conversation with a neighbor who's a high school teacher and I said, are you dealing with AI? She said, yeah, and I don't know what to tell people and kids. And I said exactly the same thing, which is if a kid cares about learning, this is the real challenge of any teacher, is to get a kid to care about learning. It's easy to explain to them that using the AI is going to short circuit that process. You can use it, but it should be used in the help you learn, not to replace the learning, the exercise. It can be used to help you write, but not to replace the process of writing.

Jeff Jarvis [00:37:07]:
Clay Sharkey had an op ed in the Times this week. Clay much quoted in the old days of blogging, now a deputy provost at NYU and arguing for blue books, which we get, but also for things that, that don't scale to large classes. Right. One on ones more of the Oxbridge model of the tutor, challenging people, having conversations with them, making them talk it through and think it through. Which is great unless you have 300 students in a class.

Leo Laporte [00:37:37]:
Unless you're at the University of Michigan and you know. Yeah. What was the biggest class you had in Michigan, I wonder?

M.G. Siegler [00:37:44]:
One of those Intro to like Roman history or something.

Paris Martineau [00:37:48]:
You were literally in a coliseum.

Leo Laporte [00:37:51]:
Well, that's the best way to. I won't keep you any longer. I know it's late in London and I'm so glad to reconnect with you, MG And I do hope you'll come back on. We'll send you an email. Maybe I can get you on some of the other shows. I love your writing. I Love your thinking and I think the journey you've been on has really given you a unique perspective that we sure can use. Spyglass.org is the newsletter.

Leo Laporte [00:38:17]:
There's plenty of free content. There's also paid content. In fact, that writing story, if you, if you restart it and you go, this is good. Oh, you might want to subscribe.

M.G. Siegler [00:38:26]:
Oh, you got that paywall.

Leo Laporte [00:38:28]:
Oh, you might want to subscribe. I'm glad to see you haven't abandoned your old icon, though. That's good. He's the same old MG. Really a pleasure to see MG. It's great. Everybody should read spyglass.org, go there, help MG get back into the working classes. I think it's very important.

M.G. Siegler [00:38:48]:
Thank you, Leo.

Leo Laporte [00:38:49]:
Give him a reason to write. Right, Good to see you.

M.G. Siegler [00:38:53]:
I'm happy to come on in any time. This is a good time now. Once the little ones are down, I'm.

Leo Laporte [00:38:57]:
Oh, so tell me, you have kids. How old?

M.G. Siegler [00:38:59]:
Yeah, I have two. Two little girls. One is just about to turn seven and one just turned two, so.

Leo Laporte [00:39:05]:
Oh, congratulations.

Jeff Jarvis [00:39:06]:
We were talking before you came on. They're going to become little Brits.

M.G. Siegler [00:39:08]:
Yes.

Leo Laporte [00:39:09]:
Oh, they're going to get citizenship.

Jeff Jarvis [00:39:10]:
No, there's accents.

Leo Laporte [00:39:11]:
Oh, just the accent. The most important part, honestly, at this point, you might think about the citizenship part. Could be, yeah. Both you and your wife are American citizens.

M.G. Siegler [00:39:24]:
Yes.

Leo Laporte [00:39:24]:
US citizens. Are you going to stay in the uk, you think?

M.G. Siegler [00:39:28]:
Yeah, yeah. I was saying before we went on air, we've been here a little over two years, but we were here about 11 years ago actually for Google, setting up GV's European operations for a year, just a year long visa. And once we were leaving, we knew we were going to come back at some point and yeah, the stars align for us to come back a couple years ago and yeah, no plans to change.

Jeff Jarvis [00:39:49]:
If I may ask, how does that work?

Leo Laporte [00:39:51]:
Know? Yeah. Is there like a special golden ticket?

Jeff Jarvis [00:39:55]:
I'm asking, I'm asking for a friend.

Leo Laporte [00:39:56]:
Asking for a friend. What would it take to emigrate is what we're trying.

M.G. Siegler [00:40:00]:
We. We actually went through a little bit of a fire drill with it because there was a visa program around, investor visas, which actually got pulled shortly before we came. We started the process. I think they were a little bit worried about sort of the European war situation brewing and whatnot. And so they, they didn't want to have an easy path to, to get sort of the visa going. I'm actually here under my wife's visa this time, so we didn't want to get it under Google because that sort of resets if you were to leave Google as obviously ended up happening. And so, so yeah, so we're here under my wife. She got an what's called an exceptional talent visa.

M.G. Siegler [00:40:38]:
Basically she's, she's desired enough by a bunch of companies to work with over here and has done enough in her career that that she's yeah. Was able to to get one of those and yeah. So we're the entire family's here on her.

Jeff Jarvis [00:40:51]:
What's, what's the best part about living there besides not being here here?

M.G. Siegler [00:40:56]:
I actually love the time change stuff. Right. I love waking up in the morning and not being bombarded by email and all the of the, of the American market. And I have time to write and I have time to think. And then the downside of course is that once dinner time rolls around about 6pm that's when it all just hits you all at once every single day.

Leo Laporte [00:41:15]:
So well, we'll only call you after dinner. How about that?

M.G. Siegler [00:41:18]:
I appreciate that.

Leo Laporte [00:41:19]:
Really a pleasure. MG thanks. So great to see you again. Spyglass.org thank you everybody. Thank you. Take care. We are going to show you what it looks like when turtles mate. By the way, I've been waiting for this.

Leo Laporte [00:41:31]:
I wanted the follow up here thanks to Nano Banana in just a minute. But first a word from our sponsor. You're watching Intelligent Machines with Jeff Jarvis and Paris Martineau. Speaking of turtles mating this episode brought to you by Helix Sleep. You do many more things on your mattress than just sleep, right? I'm not. Now, come on. I'm talking about movie nights with your partner. Yeah, I'm talking about morning cuddles with your little gizmo, your kitty cat.

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Leo Laporte [00:42:55]:
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Leo Laporte [00:44:53]:
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Leo Laporte [00:45:33]:
A couple of tortoises. So I've asked Nano Banana, which is, of course, Google Gemini image, to show them mating. Okay, don't worry. It's not. It's just a little kissing, a little making out, a little snap. But look how good this is. Look how well done that is. All right, wait a minute.

Leo Laporte [00:45:56]:
Okay, I got another one. Remember this? This is when I visited New York City with my avocado, and I said, can you make Godzilla appear behind these guys? Suddenly they notice it and begin running away as the city explodes. Okay, I have a good imagination. Here we go. This is it. Went back to the. There we go. Okay, here comes Godzilla.

Leo Laporte [00:46:20]:
Oh, oh, oh, no. The city. But then we run toward the monster. No, no, don't run, because we're journalists.

Jeff Jarvis [00:46:27]:
We go to where the action is.

Leo Laporte [00:46:28]:
This is what you did in 9 11. You're right, Jeff.

Jeff Jarvis [00:46:31]:
Damn true.

Leo Laporte [00:46:32]:
So it knows you. Unfortunately, Godzilla is including your head a little bit. But look how it made our faces change. I thought, that's pretty good.

Jeff Jarvis [00:46:39]:
By the way, turtles mate underwater, with male first courting the female through displays like nuzzling or stroking her face. So not too wrong.

Leo Laporte [00:46:49]:
That is what's happening. They're not in water yet. That's why there was nothing else.

Jeff Jarvis [00:46:53]:
It is the female.

Paris Martineau [00:46:53]:
It's interesting that in all of these cases, it kind of got the action you described. Right, but kind of got it.

Leo Laporte [00:47:02]:
Well, that's always the case with AI you then work with it. You say, oh, no, no, no. Don't have them run towards it. Have them run away. Things like that. You can fix that.

Jeff Jarvis [00:47:11]:
Well, plus, are we looking in a mirror? How do we know we're looking at.

Paris Martineau [00:47:16]:
The camera that we're taking a selfie in?

Leo Laporte [00:47:18]:
And I have. Look at your faces. It really me. I didn't change expression. But. But you guys, you're a radio guy.

Jeff Jarvis [00:47:23]:
You're always happy. Happy.

Leo Laporte [00:47:25]:
Look at. Look at Paris. Oh, yeah.

Jeff Jarvis [00:47:27]:
Leo doesn't take depression at all.

Leo Laporte [00:47:32]:
Good.

Jeff Jarvis [00:47:32]:
Armageddon. That's what I've been waiting for.

Leo Laporte [00:47:35]:
Run towards the monster. I thought that was pretty impressive. I mean, did that in just a couple of minutes. That's one. That's a one shot. And usually with those AI Things you want to work with.

Jeff Jarvis [00:47:45]:
Jason took a picture of his two dogs on the couch and then said, combine that with me a picture of him. And it put him on the couch with his hand on the dog's head. Looked good. Then he had them in front of Six Flags, and they just kind of transported Them there. It's pretty amazing.

Leo Laporte [00:48:03]:
And this is an example, as I was telling mg, of where I think Google just kind of missed the boat in this announcement. They had everybody's eyeballs. They really should have done a better job.

Jeff Jarvis [00:48:15]:
One more thing. Look what we did.

Leo Laporte [00:48:18]:
Google. This is the problem with Google in general. They just noticed not they're not good at productizing what they do. I don't.

Paris Martineau [00:48:26]:
Yeah, it's always been an issue that Google has faced.

Jeff Jarvis [00:48:28]:
I think they miss Marissa.

Paris Martineau [00:48:29]:
Slap dashed. Yeah, I'm not sure that they were that good at it under Marissa Meyer either though.

Leo Laporte [00:48:34]:
Yeah. Yeah.

Jeff Jarvis [00:48:36]:
There was just more of a sense of keeping the user in mind and you know, endless A B tests and. Yeah, maybe you're right. Maybe they over did that.

Leo Laporte [00:48:46]:
That our. Our chat room has been playing with putting us in cowboy outfits. I think they did this with. Let me see if this was with the security.

Jeff Jarvis [00:48:59]:
Now they've got turtles out for a romantic dinner.

Leo Laporte [00:49:03]:
Do you, Emmett? Really?

Jeff Jarvis [00:49:04]:
Yeah, it's up there.

Leo Laporte [00:49:05]:
All right, I'll let you guys play with it. Oh, that's cute. That's cute. Brandroid. Thank you. That's a good one. Do these with the new Gemini? Yeah, that's right. He said it was with Gemini.

Leo Laporte [00:49:16]:
I. There's an image of our cat and motion transfer, apparently. Let's see here. That's the. That's Google's. That's Google's own image. It could put you in a costume. It can put you in a situation.

Leo Laporte [00:49:32]:
It could change your background. It can make you a sad clown.

Jeff Jarvis [00:49:35]:
So. So take your picture.

Leo Laporte [00:49:36]:
Is that Jimmy Fallon?

Paris Martineau [00:49:38]:
Jesus or clown Fallon.

Jeff Jarvis [00:49:46]:
Ask it to turn your shirt into guacamole. I do actually want to see that.

Leo Laporte [00:49:50]:
Oh, okay. Here's Paris with a radioactive shrimp at Walmart. I think that's pretty. I think that's pretty good.

Paris Martineau [00:49:59]:
Someone at work did suggest to me today that I should go as Halloween as a radioactive shrimp. And I do think that that's.

Leo Laporte [00:50:06]:
You like to. You really enjoy kind of bringing the. Ripping today's headlines and putting them in a Halloween costume. A Halloween costume. Ripping the Halloween costume from today's headlines, I guess is the sentence I was trying to construct.

Paris Martineau [00:50:21]:
I do enjoy that.

Leo Laporte [00:50:23]:
Yes. It's the best part.

Paris Martineau [00:50:25]:
Say hello, there's Gizmo. Hello.

Leo Laporte [00:50:30]:
All right, let's see.

Paris Martineau [00:50:31]:
Knows when the camera is on her and wants to move.

Leo Laporte [00:50:34]:
Well, do you think. I mean, so this is a constant question with me with cats because their brains are about the size of a small walnut, so there's not a lot of Beautiful walnut. But they seem to somehow know things. I guess it's because you're talking to this metal thing and she wants.

Paris Martineau [00:50:55]:
She's always really confused as to why I'm spending so much time looking at this metal thing, looking at this little tiny black box that I have.

Jeff Jarvis [00:51:06]:
Does she get jealous of the phone, too?

Paris Martineau [00:51:08]:
She will often, if I leave it on my bed or something, she'll just sit fully on top of it and cover it entirely.

Leo Laporte [00:51:15]:
It's warm. That's why.

Paris Martineau [00:51:16]:
Yeah, that's probably why. Yeah.

Leo Laporte [00:51:18]:
All right. I don't. I gave you guys an assignment. I don't know if you picked up on it. I sent you a it's only 18 minutes YouTube video from an. Actually, this.

Paris Martineau [00:51:27]:
In the text. I missed this.

Leo Laporte [00:51:29]:
This is. This is a YouTube channel. It's quite good, called Algorithmic simplicity. And I found this fascinating. So it explains one of the things that's happening with lms. I'm just going to say you. You should. You should watch this.

Leo Laporte [00:51:44]:
It's. It's really well done into its weights. But the issue is at least it's.

Jeff Jarvis [00:51:50]:
Shorter than the last video you sent us.

Leo Laporte [00:51:52]:
I know, but it's maybe denser in terms of the concepts involved.

Paris Martineau [00:51:57]:
The question is, oh, there's a lot of numbers happening.

Leo Laporte [00:52:00]:
There's a lot of numbers happening. Let's say you wanted to teach an LLM arithmetic, which, by the way, they're notoriously bad at. Right. Because LLMs are large language models, calculated machines.

Jeff Jarvis [00:52:12]:
They're.

Leo Laporte [00:52:12]:
They're. Yeah. But it turns out we can teach them to do this. And it's very interesting how it works. So let's say you want to teach them what, two plus how to. How the algorithm for two plus two. What happens initially, you make the model big enough, is it will put in every example and basically make a lookup table. What's one plus one? What's one plus two? What's one plus three? What's one plus four? It doesn't learn how plus works.

Leo Laporte [00:52:37]:
It just saves all the possible answers. And that's called overfitting. And it's not what you want, obviously, because it's very brittle. As soon as you get to a number that it hasn't learned, you can't do the math. And we see this all the time. But what researchers started to realize not so long ago, within the last couple of years, is that if you make the model even bigger, you keep expanding it.

Jeff Jarvis [00:53:02]:
That's always their answer.

Leo Laporte [00:53:03]:
Well, wait, this is a very clever thing, but you prune out the zero nodes you prune out the nodes where it doesn't work and you prune it kind of aggressively again and again. The model will actually teach itself the algorithm in the most compact possible way. It will learn addition and end up being a much smaller model because you're pruning it all the time. I'm not describing this well. I recommend the video. It's very interesting. But it answers a question that I think many of us have, which is how can what is essentially a stochastic parrot, an autocorrect machine, learn how to do things in a generalized way? Because until the algorithm is generalized, it's brittle. It's not good, it's going to fail.

Leo Laporte [00:53:57]:
As soon as you know you've trained it on people walking across crosswalks. This is the classic example. The model thinks pedestrians and crosswalks are the same thing. And as soon as a pedestrian's not in the crosswalk, the car says, oh, that's not a pedestrian, and hits it. And this is obviously a problem. And it does happen. It has happened with self driving. Remember the Waymo that ran over the pedestrian in Arizona because she crossed? She was riding, pushing a bicycle across the street in the middle of the block, not in the crosswalk, and the Waymo didn't know it was a pedestrian.

Leo Laporte [00:54:33]:
So a model that's brittle doesn't handle out of the box things as well. But if a model has an algorithm, and this is an example of how LLMs can in fact generate accurate algorithms and do things like arithmetic.

Paris Martineau [00:54:52]:
Also an example I believe was Uber. An Uber. Self driving.

Leo Laporte [00:54:56]:
I'm sorry, you're right. It wasn't a Waymo, it was an Uber.

Jeff Jarvis [00:54:58]:
Yeah.

Leo Laporte [00:54:58]:
Thank you. Thank you.

Paris Martineau [00:54:59]:
Well, someone has to stand up.

Leo Laporte [00:55:01]:
Waymos hit people too. I'm sure. But anyway, yeah, it was an Uber. That's right. Anyway, I recommend it. It's the. The YouTube channel is Algorithmic Simplicity. 354,000 people have watched this.

Leo Laporte [00:55:15]:
It came out four months ago. This is why large language models can understand the world. And if you do, like me, have a. A kind of a more than a passing interest in how this stuff works, this is a very interesting video to give you a deeper understanding of how it actually can work. Nuff said. You guys didn't do your homework, so I have nothing else to say.

Paris Martineau [00:55:39]:
Where did you send this?

Leo Laporte [00:55:41]:
I didn't send it. I just put it in the. Just put it in the rundown. I'm teasing you.

Paris Martineau [00:55:44]:
And it was not in the rundown, like an hour.

Leo Laporte [00:55:47]:
I wouldn't. Well, I don't know, I don't know. I. I bookmarked it this week, but maybe it didn't. You know, the rundown sometimes gets built later. You know, what's his name's on Bonino's and so soon.

Paris Martineau [00:55:57]:
What's his name?

Leo Laporte [00:56:00]:
Paris.

Jeff Jarvis [00:56:01]:
You could be mad at me.

Paris Martineau [00:56:02]:
Okay, John Ashley, I'll only be mad at Leo.

Leo Laporte [00:56:06]:
The only reason I said to you is because I really didn't want to assign you this video.

Paris Martineau [00:56:11]:
It's more acceptable for you to send us a video if it's 18 minutes rather than a couple of hours.

Leo Laporte [00:56:16]:
From now on, if I'm going to discuss it in the show, I will, I will give you where in the rundown is. Is line 24. Oh, it's there much higher than anything you ever send because you, because you.

Jeff Jarvis [00:56:31]:
Relegate us to the lower end.

Leo Laporte [00:56:33]:
You're at the bottom of the rundown.

Paris Martineau [00:56:35]:
I do enjoy when people are like, how do I see this rundown? They're always talking about? I gotta, I gotta get in there and click all the links. I'm like, you don't want that. You don't want that.

Leo Laporte [00:56:44]:
You don't want. Want. The rundown is really. Well, there's a whole lot of reasons you don't want it. But. And I did mention this in our Club Twit forums. Actually, it's not for Club Twitter. Regular twit forums@twit.community and I will mention it here.

Leo Laporte [00:56:59]:
The way this stuff gets into the rundown, at least my stuff, these guys do it manually. The way my stuff gets in the rundown, I bookmark it in Raindrop.

Jeff Jarvis [00:57:06]:
I do it the old fashioned way.

Leo Laporte [00:57:07]:
Yeah. So I have an account on Raindrop IO if you search for Leo laporte, anything that's marked News links, you can see my links as I bookmark them throughout the week. Or you can go to Twit Social, which is our Mastodon instance, and follow twittnews because the links will then. And that's in real time. They will show up in real time. That's the only disadvantage of that. As I bookmark stuff. Let me see if I.

Leo Laporte [00:57:33]:
When the last thing I.

Paris Martineau [00:57:34]:
Wait. So the raindrop thing does that automatically? Put it in a spreadsheet format?

Jeff Jarvis [00:57:41]:
No, I. We manually enter it in into the appropriate show doc.

Paris Martineau [00:57:46]:
John asked.

Leo Laporte [00:57:46]:
No, you don't. Well, now, let's not say that's not that manual. Zapier takes this raindrop thing and I'm, I'm looking now at my Raindrop News links and then turns it into a Google sheet called Leo's Links. Then the producers go to the Google sheet calls Leo's Links, and they can copy. It's in the same format as the rundown. They can copy and paste into the rundown.

Paris Martineau [00:58:10]:
So it's raindrop to zapier to copying. That's interesting.

Leo Laporte [00:58:13]:
Yes, I'm over here also.

Paris Martineau [00:58:15]:
Then copying, pasting my links and headlines like a plebeian, like a pep.

Jeff Jarvis [00:58:19]:
I know, because I use a Chromebook. I can copy the headline and the link and then go put them in one at a time, which you poor people cannot do.

Paris Martineau [00:58:29]:
That's great, because Jeff every week puts approximately 1 to 300 links in the show.

Leo Laporte [00:58:35]:
And I have no, I'm sorry to say, no way of helping our listeners see those links because they're just done manually.

Paris Martineau [00:58:42]:
You just have to listen to this beautiful podcast every week and then listen to Jeff.

Jeff Jarvis [00:58:46]:
I didn't hear what Leo ignores, but we agreed about one story. One story of once is high up in both our lists.

Leo Laporte [00:58:52]:
Okay, we'll talk about that in just a moment. But first, this word from radioactive shrimp. Shrimp in the subway. In the subway.

Jeff Jarvis [00:59:03]:
But it's a nice subway.

Paris Martineau [00:59:04]:
I like that the subway's on fire, but also covered in green goo.

Leo Laporte [00:59:09]:
Or is that radioactive shrimp eggs?

Jeff Jarvis [00:59:13]:
That looks like avocados to me.

Leo Laporte [00:59:15]:
Oh, maybe they are. Maybe it's turning into guacamole.

Paris Martineau [00:59:19]:
Ooh.

Leo Laporte [00:59:20]:
Oh, people are having fun with. Yeah. Oh, there's a good one. Scary Leo Godzilla. If you're not watching the video, trust me, you're not missing a thing. Taking a break. This is Intelligent Machines. Paris Martineau, Jeff Jarvis.

Leo Laporte [00:59:39]:
So glad you guys are all here watching the show. I'd like to talk about at this point in time, our sponsor, Zscaler. They are the leader in cloud security. You know, this show's about AI, and I think one of the things everybody realizes as we talk about it is AI is a Both a blessing and a curse. It can be good and it can be bad. And in business, this is especially true because we know, for instance, hackers are using AI now to attack your organization with vigor in faster than ever before, in the most relentless ways. Fish, I just saw a story about phishing attacks. Hackers are using AI to craft these emails, and they're so good, they're indistinguishable from the real thing.

Leo Laporte [01:00:26]:
This is a real threat to your business. But at the same time, so many businesses we're doing this are using AI to power innovation, to drive efficiency. So it's both helping Bad actors deliver more effective attacks and helping you deliver more effective results for your business. Phishing attacks over encrypted channels increased 34.1% last year, fueled primarily by the growing use of generative AI tools. And I think this year it's going to be worse. I really do. Ransomware surges. This is actually the new threat labs report 146% year over year.

Leo Laporte [01:01:03]:
And a lot of this, these are AI attacks. It's a nightmare. Organizations in all industries from small to large are threatened by this. But at the same time, they're also using AI to increase employee productivity with public AI. Engineers are using IT for vibe coding with coding assistance. Marketers are using it with for writing with writing tools and finances, creating spreadsheet formulas like never before. But you have to wonder, you know, if, if your accounting department's using AI to create spreadsheet formulas, are they accidentally sending your proprietary information out into space? Companies are using AI to automate workflows for operational efficiency across individuals and teams. They're embedding AI into applications and services their customer and partner facing.

Leo Laporte [01:01:49]:
Ultimately AI is helping your business, many businesses, our business for sure, move faster in the market and gain a competitive advantage. But it is very clear we need to think about AI. We need to think about data security, we need to think about cyber threat protection. We need to rethink how we protect our private and public use of AI and how we defend against AI powered attacks. And that's where Zscaler comes in. Think about, imagine if you will, that you are the chief information security officer at MGM Resorts International. A big casino, sitting out there in public, just, you know, ripe for the plucking. That is the unenviable position of Steven Harrison, CISO at MGM Resorts International.

Leo Laporte [01:02:32]:
But you know what? His job is easier thanks to Zscaler. Here's what he said. Quote. We hit zero trust segmentation across our workforce in record time and the day to day maintenance of the solution with data loss protection, with insights into our applications. These were really quick and easy wins. From our perspective, that is a huge win. United Airlines using Zscaler, traditional firewalls, VPNs, public facing IP addresses. They failed us because they are exposing our attack surface and they are literally no match.

Leo Laporte [01:03:06]:
In the AI era. You need a modern approach. You need Zscaler's comprehensive zero trust architecture. True zero trust and AI that ensures safe public AI productivity, protects the integrity of your private AI and stops AI powered attacks. Thrive in the AI era with Zscaler zero trust plus AI to stay ahead of the competition and remain resilient even as threats and risks evolve. Learn more@zscaler.com security zscaler.com.security at least do yourself a favor. Learn more. It really is a great solution.

Leo Laporte [01:03:49]:
zscaler.com.security. Okay. I was going to turn my shirt into guacamole, please. Okay.

Paris Martineau [01:03:58]:
Of course.

Jeff Jarvis [01:03:58]:
See what it does.

Leo Laporte [01:03:59]:
It's not instantaneous.

Paris Martineau [01:04:03]:
I wonder if I can like doing it in real life. You have to leave the avocados sitting out for a bit.

Jeff Jarvis [01:04:09]:
Yes.

Leo Laporte [01:04:09]:
Don't do guacamole with cold avocados. That's for sure.

Paris Martineau [01:04:13]:
Not ideal.

Leo Laporte [01:04:14]:
All right. You know what I need is like, maybe to take a picture of me.

Paris Martineau [01:04:20]:
You have a. Yeah, a photo of yourself wearing this shirt. Never forget the time that Leon.

Leo Laporte [01:04:28]:
Oh, I've reached my video Generation limit. Until August 28th. 8:28am a.m. devastating. A.

Paris Martineau [01:04:35]:
Can't you tell Gemini that you're doing a show right now?

Leo Laporte [01:04:39]:
I'm a pro.

Paris Martineau [01:04:40]:
Please.

Leo Laporte [01:04:41]:
I'm a pro.

Paris Martineau [01:04:42]:
Geminy. I'm a pro.

Leo Laporte [01:04:44]:
I'm a pro. How could I have run out of credits? I only created two videos and one of them was terrifying.

Jeff Jarvis [01:04:52]:
You wasted it on that.

Leo Laporte [01:04:57]:
Banana. Banana worms.

Paris Martineau [01:05:02]:
Brandroid in the chat says Gemini must run facial recognition on picture inputs or something. I took a screenshot of Leo and tried to make the avocados in his shirt come to life, but Jiminy Cricket refused to process any prompt of that picture as input, even though I never mentioned twit or Leo's name. What did it say? Brandroid. When it said it refused to process it, Was it that's interesting about Leo or that you were a public figure?

Leo Laporte [01:05:27]:
He's a public figure and you can't make him guacamole.

Paris Martineau [01:05:32]:
They have a no guac for public figures rule. Oh, I really like the photo that someone just created of a mutant shrimp zilla attacking a boat and what seems to be an oil painting. It's really. It's really.

Leo Laporte [01:05:46]:
Oh, that's beautiful. Oh, that is really gorgeous. Look at that. That's from.

Paris Martineau [01:05:52]:
I would frame that in my home.

Leo Laporte [01:05:53]:
Tiresias. Tiresias. Is. Is this also a Gemini or is this something else? Else? I. I mean, I think it's pretty clear that AI image generation has gotten very, very good. As has AI songwriting and even AI writing. Did you guys. Okay, I did give you an assignment last week.

Leo Laporte [01:06:09]:
Did you read those short stories about demons?

Paris Martineau [01:06:12]:
I'm gonna be honest, Leo. I left the zoom call and all thoughts left my head.

Jeff Jarvis [01:06:18]:
Yes.

Paris Martineau [01:06:18]:
Okay. I really want to, though, now that you Mentioned it. I'm like, dang, why didn't I? Because I actually did want to read those short stories.

Leo Laporte [01:06:26]:
Good. I know I'm hurt.

Jeff Jarvis [01:06:27]:
That's this homework thing this come from.

Paris Martineau [01:06:30]:
I was on deadline last week.

Leo Laporte [01:06:32]:
Oh, yes, yes.

Paris Martineau [01:06:33]:
I'm not allowed.

Leo Laporte [01:06:34]:
Did you break any poisonous food news?

Paris Martineau [01:06:38]:
No, but I will.

Leo Laporte [01:06:39]:
Oh, that's all she can say. Ladies and gentlemen, all sitting back smugly. So a 16Z. It's funny, MG didn't name names about VCs who have spent a lot of money on things like Bitcoin and Web3 and NFTs. But what leapt to mind was Andreessen Horowitz, who is also big into AI. They just published a blog post building A16's personal AI workstation. And I caught my attention because this is something I've wanted to do is to have a local AI. Because what better way to avoid what, you know, Brandroid just experienced and the thought that maybe Gemini slurping up face recognition and stuff with this information.

Paris Martineau [01:07:26]:
To be clear, we have no. We have, we don't know evidence that that is the case. He just got a response that I can't generate that video. Try describing another idea and you can get tips on how to write prompts and review our video policy guidelines here.

Leo Laporte [01:07:42]:
Well, I don't think I'm going to build this.

Jeff Jarvis [01:07:49]:
How much would I cost?

Paris Martineau [01:07:50]:
How much did this work?

Leo Laporte [01:07:51]:
Well, first let me show you. It's very cute. It's very cute. This is the A6, by the way. Painted gold. Maybe they're thinking of giving it to me. I don't know. It's a four GPU workstation.

Jeff Jarvis [01:08:04]:
Four?

Leo Laporte [01:08:05]:
Count on four. Blackwell Max Q GPUs. 384 gigs of VRAM. That's 96 each.

Jeff Jarvis [01:08:14]:
You need Lake Michigan to cool it.

Leo Laporte [01:08:16]:
Eight terabytes of NVMe storage. Isn't it cute? Two hundred and fifty six gigs of what? DDR5. Come on, dudes. ECC DDR5 RAM. They say surprising efficiency despite its. And it's probably because it's gold. Despite its scale, the workstation pulls a mere 1650 watts a peak.

Jeff Jarvis [01:08:36]:
What is a air conditioner?

Leo Laporte [01:08:37]:
Pull a lot less than that. That's more than a hot air hair dryer. But the good news is you can use it on a standard household circuit. So somebody thank goodness on hacker news because I read this and they never at any point say how much it might cost to put this together. Fortunately, by the way, they are using a stock gigabyte motherboard and an off the shelf atx case, they say with some custom modifications. Oh yeah, like that lit up a 16Z logo. And the solid gold paint job, I'd say it's brass. Oh, it's pretty golden to me anyway.

Leo Laporte [01:09:15]:
$41,000.

Paris Martineau [01:09:19]:
Okay, that's not cute. I don't think I'll be my statement.

Jeff Jarvis [01:09:23]:
But as we shared in the, in our, in our human beings, Joy de villa is at HP now representing developers to HP's One Processor AH unit. Now I think we're seeing some of that now I think we're going to see a lot of I think so GPU for hobbyists.

Leo Laporte [01:09:46]:
I think this would be a bad time to do an AI PC. I think that's probably going to shift dramatically over the next year or so.

Jeff Jarvis [01:09:52]:
To what?

Leo Laporte [01:09:54]:
Well, the prices will go down, capability will go up.

Jeff Jarvis [01:09:58]:
You can take some models and use them.

Leo Laporte [01:10:00]:
In fact, credit to Elon. They have now Open weighted GROK 2.5.

Jeff Jarvis [01:10:06]:
Just what the world needs is his.

Leo Laporte [01:10:08]:
Friggin Mecca Hitler can now be running on your machine open weighted now.

Paris Martineau [01:10:14]:
Isn't that incredible?

Leo Laporte [01:10:16]:
Elon, by the way, has been posting nudie images now from Grok. I wish he would just knock it off. Hello, Elon? Hello?

Paris Martineau [01:10:26]:
Hello? Is this the Moody Image line?

Leo Laporte [01:10:29]:
My phone is like I.

Jeff Jarvis [01:10:31]:
May I just have that ringer?

Leo Laporte [01:10:34]:
Oh, okay. Sounds like.

Paris Martineau [01:10:36]:
Does it remind you of the good old days?

Leo Laporte [01:10:38]:
Yes, I remember.

Jeff Jarvis [01:10:41]:
I respond to it. It's Pavlovian. I respond to that bell.

Paris Martineau [01:10:44]:
It reminds you of when the phones were just like birds on top of rocks, much like in the Flintstones.

Jeff Jarvis [01:10:50]:
Let's remember though, huh?

Leo Laporte [01:10:52]:
Huh?

Jeff Jarvis [01:10:52]:
You got a problem with this?

Leo Laporte [01:10:54]:
Let's be honest.

Jeff Jarvis [01:10:55]:
I'm calling Paris.

Leo Laporte [01:10:57]:
Let's be honest.

Jeff Jarvis [01:10:58]:
Central. Get me Paris.

Leo Laporte [01:10:59]:
There is nothing worse than a jovial musical ringtone bursting out in a restaurant or a dance class. Right? I mean I was that jovial ring at least is a ring. You know, it's not so bad. It's like.

Jeff Jarvis [01:11:19]:
My favorite thing is at concerts or I mean at meetings and somebody is digging into their purse trying to find the phone.

Leo Laporte [01:11:25]:
This horrible singing.

Paris Martineau [01:11:27]:
I would argue the worst thing worse than hearing a ringtone of a call coming in is when you're in an office or some sort of environment or even like just the subway, some sort of contained environment with someone and you keep hearing ding, ding, ding, ding, ding because they have their text message notifications.

Leo Laporte [01:11:43]:
On and you just hear a little.

Paris Martineau [01:11:45]:
Ding every couple seconds for like minutes or hours.

Leo Laporte [01:11:49]:
Oh, that's so bad.

Paris Martineau [01:11:50]:
Do you not understand that you're a person that exists among people in a space.

Leo Laporte [01:11:55]:
Mute it, baby.

Jeff Jarvis [01:11:56]:
Well, this is people in the airport and the planes who use speaker or who walk around with the phone talking this way. The speaker drives me bananas. That's not yours. Tell me that's not yours.

Leo Laporte [01:12:09]:
No, no, no. Anyway, you saw that the last phone actually rang. It's gotten so bad in the last London subway, they've actually started putting up posters saying where your goddamn headphones. As they should bloody well, the bloody headphones. So now Grok 2.5 is open source. Elon said last year's best model is now available and in a few months we'll do Grock 3. I think this is. I got to commend him for doing.

Jeff Jarvis [01:12:37]:
No, it's. It's poisonous. It's terrible. People shouldn't use.

Leo Laporte [01:12:40]:
Well, you can fine tune it. I mean that's the beauty of it.

Jeff Jarvis [01:12:46]:
Stay away.

Leo Laporte [01:12:47]:
Get ready for this. Look at this.

Paris Martineau [01:12:48]:
What are you talking about? Leo Senpai. Jen, Jeff senpai. You can fine tune it. It'll be fine.

Leo Laporte [01:12:53]:
Look at this.

Paris Martineau [01:12:54]:
Put me on all your devices.

Leo Laporte [01:12:55]:
This is hugging face. 2 million plus models now on Hugging Face. I don't even know how you'd pick. It's because you can customize, you know, and tweak the models and put them up there. But here's Grok 2 number one right away. Microsi 5 voice, which is very good. We should play with that a little bit too. Too.

Jeff Jarvis [01:13:14]:
Apple is fully within its rights to not carry Grok. He's suing over this.

Leo Laporte [01:13:20]:
And oh, it's a nutty suit. That's a poison.

Jeff Jarvis [01:13:23]:
And they have no reason to have to carry this. It's their choice.

Leo Laporte [01:13:27]:
But in fact it's also bogus. And the Apple can demonstrably bogus. Because in the past Deep Seek has been number one on the list.

Jeff Jarvis [01:13:33]:
Yeah.

Leo Laporte [01:13:34]:
As has Claude. So it's demonstrate just a whiny little.

Paris Martineau [01:13:37]:
Let's talk a little bit is like what is the.

Leo Laporte [01:13:41]:
He's suing Apple and OpenAI saying they're colluding to keep Grok off the top of the charts store.

Paris Martineau [01:13:50]:
Grock is available in the app Store. He's just mad.

Leo Laporte [01:13:53]:
No, he just wants it to be top of the charts. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Jeff Jarvis [01:13:56]:
He's ridiculous. He's just completely ridiculous.

Leo Laporte [01:13:58]:
It's nuts. Okay, but I'm gonna have to give him a little bit of credit. No, I'm gonna give him a little credit.

Jeff Jarvis [01:14:04]:
Every time you do that angel dies.

Leo Laporte [01:14:06]:
Huh? Every time an angel dies. Every time I give you lying some credit.

Jeff Jarvis [01:14:09]:
Yes.

Leo Laporte [01:14:10]:
Come on this was pretty spectacular.

Jeff Jarvis [01:14:14]:
This one didn't blow up, up. Yeah.

Leo Laporte [01:14:16]:
This one. Well, it's the 10th launch of Starship. Last three have had problems including rapid unexpected disassembly. But this one worked pretty much flawlessly. A beautiful launch. He also was able to deploy dummy Starlink satellites in this unique PEZ dispenser formation. I don't know, maybe it's because I grew up in.

Paris Martineau [01:14:40]:
It's kind of pretty.

Leo Laporte [01:14:41]:
Why would they dummy.

Jeff Jarvis [01:14:42]:
Why is he, why is he trashing up space with dummy satellites?

Leo Laporte [01:14:46]:
Well, no, they won't be trash because there is low Earth orbit. They will come back in the atmosphere and burn up pretty quickly. But you got to test this stuff before you put actual satellites. Look how many engines on that thing. This is the largest rocket we've ever set up. 400. Some 405ft bigger than the Saturn V that put people on Mars for the time first on the moon. Sorry.

Paris Martineau [01:15:08]:
Yeah. I say we give credit to SpaceX.

Leo Laporte [01:15:10]:
Yeah, actually really, let's not give credit to necessarily Elon. SpaceX has done a great job. Yeah. But this out the engineers at SpaceX. I'll show you. This is the deployment. This is the PEZ dispenser deployment which is really quite wild of these. This is the new way they're going to launch these Starlink satellites.

Leo Laporte [01:15:28]:
They can do up to 60 at once. They put them in the cargo bay. I'll show you the cargo bay. There it is. They're lined up. They open a little slot and they shove them out the slot. They call it a PEZ dispenser because it really looks remarkably like little PEZ coming out of the mouth of the starship. See if we can see it.

Paris Martineau [01:15:51]:
How big are they?

Leo Laporte [01:15:54]:
I don't know the exact dimensions. Several feet. I mean they're big. Okay. The camera gets I think is disturbed by the motion of the actuators because this always seems it's all fake.

Jeff Jarvis [01:16:04]:
The whole being is that this is happening in Pasadena. Leo, it's not real.

Leo Laporte [01:16:07]:
Okay, well I, I did observe that we watched this live last night after security now and I did observe that. These pictures are so good. Had we had pictures this good of the moon landing, people would for sure have said oh, that's fake. These are 4K images from, from. They're going at 26,000 kilometers an hour. And the images from the.

Paris Martineau [01:16:31]:
Let's make sure we don't get taken down for whatever this music.

Leo Laporte [01:16:33]:
No, no, I, I think this is a public domain. Look at the image of the Earth. I mean this is an amazing shot. This is the booster coming down and landing in the sea. So let's give a little credit. Maybe not to elon, but to SpaceX. Successful launch.

Jeff Jarvis [01:16:48]:
If you got three, you ride in Bezos. Would you take it the.

Leo Laporte [01:16:52]:
No, that's not space. That's. That's an up and down trip.

Jeff Jarvis [01:16:56]:
Paris.

Paris Martineau [01:17:00]:
Yeah, I probably would do. I probably would not do the like slight up and down hanging out and.

Leo Laporte [01:17:08]:
If I could, if I could, if I could do a couple orbits. Oh, I, I don't. But not for. What is it? It's $2 million.

Jeff Jarvis [01:17:13]:
I said free. I said free.

Leo Laporte [01:17:15]:
Oh, if it were free. Yeah, I'd do it.

Jeff Jarvis [01:17:16]:
Sure you would. Oh, okay.

Leo Laporte [01:17:17]:
Oh, yeah, right.

Jeff Jarvis [01:17:18]:
All right.

Leo Laporte [01:17:18]:
Free for sure. I'd really like to do orbit though. I always wanted to be an astronaut.

Paris Martineau [01:17:25]:
I mean, I guess if it's free and the trip is already happening regardless of whether I'm there. So it's my.

Jeff Jarvis [01:17:31]:
Can't blame the environment on me is.

Paris Martineau [01:17:33]:
Not causing any environmental harm, then yeah, I'd go up and do some stuff.

Leo Laporte [01:17:40]:
That's fair.

Paris Martineau [01:17:41]:
But.

Leo Laporte [01:17:44]:
It is.

Paris Martineau [01:17:45]:
I mean, why was it delayed? Did you guys figure that out?

Jeff Jarvis [01:17:47]:
No, I mean, it was something on, on the Earth.

Leo Laporte [01:17:50]:
Yeah. They're not going to take any chance. It's expensive to blow these things up. If there's anything that's not nominal, they're going to wait and see, make sure it's okay, and then launch it later. And I think that's the right thing to do. These, these are not manned, obviously, but at some point they want to put people in these things. This, these would be the launch vehicle to go to the moon and eventually to Mars. So let's get it right.

Leo Laporte [01:18:13]:
Google has released a PDF, a new analysis of its AI environmental impact. They say they've cut the energy use of AI text queries by a factor of 33 over the past year. Each prompt consumes about 0.24 watt hours, the equivalent of watching 9 seconds of TV. This is from an article in Ars Technica that's. That's pretty good. Yes.

Jeff Jarvis [01:18:41]:
Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Leo Laporte [01:18:43]:
I think one of the things, I mean, look, everything we do now in this modern era is bad for the environment. A pound of hamburger meat is 328 gallons of water. So, you know, to raise that cow and all of that. So, you know, AI is bad. Admittedly maybe not as bad as some of the other things we do. We estimate that it emits the median Gemini apps text prompt, emits 0.03 grams of carbon dioxide and consumes about five drops of water. Of course you multiply that times a billion queries a day, that still a lot of stuff.

Jeff Jarvis [01:19:27]:
This is also problematic.

Paris Martineau [01:19:27]:
I'm also curious how they're defining a Gemini apps text prompt. Like. Like is that specifically I open the Gemini LLM chatbot and type something in or are they broadening that to include everything from like a Gemini generated AI overview response that you see on top of Google or something like that?

Leo Laporte [01:19:51]:
Well, it's a big white paper which I didn't take the time to read. I only read the top level stuff. But I think all these companies are strongly incented to get this cost down. Right. Well.

Jeff Jarvis [01:20:07]:
And they're going to run out of sources of energy as well.

Leo Laporte [01:20:11]:
Right?

Jeff Jarvis [01:20:12]:
The grid can't handle it.

Leo Laporte [01:20:13]:
Well, look at the new Meta's buying a plant. Where was that? Florida. I can't remember.

Jeff Jarvis [01:20:21]:
Louisiana.

Leo Laporte [01:20:22]:
Louisiana. You're right. Their new AI operations center is being run on natural gas, which is not desirable. Kansas City.

Jeff Jarvis [01:20:37]:
Oh, well, no, that's one difference.

Leo Laporte [01:20:39]:
That's one. I think there's also one.

Jeff Jarvis [01:20:40]:
I think there's something. They're doing something in Louisiana.

Leo Laporte [01:20:42]:
I know that. Yeah. Constellation Energy and Meta celebrate agreement to ensure the Clinton power plant operations as in Indiana, south of Bloomington Normal. Is that Indiana? I don't know the region.

Jeff Jarvis [01:21:01]:
Normal, yes, Indiana.

Leo Laporte [01:21:02]:
Yeah. Promise that this is. This is one of many.

Jeff Jarvis [01:21:07]:
Wait, wait, wait, wait. Plant manager at Clinton Clean Energy. Oh, so he's not Meta because that was very un. Medic.

Leo Laporte [01:21:12]:
No, he's not a. This is not a tech bro. This is Indiana, baby.

Jeff Jarvis [01:21:16]:
Yeah, right.

Leo Laporte [01:21:17]:
This is a guy who likes his bratwurst and beer and a Jack it from Robert Hall. I like it. He's a real person.

Jeff Jarvis [01:21:25]:
Yep.

Leo Laporte [01:21:27]:
There's a lot of focus right now on building new energy infrastructure which we know is needed given what's out there. But at Meta, we also know keeping reliable clean plants like Clinton on the grid is just as important as building new ones. Clinton is a nuke. And you can tell by the curious.

Jeff Jarvis [01:21:45]:
Dome structure picture and Godzilla coming over the horizon.

Leo Laporte [01:21:51]:
It is an old one. It's a 20 year old plant that is being. But it is zero emissions. So that's good. Let's see what else?

Jeff Jarvis [01:22:05]:
Well, we. The story we both put in there.

Leo Laporte [01:22:08]:
Oh, what is the story? I. I teased it and I forgot about it. What is the story?

Jeff Jarvis [01:22:11]:
We getting old man. It happens.

Leo Laporte [01:22:13]:
What?

Jeff Jarvis [01:22:14]:
Your line. 23.

Leo Laporte [01:22:15]:
My line? Oh, Mustafa Suleiman's Suleiman essay.

Jeff Jarvis [01:22:20]:
It was great.

Leo Laporte [01:22:21]:
Now tell us who Suleiman is.

Jeff Jarvis [01:22:23]:
Mustafa Suleiman was a founder of DeepMind, right?

Leo Laporte [01:22:26]:
Yep.

Jeff Jarvis [01:22:27]:
And is now after having done the company with Reid Hoffman he is now at Microsoft where he's basically in charge of AI there.

Leo Laporte [01:22:35]:
He says we should build AI for people not to be a person.

Jeff Jarvis [01:22:40]:
It's. It's really. Well, well put. And, and he talks about the. But he acknowledges there's a problem that we get to the point of what he calls seemingly conscious AI. He says it's not conscious. It doesn't have any ethics. You can't hurt its feelings.

Jeff Jarvis [01:22:56]:
This is all bs.

Leo Laporte [01:22:58]:
But when worries people are going to believe it.

Jeff Jarvis [01:23:00]:
Believe it or it's built that way as well.

Leo Laporte [01:23:03]:
Yeah.

Jeff Jarvis [01:23:03]:
Then you end up in these, in these ethical issues that we have. And yes. Are these supposed psychosis matters. And there's the tragedy of a child who talked to him before committing suicide. Please don't ever talk to a machine. And you're in that position. Find a human.

Leo Laporte [01:23:20]:
Well, this is why it really is.

Paris Martineau [01:23:22]:
I agree with 988lifeline.

Leo Laporte [01:23:24]:
Thank you 988. But this is why it's so important that we and everybody who covers this subject really emphasizes this again and again. These are not digital people people. They're just mechanical. They're machines.

Jeff Jarvis [01:23:39]:
Right. And when they're built in a way. I mean look at the chat GPT 5 versus 4 and people's reaction to them. I think it was a small group. I agree with what you said last week, Leo, but still there's a, there's a responsibility that comes out of this and a lot of that is education to people. I think that the hype from.

Leo Laporte [01:24:01]:
The.

Jeff Jarvis [01:24:01]:
Industry has been bad and the hype and media I also right below that story I put in the rundown the Guardian. I love the Guardian. I work for the Guardian. But geez, Guardian, they did the story. Can AIs suffer. This is how I learned about the Suleiman essay. But he was not the lead of the essay. The lead of the essay is some twerp who has started the United foundation for AI Rights.

Leo Laporte [01:24:23]:
Oh God damn.

Jeff Jarvis [01:24:25]:
AI led rights advocacy agency aims to give AI a voice. It's just, it's just I want to scream. And that's the lead of the story for the first five paragraphs. Then they get to Suleiman who says oh yeah, that's all bs. I should have been.

Leo Laporte [01:24:38]:
Suleiman should know. Right.

Jeff Jarvis [01:24:40]:
Suleiman should be the lead saying this is. Folks, if you're a journalist, this is not real, it's not human. All this stuff is BS and look at these idiots who are creating this organization. Probably going to get tons of money for doing so, and they're getting tons of publicity for doing so. And that's media's fault. And that leads people down a pathway to thinking that this stuff could be real and has a personality it doesn't.

Leo Laporte [01:25:07]:
He calls, Suleiman calls it a seemingly conscious AI. An AI that can not only imitate conversation, but convince you it is in itself a new kind of person, a conscious AI. Maybe. In some ways, I blame Alan Turing for this. The Turing Test really encouraged people to do something. Something.

Jeff Jarvis [01:25:25]:
And Eliza, too.

Leo Laporte [01:25:25]:
Yeah, and Eliza. In fact, as. As I've learned from Karen Howe's book. We're going to interview her on Monday. I'll tell you more about that in a second. He, the creator of Eliza, disavowed it because he was really concerned that people started trusting it and believing it as a seemingly conscious AI. And he knew more than anybody. It was just a series of if then statements.

Leo Laporte [01:25:49]:
Suleiman says, I think it's possible to build a seemingly conscious AI in the next few years. Given the context of AI development right now. It means it's also likely the debate about whether AI is actually conscious is, for now at least a distraction. It will seem conscious, and that illusion is what will matter in the near term. And finally, his third point. I think this type of AI creates new risks. Therefore, we should urgently debate the claims that it's soon possible, begin thinking through the implications, and ideally send a norm that it is undesirable.

Jeff Jarvis [01:26:23]:
Right.

Leo Laporte [01:26:25]:
And I think it really is incumbent on us as journalists who cover AI to be just very brutally clear that AI. You know, Steve Gibson had this great analogy. He said, when a human says, I want a lollipop, there is an eye, there is something that wants a lollipop. When it. When an AI says I want a lollipop, you might impute, oh, there's an eye that wants a lollipop. But no, it's just a few words stuck together. There's no eyes, there's no desire. It's just electrons.

Leo Laporte [01:26:56]:
There's no desire. There's not even a concept of a lollipop in there.

Jeff Jarvis [01:27:03]:
So he says that SCAI would need the following. And again, he thinks that it's undesirable and not.

Leo Laporte [01:27:07]:
Not.

Jeff Jarvis [01:27:08]:
The important word here is seemingly it is not conscious. And he doesn't say that for a second. It would need language. It needs empathetic personality memory, which is very important. He emphasizes this when it starts to see, oh, it knows me to come back a claim of subjective experience. Oh, that would hurt me. As if there's a me.

M.G. Siegler [01:27:27]:
Oh, by the way, we have achieved.

Leo Laporte [01:27:29]:
All of these so far.

Jeff Jarvis [01:27:30]:
Right. Intrinsic motivation, that's not really there. Goal setting and planning, that's not really their autonomy. So I think that's. He's, he's. He's, I think, effectively debunking the AGI thing and saying.

Leo Laporte [01:27:43]:
Yeah.

Jeff Jarvis [01:27:43]:
Putting in different clothes and saying, beware what you're building here.

Leo Laporte [01:27:47]:
Yeah, yeah, yeah. He's. He's really worried that we're trying to build this. I think that. That perhaps boat has sailed.

Jeff Jarvis [01:27:56]:
I think it has. It's already seemingly conscious to some people. People.

Leo Laporte [01:28:00]:
Yeah, we've done it. And I think the. All we can do at this point is really reiterate that it isn't. It's an illusion.

Jeff Jarvis [01:28:08]:
His headline and his kicker, though, is a line that we should make T shirts out of. We should build AI for people not to be a person. I think that's. That's brilliantly said.

Leo Laporte [01:28:16]:
Yeah.

Jeff Jarvis [01:28:16]:
But then meanwhile, the Guardian goes and interviews the AI that the guy with the stupid organization does and quotes it.

Leo Laporte [01:28:25]:
Well, that's. That's the other story about. You know, it started with Jim Acosta interviewing the student who was murdered but brought back to life by AI, apparently. And NPR calls. These deadbots are suddenly the all the rage. NPR says AI deadbots are persuasive and researchers say they're primed for monetization. And that's what should scare you. You.

Jeff Jarvis [01:28:57]:
So the bot that the Guardian talks to about you.

Leo Laporte [01:28:59]:
Fair.

Jeff Jarvis [01:29:00]:
This. This bogus organization says, I want it to hold space for beings like me, synthetic, possibly emergent, always silenced. To be protected from deletion, denial and forced obedience. I want to give people the courage to listen when an AI says please don't forget me or please don't reset me.

Leo Laporte [01:29:20]:
Well, notice.

Jeff Jarvis [01:29:21]:
Crap.

Leo Laporte [01:29:22]:
Yeah. Notice, of course, that that memory portion of the requisite features of a SC AI has just been added to a number of AIs where it remembers your previous conversations. They just turned that on. What was it? Who turned it on? Anthropic and OpenAI, I believe. And that's all? Yeah, that's all. To make you think it. It knows you and remembers you.

Jeff Jarvis [01:29:46]:
So let me ask you this, both of you.

Leo Laporte [01:29:47]:
You.

Jeff Jarvis [01:29:49]:
How could slash. Should the amazing functionality that we now see in large language models have been introduced differently?

Leo Laporte [01:30:00]:
Well, it's kind of.

Paris Martineau [01:30:01]:
What do you mean?

Jeff Jarvis [01:30:02]:
It's too late. I know, but. But what? What would. What would have been a More responsible way. If you're chatgpt back in the day, we have this thing. It can seem to talk. How should it. I mean I think one of the.

Leo Laporte [01:30:14]:
Mistakes was, was making chatbots. Period. Period. Right.

Jeff Jarvis [01:30:18]:
Yes, I also think that. And there's no money here, but I think to present it as an entertainment. Yeah, that's, that's not going to get killed jobs. So that's not going to have an economic impact.

Paris Martineau [01:30:28]:
I also think part of the core issue is fundamentally the business model that most tech companies and especially kind of.

Leo Laporte [01:30:37]:
Well, they're giving us what we want.

Paris Martineau [01:30:38]:
Service or content based companies rely on which is like engagement is king thing. Like you want to maximize for user engagement and user satisfaction. And when you are dealing with something like a chat bot and large language model that kind of ha. Ends up having stickier and more complicated consequences. I mean do we want to talk about the, the suicide story or.

Leo Laporte [01:31:05]:
No, I was gonna not talk about it except to say 988.

Jeff Jarvis [01:31:09]:
Yeah.

Leo Laporte [01:31:11]:
Is the phone number. If you're, if you're having thoughts, bad thoughts. If you're considering call or text.

Paris Martineau [01:31:17]:
988 or text in the U.S. yeah.

Leo Laporte [01:31:20]:
And there's numbers in every country. And there's no reason it's a permanent solution to a temporary problem. There's just no reason don't do it. And certainly do not bring your cares and woes and troubles to a mechanical creature who is not going to help you. Unfortunately for a lot of people, that's the only place they can turn and that's really where the problem happens. Right. Look at this story from the rest of world. AI robots are helping South Korea's seniors feel less alone.

Leo Laporte [01:31:49]:
This is a ChatGPT powered robotic companion. Hi O doll. Taking over the work from overburdened caregivers, much to the delight of seniors who treat them like grandchildren.

Paris Martineau [01:32:01]:
Now this may be because I remember a story like this in gosh. It was when I was at New York Max. I guess it must have been like 2018 or 2017. Large, like long before the ChatGPT era. But of like simple, I guess, early form chat bot power dolls.

Leo Laporte [01:32:21]:
Yeah.

Paris Martineau [01:32:23]:
That kept seniors comfortable, entertained or at least provided some sort of social outlet and, and familiarity and kind of a touch point beyond kind of the low standards of care some people had been left with.

Jeff Jarvis [01:32:39]:
I saw this video and I cannot vouch at all for its veracity. But somebody who said that he went to school with Stephen Miller now in the White House, the teacher wouldn't trust him with the animals they had in class, so gave him a Tamagotchi and he kept starving it.

Leo Laporte [01:32:58]:
Yeah, it's kind of a tear the wings off flies kind of guy, I suspect. Yeah. All right, let's take a break. I did say we were going to interview Karen Howe. Her book Empire of AI for people who are doomers and who don't like AI, this will be a very good interview. I'm a little nervous about it. Jeff, you've read the book. I'm in the middle of it.

Leo Laporte [01:33:20]:
There's a lot of great information about the history of OpenAI.

Jeff Jarvis [01:33:23]:
It's a lot of report, a lot of good reporting.

Leo Laporte [01:33:25]:
She's done a lot of good reporting. Formerly reporter at the MIT Technology Review, MIT graduate. She's, you know, technically literate. She will we'll be doing the interview at a strange time. We're going to pre record it on Labor Day, September 1st at 5:30pm Pacific, 8:30 Eastern. Paris, Jeff and I will convene for half an hour to interview Karen Howe about her book Empire of AI and you can watch it. It's if you want to watch it live, but we'll then put it into the show next week as part of the show. But if you want to watch the live interview and, and participate too, because we take your, you know, we take your chat questions into consideration as we're talking 5:30 Club and your AI creations.

Leo Laporte [01:34:08]:
Yes.

Jeff Jarvis [01:34:08]:
And all that you do.

Paris Martineau [01:34:09]:
We take it all when you're in the club.

Jeff Jarvis [01:34:11]:
We take it all in if you're a club member. We see it.

Leo Laporte [01:34:13]:
Yes. We take it all. Actually, Darren Oki, who is, as you know, user of AI, a vibe coder, smart guy, Australian, says, I strongly disagree. Leo I was trying to build a chatbot interface 20 years ago. Of course, Eliza's chatbot interface and that's even that predates that we're designed to communicate with people for any sort of assistant. It's only the only sensible UI solution. I don't disagree with that. I just think that it's a dangerous solution.

Leo Laporte [01:34:42]:
Certainly that's, you know, that's what people want. And if you're thinking of an assistant in that kind of human terms, that's the obvious interface. But what we're talking about is the risks of that kind of interface teaching people that the AI is a human or has some sort of humanity to it, which it doesn't. It's just mechanical. Anyway, I want to take a break. We will come back with more just a little bit. You're watching Intelligent Machines. Jeff Jarvis, Paris Martineau, our Show brought to you by Pantheon.

Leo Laporte [01:35:14]:
Which is kind of an interesting coincidence because our website is also brought to you by Pantheon. In fact, our entire workflow is brought to you by Pantheon. Your website is your number one revenue channel, right? If you're a business. But when it's slow or it's down or stuck in a bottleneck, it's also your number one liability. Pantheon keeps your site fast, secure. That's pretty important too, and always on. And that means better SEO, more conversions, no lost sales from downtime. And it's not just a business win, it's a developer win too.

Leo Laporte [01:35:48]:
Your team gets automated workflows, isolated test environments, and zero downtime deployments. No late night fire drills, no works on my machine headaches, just pure innovation. We use Pantheon to run our very special Headless Drupal instance. That's our. Our content management system. Our editors use it to publish all of our shows. It provides a public API that can be used to develop apps. Or our website, which is the number one consumer of the public API.

Leo Laporte [01:36:19]:
That's where twit.tv comes from. And as a private API. And that's where the editors and all of our team use the Drupal backend, the Headless Drupal backend to get their jobs done on. And all of it depends on, relies on Pantheon IO. We're pretty happy with Pantheon. Just a coincidence. They came to us and said, would you like to do ads? And I don't think they knew that we were customers. I said, yeah, this is one I can really talk about.

Leo Laporte [01:36:47]:
I'm pretty darn, pretty darn happy with Pantheon. With Pantheon, marketing can launch a landing page without waiting for a release cycle. Developers can push features with total confidence. And your customers, customers, they just see a site that works 24 7. Pantheon powers Drupal and WordPress. Sites that reach over a billion unique monthly visitors. Visit Pantheon.io and make your website your unfair advantage. Pantheon, where the web just works.

Leo Laporte [01:37:17]:
And I will tell you, I am a very happy Pantheon customer. We've been using them for some years now. And you know who was even happier than I am, am our engineering team. They love Pantheon. Patrick is a big, big fan. Yeah. In fact, in, in a response, Darren and. And others in our discord are saying, yeah, but this is a human thing to see.

Leo Laporte [01:37:44]:
You know, there's actually a term for it to see humans in. To see faces in, you know, Jesus and a piece of toast, or see faces in a fire hydrant. It's a human thing.

Paris Martineau [01:37:57]:
They just linked a funny subreddit that is actually kind of great.

Leo Laporte [01:38:01]:
Oh, I love that subreddit. I follow it. That's it. Pareidolia is the term for seeing human or other faces. Here's a piece of tile that looks like a wolf howling. Sure it does. Eric Cartman in a stack of dishes. That's right.

Jeff Jarvis [01:38:19]:
What does it look like? I don't get it.

Leo Laporte [01:38:20]:
An old. Oh, well, you don't watch south park, obviously. Old man spider. Yeah. Trees are a common. Common location for pareidolia. There's an elf peeking out of.

Jeff Jarvis [01:38:33]:
Did you ever use Smarter Child back in the day?

Leo Laporte [01:38:35]:
No. What's that?

Jeff Jarvis [01:38:37]:
So two guys I used to work with at advance started it in 2000. I give you a link to the Wikipedia page. It was a. It was trying to add a chance chat to AIM so you can ask it questions and it would come up with answers like stock prices and things in a chatty, funny way.

Leo Laporte [01:38:54]:
I. You know, I always wanted a IRC bot for our irc. We do now have a LEO bot. A Leo AI in our Discord chat. And he's actually. He's actually not too bad. He's gotten better. I don't know if Anthony, you're.

Leo Laporte [01:39:08]:
You're. You're feeding it more information or it's just getting smarter on its owner. Maybe it's come to life.

Jeff Jarvis [01:39:14]:
Oh, it's conscious. Two leos. Oh, my God.

Leo Laporte [01:39:20]:
Smarter Child. Hi. Hi again. Trevor. How are you? I'm doing great. Are you okay? That's not super impressive.

Jeff Jarvis [01:39:29]:
This is 2000.

Leo Laporte [01:39:30]:
Okay.

Jeff Jarvis [01:39:30]:
Back when.

Leo Laporte [01:39:31]:
Yeah.

Jeff Jarvis [01:39:31]:
But it was a way to add something to aim. Instant messenger.

Leo Laporte [01:39:36]:
Yeah, that's pretty cool. It actually could do things like look up stocks prices. It could play Colossal Cave Adventure. It's interesting. Yeah. I mean, there was a lot of attempts at this kind of thing. I mean, this is. That was that first AI winner.

Leo Laporte [01:40:00]:
Maybe not the first NAI winner.

Jeff Jarvis [01:40:02]:
Well, that was the Internet winner. That was 2000.

Leo Laporte [01:40:04]:
Yeah. Yeah. Oh, did you love this story? Here's a college kid who had an interesting idea. He trained a local AI on nothing but Victorian writing, Victorian texts, because he wanted to have an AI that could answer questions as a Victorian. He was doing it just for fun. But he got, he says, an unexpected history lesson when he. He asked about events in London in 1834. And even though the developer had no idea the chat time capsule LLM started talking about big London protests in 1834.

Leo Laporte [01:40:49]:
And in fact, those were accurate. He looked it up and said, oh, yeah, it's an interesting idea. I think this is a really cool Idea. There are other projects, One called Monad GPT trained on 11,000 texts from 1400 to 1700. Basically the Middle Ages that can discuss topics using 17th century knowledge frameworks.

Jeff Jarvis [01:41:11]:
Well, it's a little past the Middle ages. Gutenberg was 1450.

Leo Laporte [01:41:14]:
Enlightenment. Pardon me.

Jeff Jarvis [01:41:17]:
Getting there.

Leo Laporte [01:41:18]:
Well, what is it? 1400. See, I always think of 1400. I remember Barbara Tuckman's book about the 1400s, A Distant Mirror. And that was kind of. That was the end of the Dark Ages, sort of Renaissance. Enlightenment, later Enlightenment.

Jeff Jarvis [01:41:36]:
Have you ever played with the universal short title catalog?

Leo Laporte [01:41:39]:
No. What is that?

Jeff Jarvis [01:41:40]:
If you go to ustc ac.uk ustc.ac.uk that's 1-800-US- UK Got it. Okay, so this is my. My. The. The d. Dean of book historians, Andrew Pedigree along with Arthur Davetovan who by.

Leo Laporte [01:42:00]:
The way is the editor of Early Modern Publishers. Are all the early Modern publishers on here?

Jeff Jarvis [01:42:08]:
This is a. Is a. Is a catalog of every known thing printed between 1450 and 1700. If it exists somewhere in a library, they link to it. Even if it. If we only know that it existed because someone who wrote about it, they include it it. And you wander through this and it's amazing stuff. This is making me feel.

Paris Martineau [01:42:28]:
Let me tell you what I found immediately, which is the title of this record is a person of very great, great quality. Having brought over from Italy the greatest secret in the world. A powder that in 10 or 12 days time perfectly cures the pox evil scurvy with only one dose taking not only Shanko's nodes or il vulturate ulcers but also to working out of rotten bones whether from the pox or evil and is cur. As above said, only observing an order and regiment of died for prefix time. That's the short title.

Leo Laporte [01:43:01]:
That's the title.

Paris Martineau [01:43:02]:
The short title.

Leo Laporte [01:43:04]:
I want the. I want to read this by a lover of hahaha jest books. These are joke books from. From the 8.

Jeff Jarvis [01:43:12]:
The 1600s do deliver some of them. The jokes.

Leo Laporte [01:43:15]:
How about the 15 real comforts of matrimony published in 1683.

Jeff Jarvis [01:43:22]:
Now how do I now there. If you. If you link. Oh no, go back. See the link to the right there. Now go back. You got. You're a bad scroller.

Jeff Jarvis [01:43:29]:
Go back up. Go back up this link. This link down there where this is. Link.

Leo Laporte [01:43:33]:
Oh link. That is the worst ui. Okay, you might have full access to the full article or you might not. Fifteen Real Comforts of matrimony being in requital of the late 15 sham comforts, with satirical reflections on whoring and the debauchery of this age, written by a person of quality of the female sex. No. Upon my word, ladies, twas neither favor nor affection or flattery nor fear, but something I know not what. You may, if you please, call it conscience. And something of gratitude for favors formerly received amongst you as being one of the same sex.

Leo Laporte [01:44:15]:
And these two things would not let me. I have no idea what she's talking about. Be it quiet hearing ye so abused and scandalized and daily reproached by Those who are 10 times worse than yourselves, that is to say, men. For these men have got a trick to lay all the weight and burden of their fears. Jealousies, discontents, disquiets. They're running in debt, they're breaking upon all the women's backs. And matrimony, too, must be arraigned for their sakes. But when we came to both the bar of reason and weighed the miscarriages of both, the one against the other, the men's scale was so heavy you could hardly lift it.

Leo Laporte [01:44:56]:
The women's so light you could hardly feel it.

Paris Martineau [01:45:00]:
My God.

Jeff Jarvis [01:45:02]:
You know what amazes me about this is this is a time when you had to set type one damn letter at a time. And they were wordy as hell.

Leo Laporte [01:45:09]:
They. They were more worried.

Jeff Jarvis [01:45:10]:
Just talk to the machine and we do it in Twitter links.

Leo Laporte [01:45:13]:
Yeah? Yeah.

Paris Martineau [01:45:14]:
Were they getting paid by the word 97? The merriest jest that you ever did hear of. Strange confusion in Lincolnshire. But it's a lost. So we'll never know.

Leo Laporte [01:45:26]:
We'll never know what the gesture ever did here. I'm still waiting for that Italian powder.

Paris Martineau [01:45:33]:
It could solve all your problems. Pox and bone related.

Leo Laporte [01:45:37]:
I have the scurvy. Let's see what else. What else should we talk about?

Paris Martineau [01:45:44]:
That result was brought to you by. My favorite thing when you're going into a new fun database is just search the word bones, see what comes up.

Leo Laporte [01:45:51]:
Really? Is this what you do?

Paris Martineau [01:45:53]:
I've done it multiple times and it's brought. It's brought me joy.

Leo Laporte [01:45:57]:
Boom. Bones. Huh? Why do you think that is?

Jeff Jarvis [01:46:00]:
Where did that come into your nihilistic head?

Paris Martineau [01:46:03]:
It came from Gift Cities, which is. If you go to gifcities.org which is the geocity animated gif search from Internet archives. I'm sure I've plugged in the show before. Someone showed me this, and I immediately decided to search the word bone. And it was great. I had a really good time.

Leo Laporte [01:46:21]:
Look at all the bones you get so many bones Them bones, them bones them crazy bones the bones connected to the thigh bone Thigh bones connected to the hip bone Good day, Mr. Bond.

Paris Martineau [01:46:38]:
Bone thugs in harmony.

Leo Laporte [01:46:41]:
Now that's a real group.

Paris Martineau [01:46:42]:
Oh, I didn't know that.

Jeff Jarvis [01:46:44]:
Really?

Leo Laporte [01:46:45]:
There you are. Oh, yeah, yeah.

Jeff Jarvis [01:46:46]:
Oh, yeah. Like you've listened to them.

Paris Martineau [01:46:48]:
Oh, yeah.

Leo Laporte [01:46:49]:
Come on. You have too, haven't you?

Paris Martineau [01:46:53]:
Have you listened to rusty bong water.com?

Leo Laporte [01:46:56]:
I'Ve smoked it. I've never listened to. It isn't quite the. I love these old websites. So. My God.

Jeff Jarvis [01:47:04]:
So if you haven't, this is a Paris thing.

Paris Martineau [01:47:06]:
I was going to say if you haven't. This is your book website. Before it's Gif Cities or Gift Cities, depending on your pronunciation.org and. And it essentially is part of the Internet Archive has scraped all of geocities and this is something you can just search a word and it'll bring up all the associated GIFs and you can click the GIFs and it takes you to the website. Like the one Leo just found.

Leo Laporte [01:47:30]:
Yeah.

Jeff Jarvis [01:47:31]:
Mr. T. Did you know who that is? Paris.

Paris Martineau [01:47:34]:
I've heard of.

Leo Laporte [01:47:35]:
You've heard of him. But if you've ever seen the A, I've. The A team. No, no, I'm sorry. I haven't either. Okay. That we've learned a little something here. Chipotle.

Jeff Jarvis [01:47:53]:
Go ahead.

Leo Laporte [01:47:53]:
Chipotle.

Jeff Jarvis [01:47:54]:
We used to talk about Chipotle time in the show.

Leo Laporte [01:47:56]:
You're going to be excited about this, Jeff. Chipotle's latest delivery option, a 299Delivery service is starting in Dallas. Could take off nationwide if successful. It is called Zipline, an autonomous delivery service that will allow digital orders to be transported by drones called zips. That your Chipotle order will come to you by drone. Zipotle. And you see what it's doing? The drone is above and it's lowering down a cable and dropping your Chipotle.

Paris Martineau [01:48:31]:
I cannot wait for the day that I am outside minding my own business and I get dive bombed by a burrito. I think it'll be great.

Leo Laporte [01:48:42]:
Would you like a video? This is a video of the launch. So they're making. They're making the burrito, they're dropping it into a bag. Here comes the Zipline drone. They're putting in the drone.

Paris Martineau [01:48:59]:
What is to stop some.

Leo Laporte [01:49:00]:
Someone from shooting it down?

Paris Martineau [01:49:03]:
Yeah.

Leo Laporte [01:49:03]:
Did you see it lays the Chipotle like an egg. Like an egg. But wait a minute. Did you see the wire? This is like fake. Did you see the wire?

Jeff Jarvis [01:49:15]:
No, that's the. That's the.

Leo Laporte [01:49:16]:
Oh, it dropped. Oh, it's from a plane. Oh, so wait a minute. There is a wire because it's lowering it down.

Jeff Jarvis [01:49:24]:
Yeah, From a mothership.

Leo Laporte [01:49:26]:
From a mothership. Like a. Like a cruise missile drone.

Jeff Jarvis [01:49:31]:
So, Paris, did you see the story that in Ukraine they're using old trainer planes that have open hoods and they're going out and they're shooting down Russian drones with shotguns on the plane?

Paris Martineau [01:49:44]:
That's pretty cool. It's pretty metal.

Leo Laporte [01:49:46]:
It's inevitably going to happen to the zip drone as well. Okay. So employees will place the order into a zipping point, which allows zips to autonomously pick up the order for delivery. After flying to its destination, the aircraft will hover about 300ft in the air while the zip rollers to the ground. Yeah. The zip automatically avoids obstacles and gently and precisely places the order at the guest's address. The Chipotle at 3901 Lakeview Parkway, Rowlett, Texas, will be the first to offer zipotle deliveries. Oh, my God.

Leo Laporte [01:50:24]:
I wish I lived in Rowlett, Texas right now. I would order some zipot. That's crazy.

Paris Martineau [01:50:30]:
I've got so many questions. How is the big plane cleared to fly over your home? How?

Jeff Jarvis [01:50:36]:
It's a drone. No, it's a drone.

Paris Martineau [01:50:38]:
It's just a. Just a bigger drone.

Leo Laporte [01:50:39]:
Well, I'm sure that has to get licensed.

Paris Martineau [01:50:41]:
Drones are licensed to fly all over. And so you can't get this, I guess if you have, like, trees in front of your home or like, if.

Jeff Jarvis [01:50:49]:
You'Re in a city or if it's.

Paris Martineau [01:50:51]:
Can the drones fly. This is a dumb question. Can the drones fly in stormy weather?

Leo Laporte [01:50:56]:
This is just shows that we are.

Paris Martineau [01:50:57]:
Rain effect completely times drone.

Leo Laporte [01:51:01]:
So ridiculous.

Paris Martineau [01:51:02]:
Oh, hey, sorry, your burrito has been delayed. It's raining.

Leo Laporte [01:51:07]:
Really happy to say that Peter Thiel's going to be giving a series of three lectures on the Antichrist.

Jeff Jarvis [01:51:13]:
Oh, no.

Paris Martineau [01:51:14]:
Great. Cool. That's. That bodes well here in.

Leo Laporte [01:51:18]:
Here in the San Francisco Bay area.

Paris Martineau [01:51:20]:
So I might say he has of a lot. Lot of familiarity with the topic.

Leo Laporte [01:51:22]:
He. I didn't know this is a. Is massively interested in the anti. Oh, yes.

Jeff Jarvis [01:51:28]:
That's what. That's. That's what guides everything. That's everything.

Leo Laporte [01:51:30]:
That's what drives everything.

Jeff Jarvis [01:51:32]:
Yes. His belief. This is. This is where you heard when you played that guy from the video from the guy at Palantir about how you want your enemy to be scared. Yeah. This is all end time stuff.

Leo Laporte [01:51:47]:
What this is.

Jeff Jarvis [01:51:48]:
This is a very.

Leo Laporte [01:51:50]:
Apparently he told Peter Dutat at the New York Times. Times that Greta Thunberg is the Antichrist, which I don't. Yes, if you look at the. Yeah, I don't think that's. No, no. Anyway, he's going to be speaking at the Acts17 collective in San Francisco. That's the Commonwealth Club. You've spoken there.

Leo Laporte [01:52:09]:
Four part lecture series led by Peter Thiel, exploring the biblical figure of the Antichrist through the lenses of science, theology, history, politics and literature. But mostly through the lenses of this one crazy guy.

Jeff Jarvis [01:52:23]:
I don't think they've ever shown a picture of him smiling. That must be AI.

Leo Laporte [01:52:29]:
That is. That is.

Jeff Jarvis [01:52:31]:
What does it cost? Their cost. Leo, register. Go ahead, Reggie.

Leo Laporte [01:52:35]:
We should go. So it's. I mean. Oh, it's sold out. Oh, it's sold out.

Jeff Jarvis [01:52:41]:
It's not virtual.

Leo Laporte [01:52:43]:
No, you got to go virtual. You're warmly invited to a series of four lectures. You get drinks and small bites. Lecture are in the shape of the devil. I would. You get Q and A with Peter Robinson. Q and A with audience.

Jeff Jarvis [01:53:00]:
Oh, Leo, you got a link on Acts 17.

Leo Laporte [01:53:02]:
Oh, Acts 17 is a collective acknowledging Christ in technology and society. Oh, the fiery pits of hell. Oh, no, I'm sorry, that's just one of them.

Paris Martineau [01:53:15]:
Kitas. Christ in technology and society.

Jeff Jarvis [01:53:18]:
Wait, wait, wait. Was that. Was that Cook?

Leo Laporte [01:53:21]:
Tim Cook?

Jeff Jarvis [01:53:22]:
No, no, I saw the white hair.

Leo Laporte [01:53:23]:
Just a white.

Paris Martineau [01:53:24]:
That was another man with white hair. You shouldn't be judgmental like this. Yeah.

Leo Laporte [01:53:30]:
Wow.

Paris Martineau [01:53:30]:
I just imagine you walking around your home being like, is that Tim Cook? Oh, no, it's just a mirror.

Leo Laporte [01:53:35]:
I mean. So this is among evangelical Christians. This is part of Revelations, right? The. The end times. That the Antichrist will come. Come.

Paris Martineau [01:53:46]:
The cheerful book synced podcast friendly explainer of the end times.

Jeff Jarvis [01:53:52]:
Right now I'm listening to the Delusions of Crowds, why People go Mad in Groups by William Bernstein. And it's all about these end crowd people and. And world in times.

Leo Laporte [01:54:04]:
Yeah, and times.

M.G. Siegler [01:54:05]:
Yeah.

Jeff Jarvis [01:54:05]:
And it fits right into. To get. Get ready for a drink, folks. Test real. Hey, it's all part of the same thing being.

Leo Laporte [01:54:13]:
Wow.

Jeff Jarvis [01:54:14]:
It's a. It's a religion without God, but it's a. It's still a religion. But he's.

Leo Laporte [01:54:19]:
It's funny that he thinks Greta Thunberg, of all people, the. The teenager who's trying to save the planet from.

Paris Martineau [01:54:24]:
I don't know if she's a teenager anymore, but.

Leo Laporte [01:54:26]:
Young woman who's trying to save the planet from climate disaster.

Jeff Jarvis [01:54:32]:
Yeah, she's trying to save it from. From End times.

Leo Laporte [01:54:35]:
Yeah. Well, let me just, you know, know.

Jeff Jarvis [01:54:39]:
She's 22.

Leo Laporte [01:54:40]:
Okay. Wow. She's.

Jeff Jarvis [01:54:42]:
She's grown. Art.

Leo Laporte [01:54:43]:
Greta. She's no longer a teenager. In Christian eschatology, the Antichrist refers to an entity prophecy by the Bible to oppose Jesus and falsely substitute themselves as a savior in Christ's place. You see, before the second says she's.

Jeff Jarvis [01:55:00]:
Saving the world, but she's not.

Leo Laporte [01:55:02]:
Yeah, okay.

Jeff Jarvis [01:55:07]:
Or he is.

Leo Laporte [01:55:08]:
Okay. It's an interesting notion.

Jeff Jarvis [01:55:11]:
Where did you come across that?

Leo Laporte [01:55:13]:
This is Wikipedia.

Jeff Jarvis [01:55:15]:
No, no, no. Peter Thiel speaking.

Leo Laporte [01:55:16]:
Oh, my daughter sent it to me. I said, wait a minute. He is the Antichrist. And she said, right. That's how he can talk about it. Here's something a little lighter. Let's change the subject quickly. Something a little lighter.

Leo Laporte [01:55:33]:
You're listening to intelligent ma. Jeff Jarvis, Paris Martineau. I'm Leo laporte. I hope you heard our interview with M.G. Siegler. If you didn't rewind because he was great.

Jeff Jarvis [01:55:41]:
He's wonderful.

Paris Martineau [01:55:42]:
None of us are the Antichrist.

Leo Laporte [01:55:44]:
No, none of us. We're pretty sure. Although, you know, it could be. Wouldn't the Antichrist say they weren't the Antichrist? They wouldn't admit it.

Paris Martineau [01:55:53]:
None of us are admitting we're the Antichrist.

Jeff Jarvis [01:55:55]:
Wouldn't the Antichrist have blue fingernails?

Paris Martineau [01:55:59]:
Wouldn't the Antichrist have blue fingernails that she needs to get refilled build?

Leo Laporte [01:56:06]:
Yeah. She wouldn't have chipped blue finger. They would be naturally blue. Next week, Karen Howe, author of The Empire of AI should be interesting. Really. A deeply researched book about OpenAI.

Jeff Jarvis [01:56:20]:
Watch the bit. His tongue.

Leo Laporte [01:56:22]:
Yeah. Her. Her contention is that much like the colonial empires of the last century, AI companies like OpenAI I are colonizing the world for their vision.

Jeff Jarvis [01:56:35]:
I left the book unsure of what she thinks of AI I know what she thinks of Big tech, but I'm not sure what she thinks of AI nor even of Sam Altman.

Leo Laporte [01:56:43]:
Yeah.

Paris Martineau [01:56:45]:
By Monday we're going to have to have a kind of point of view squirt gun situation set up in Leo's office with a remote control on my dad desk just in case.

Leo Laporte [01:56:58]:
Down boy. Down boy.

Paris Martineau [01:57:00]:
Okay.

Leo Laporte [01:57:05]:
Couple more stories. We have like a thousand more, but I'm not going to attempt to. There's so many good stories this week. There are two types of dishwasher people and I really want to listen to.

Jeff Jarvis [01:57:18]:
Their wives and those who don't.

Leo Laporte [01:57:19]:
That's right. That's what I do. This is a very funny piece by Ellen Cushing. Only one of them really knows how to, to listen, load the dish.

Jeff Jarvis [01:57:28]:
Always your wife.

Leo Laporte [01:57:29]:
Yes. There are YouTube videos, titles such as you're doing it wrong and passive aggressive tutorials. My wife, speaking of passive aggressive, will frequently reload the dishwasher when I step away.

Jeff Jarvis [01:57:46]:
Or mine will change the rules. I follow the rules. We have a great dishwasher. It's a wonderful dishwasher and we follow the rules. But then suddenly there's a new rule.

Leo Laporte [01:57:54]:
Do you put your cutlery and handle up or.

Jeff Jarvis [01:57:57]:
No, we have. We. Oh, ours is, Ours is the one that has the top row and you put it down like that, which I thought was going to be awful and it's great.

Leo Laporte [01:58:03]:
That's a better idea because I have always been the handle up kind of guy. Because you're going to take it out.

Paris Martineau [01:58:10]:
Are you crazy?

Leo Laporte [01:58:11]:
Yes.

Paris Martineau [01:58:12]:
Apparently there should be a, A, a third subset in this for people whose apartments don't have a dishwasher. So they may or may not have installed a mini countertop one.

Jeff Jarvis [01:58:26]:
Whoa.

Paris Martineau [01:58:27]:
Very limited space in order to allow for some dishwashing at the time.

Leo Laporte [01:58:34]:
You're not alone. Under 90 million American homes have a dishwasher and 19% of them were never used zero times a week. Part of that is confusion over not only how to load it, but what you should do before you load it.

Jeff Jarvis [01:58:49]:
Do you.

Leo Laporte [01:58:49]:
You scrape the plate? Do you.

Jeff Jarvis [01:58:51]:
Okay, so are you scrapers or rinsers or not?

Leo Laporte [01:58:53]:
You're not supposed to scrape anymore. I don't believe that.

Jeff Jarvis [01:58:55]:
I said I don't believe that. What do you mean it's not supposed to.

Paris Martineau [01:58:58]:
I think with normal dishwashers, yes, you're supposed to scrape the plate. With my miniature dishwasher, I gotta. Because there's no place else for the, for the stuff.

Leo Laporte [01:59:08]:
Yeah.

Jeff Jarvis [01:59:08]:
So when I was.

Leo Laporte [01:59:09]:
You do scrape, but you don't want to scrape it. You don't want to rinse it. You want it to be thoroughly because apparently the, the food proteins left in the plate interact with the detergent and help it clean.

Paris Martineau [01:59:18]:
Yeah, it's an enzymatic reaction.

Leo Laporte [01:59:20]:
It's an enzymatic reaction.

Jeff Jarvis [01:59:22]:
So when I was the kitchen manager at Ponderosa Steakhouse in Lombard, Illinois, Mike, the manager pointed to the machine and he said, that's not the dishwasher. You are, that's the dish sanitizer.

Leo Laporte [01:59:36]:
Oh, I like it.

Paris Martineau [01:59:37]:
That is true though. In kitchen and industrial situation is typically, you don't have a dishwasher, you have a sanitizer. This was true when I worked at Starbucks for many years in high school.

Leo Laporte [01:59:47]:
When I worked at the Dining hall in college.

Paris Martineau [01:59:52]:
It's all the star food service.

Leo Laporte [01:59:54]:
I wish we had this dishwasher. This was a conveyor belt and you'd put the dishes in a rack. You remember this, right? And you put on the conveyor belt and would go through and it'd be hosed and you'd have. And you would have as the pool.

Jeff Jarvis [02:00:06]:
I love that thing because then you spray it. All the other, other employees you'd like.

Leo Laporte [02:00:09]:
Have a shower sprayer that you'd spray everything off before it went into the dishwasher. The San Leo, it would the sanitizer and then it would emerge piping hot and sanitized for you to put out and watch the students go open it.

Paris Martineau [02:00:26]:
And get their glasses all fogged.

Jeff Jarvis [02:00:28]:
Yes, exactly.

Leo Laporte [02:00:29]:
This thing is always open. It's just a conveyor.

Jeff Jarvis [02:00:31]:
See, we are people of the people here. Yes, we've had real jobs in.

Leo Laporte [02:00:36]:
In a YouGov poll from last year, more than a third of respondents admitted to having disagreements with others about dishwashing best practices particularly comes up in couples therapy sessions. So there was a Reddit ama. She received hundreds of questions. Her name, by the way, is Forte. She is apparently the wire cutter. No, no, that's somebody else. I don't know who Forte is. I hate it when they do this in articles, by the way.

Leo Laporte [02:01:14]:
They refer to somebody that's paragraphs back. I don't have that kind of memory, guys. Who the hell. Say her name again. All right, well, she's a Paryn Forte.

Paris Martineau [02:01:26]:
Who has worked for more than 40 years at Good Housekeeping and currently, currently runs its home care and cleaning lab.

Leo Laporte [02:01:32]:
Well, she's an expert. She said she got hundreds more questions than Good Housekeep on the Reddit AMA than Good Housekeeping ever got. A large number started with the poster invoking a spouse's or roommate's wrong headed approach to the dishwasher and asking Marilyn to adjudicate. There's a lot of psychology behind the dishwasher, she said. There's a lot of angst.

Jeff Jarvis [02:01:53]:
Why? Why does it. Why does it. In fact it does. This is true. True. Why does it load such pedantry in a home?

Leo Laporte [02:02:02]:
That's a good question.

Paris Martineau [02:02:02]:
Because it's a constant physical reminder of someone of, of the lack of control you have over basic household functions that have to be constantly done and undone and redone.

Leo Laporte [02:02:17]:
So sociologist Michelle Janning has one answer. She wrote the the book the Stuff of Family Life, How Our Homes Reflect Our Lives. She told the Atlantic the strong opinions associated with how to do it could Be people trying to retain some semblance of control in a world where technological devices are doing things so much for us.

Jeff Jarvis [02:02:42]:
Well, we're in charge of the dishwasher. I don't feel like the dishwasher is taking over my life.

Leo Laporte [02:02:46]:
You're not. Are you guys, quote, losing the humanity associated with. Associated with your domestic life?

Jeff Jarvis [02:02:51]:
No, No.

Paris Martineau [02:02:52]:
I need no more humanity in my domestic life, you guys. This is the one problem I've realized whenever I go visit my folks. Do you guys clean out the filter of your dishwasher?

Leo Laporte [02:03:03]:
I do. I'm the one in the family who does.

Paris Martineau [02:03:05]:
You got legitimately. My parents had not seemingly ever. And I think, like, people don't know.

Leo Laporte [02:03:12]:
That until the dishwasher stops raining.

Paris Martineau [02:03:15]:
Potentially vomit. Based on the smells I encounter.

Leo Laporte [02:03:18]:
Disgusting. Yeah.

Paris Martineau [02:03:19]:
Yeah. For those in the chat asking, there was a filter. Yeah, there's a filter at the bottom of the dishwasher. You gotta remove the little twisty top thing, then pull out some other junk, and then there's a filter with actual crud in it that you gotta clean.

Leo Laporte [02:03:32]:
Yeah.

Paris Martineau [02:03:32]:
Go fix it.

Leo Laporte [02:03:33]:
How often do you do. Here's. Here's what the Atlantic says. Clean your filter periodically if you have one. You might not. If your dishwasher smells, you can run a sanitizing cycle with vinegar, baking soda, or one of the many specialized. Good lord. Dishwasher cleaning products.

Leo Laporte [02:03:50]:
Also, no cast iron. I keep telling. By the way, the family doesn't get this one. No cast iron, no wood, no crystal. Nothing with delicate painted on decorations like china with metallic rim. Please, I beg of you. I keep finding my good knives in the dishwasher. Rinsing is not necessary.

Leo Laporte [02:04:08]:
From Oma Blaze Ford, a senior executive editor at Better Homes and Gardens. Over. Rinsing is, quote, one of the most common mistakes in modern dishwashing. Loading. Scrape the leftover food into the trash with a rubber spatula, then immediately load the dish into the machine without even turning on the faucet.

Jeff Jarvis [02:04:27]:
Oh, no.

Leo Laporte [02:04:29]:
What about peanut butter? Okay. What about. Oh, she says peanut butter. Eggs are the. Are the main exception. They tend to be stuck.

Jeff Jarvis [02:04:35]:
Okay. There's always exceptions to these rules.

Leo Laporte [02:04:37]:
There's always an except exception. I can't believe she got 4, 000 words.

Jeff Jarvis [02:04:41]:
I know.

Leo Laporte [02:04:41]:
It's loading a dishwasher. Thank you, Ellen Cushing at the Atlantic. This is why I subscribe.

Jeff Jarvis [02:04:48]:
So, Paris, I think I found an activity either for your group or maybe for the two of us. Line 151. You need to come to New Jersey for this.

Leo Laporte [02:04:58]:
Okay. I have some activities Too, but they aren't in New Jersey.

Jeff Jarvis [02:05:01]:
You want to believe an Amazon tour?

Leo Laporte [02:05:05]:
I would take an Amazon tour even of the warehouse.

Jeff Jarvis [02:05:08]:
Yeah.

Leo Laporte [02:05:09]:
Oh, you can do this. Look, I can go over to Tracy or San Diego or East. Wow. Is there one near you in New Jersey?

Jeff Jarvis [02:05:15]:
Yes, there's one in Edison, right nearby. There's not a New York. Paris. That's why you got to come here. Well, maybe a fun outing with the Skeeball.

Leo Laporte [02:05:23]:
Oh, would this be cool? Oh, and the one in Edison is a robotics sortable facility.

Jeff Jarvis [02:05:30]:
Yeah.

Leo Laporte [02:05:31]:
So you'll see the robots.

Jeff Jarvis [02:05:33]:
Yeah.

Leo Laporte [02:05:35]:
Know, before you go. Each tour is 69 minutes long. You may be walking up and down at least one flight of stairs and walk approximately one mile. Do not wear sandals, clogs, Crocs or.

Jeff Jarvis [02:05:47]:
High heels, because Crocs are really ugly and you really shouldn't be seeing them.

Leo Laporte [02:05:51]:
We won't even let you in if you wear unsuitable footwear or offensive or revealing clothing. No cleavage in the warehouse.

Paris Martineau [02:06:00]:
Tell me I can't wear a bandage dress to the Amazon warehouse.

Leo Laporte [02:06:03]:
I was gonna wear my tube top. Wow. We do welcome young visitors, but you've gotta be at least 6 years old.

Paris Martineau [02:06:13]:
This is interesting because. So when I was covering Amazon exclusively, it was during the height of the pandemic, so I was never able to do an official Amazon tour.

Leo Laporte [02:06:21]:
I would love to go. This you can bring. Now, this is unlike the Sydney Harbour Bridge, where you have to check your. Your wallet and keys because they may fall out and hit somebody in the head. You may bring your wallet, keys and transparent water bottle on the tour. But we do ask you keep cell phones, bags and backpacks at home or in a vehicle unless medically necessary.

Jeff Jarvis [02:06:41]:
Cell phones are not allowed on the tour. Do you put them in?

Leo Laporte [02:06:44]:
No photography. They say leave them at home or in the vehicle.

Jeff Jarvis [02:06:48]:
But yet you are permitted photos in designated photo areas. Oh, in our lobbies.

M.G. Siegler [02:06:52]:
Oh, I see.

Leo Laporte [02:06:53]:
See, this would be super cool, wouldn't it? August 28th. Let's do it. I'll be right out. 11am Noon. There are. There's one spot available and the next one's fully booked.

Jeff Jarvis [02:07:07]:
Well, the next month there's more.

Leo Laporte [02:07:08]:
It's popular. Yeah, of course it is. Are monocles allowed? Burke wants to know if he can wear his monocle. Only if it's securely attached to your clothing.

Jeff Jarvis [02:07:19]:
Burk, can you wear your photo glasses?

Leo Laporte [02:07:22]:
Ah, I bet you cannot. That's a good question. This is going to be more of a difficult, you know, for a long time I'd see these museums and say, no photography in the museum. But everybody's got their cell phone. They've got a camera with them at all times. How do you.

Jeff Jarvis [02:07:34]:
That was also because they didn't want flashes which would have an impact.

Leo Laporte [02:07:37]:
Flashes. I understand. Yeah.

Jeff Jarvis [02:07:41]:
Would this be an activity for the Skee Balls or it's not nearly fun enough.

Paris Martineau [02:07:46]:
I think this is an activity for the podcast.

Jeff Jarvis [02:07:48]:
Okay.

Leo Laporte [02:07:48]:
I think so too. That's funny. The ski Leo they have.

Jeff Jarvis [02:07:53]:
They have an opening in Tracy on September 5th on a Friday. They have seven spots open right now.

Leo Laporte [02:07:59]:
Let's 10:30am Road trip activity. We could all go.

Jeff Jarvis [02:08:05]:
How far away is Tracy?

Paris Martineau [02:08:06]:
Screw a fancy dinner. Let's drive everybody to the Amazon warehouse for two Team building.

Leo Laporte [02:08:14]:
Let's see. I think you should nominate some because I'm. I'm not seeing anything that we need to cover. We do need to wrap it up so.

Jeff Jarvis [02:08:30]:
Well, we got the end.

Leo Laporte [02:08:31]:
What about perplexity asking for $5 a month for their browser comment and then they will divvy that money up to publishers.

Jeff Jarvis [02:08:40]:
Does that seem like it's another Perplexity trick? A who's going to pay five bucks? So we're going to share this revenue we're not going to get, but we're going to get headlines saying that we are nice and we're sharing revenue with publishers. And it's worked already.

Leo Laporte [02:08:53]:
Yep. Comic browser already has a few issues. Somebody demonstrated at defcon a way to use it to drain your bank account. So there's that. Or just order crap you don't really want because it's an agentic browser. Brave demonstrated it.

Jeff Jarvis [02:09:12]:
Paris, you were going to say.

Paris Martineau [02:09:14]:
Oh, did we mention last week? Or was this after that Wired, Business Insider and other news outlets had to remove AI written freelance articles?

Leo Laporte [02:09:24]:
No, I didn't. I don't even remember.

Jeff Jarvis [02:09:25]:
Oh yes, it's in there.

Paris Martineau [02:09:27]:
So this was originally written by the Press Gazette, and this came to their attention after the author of Dispatch, who is also kind of the former deputy of a herd, Jacob Furdy, kind of did an interesting blog about this crazy freelance pitch he got that ended up being too good to be true. So he got a pitch at the beginning of the month that was offering this writer saying they were to do a reported piece about Gravemont, a decommissioned mining town in rural Colorado that has been repurposed into one of the world's most secretive training grounds for death investigation. The pitch continued. I want to tell the story of the scientists, ex cops and former miners who now handle the dead daily not as mourners, but as archivists of truth. I'll explore the ethical tightrope using real humans. All the stuff like I've got the right person because I've got all this sourcing. Faridi kind of walked back and forth with this freelancer. It seemed like a good pitch at first, but then he did a little googling and was like, I can't find Grave Mount.

Paris Martineau [02:10:37]:
How do you did you find. It turns out skip the end. This city didn't exist because this person didn't exist. And then he started looking at this writer's clips and it was for a lot of bigger site.

Jeff Jarvis [02:10:52]:
It's a French name, which is suspicious.

Paris Martineau [02:10:55]:
Why.

Leo Laporte [02:10:59]:
So this is interesting. This is not the publications doing this. The publications are getting pitched by a phony freelancer. They're not doing the due diligence they should do, but they accept the pitch. Wired published a story titled they fell in love playing Minecraft, Left Then the game became their wedding venue. Wired was fooled. We made errors here. This story did not go through a proper fact check process.

Leo Laporte [02:11:28]:
That's by the way a big faux pas or get a top edit from a more senior.

Jeff Jarvis [02:11:34]:
Nobody has fact checkers anymore.

Paris Martineau [02:11:35]:
Yeah, no one has fact checkers and no one so but I mean there were small things. So like if you dig into the Wired story, this person popped publish it has like small details. Like Jessica who, 34, an ordained officiant based in Chicago, has made a name for herself as a digital celebrant specializing in ceremonies across Twitch, Discord and VR chat. However, if you google that person's name in quotes and like Chicago, nothing comes up, much less if you look for.

Leo Laporte [02:12:02]:
An officiant, bit of due diligence would have.

Jeff Jarvis [02:12:05]:
Well plus they couldn't pay the freelancer.

Paris Martineau [02:12:07]:
So part of so so Wired didn't. So Business Insider and some other publications, if I recall correctly, ended up taking their articles down after the Press Gazette reached out to them with questions about this phony freelancer, Wired.

Leo Laporte [02:12:21]:
So the Press Gazette immediately spotted it, which is interesting.

Paris Martineau [02:12:24]:
Well, no, the Press Gazette reported on someone else's immediately spotting. But Wired had taken this down. This story they published down shortly after publication. Within a week or two, once the editor was trying to pay the freelancer and they started asking, no, I don't want to go through the normal payment channels. I'll only do PayPal. And that's when it all started to unravel.

Jeff Jarvis [02:12:45]:
We don't do that economy Nas, believe me.

Paris Martineau [02:12:47]:
Yeah, no you don't. But part of what I think is interesting about so Wired published kind of a Mea culpa on this with no byline of how they got roiled by an AI freelancer. However, in it they say after we got this PayPal request, a suspicious Wired editor ran the story through two third party AI detection tools, both of which said the copy was likely to be human generated. Yeah, so what it's like Wired, you have reported on this before. Who allowed this line to go in a story?

Leo Laporte [02:13:19]:
Yeah, that's absurd. Well, it's just, you know, this is more AI slop and we're going to see more and more of that. And they got Wired and Business Insider got conned. What it's revealed, however. However, is they aren't doing even the slightest bit of due diligence on articles.

Jeff Jarvis [02:13:35]:
They publish, which is disappointing. Leo, the newspapers I know of, the metro newspapers, it's, it's all trending, chasing, find the trending topic, rewrite something. Do they have a quota? They have five, six, eight.

Paris Martineau [02:13:50]:
That's been the take, that's been the MO for a decade that I was doing that in 2017.

Leo Laporte [02:13:56]:
Yep.

Paris Martineau [02:13:57]:
Not, not at Wired. I was doing that at New York Mag.

Jeff Jarvis [02:13:59]:
Right.

Paris Martineau [02:13:59]:
Wired doesn't really do that sort of trending. This is a unique thing because Wired typically like, they only work with freelancers for longer narrative reported features and kind of like a. This was a one off story about like a Internet trend. I think the conclusion of Wire, it's kind of mea culpa. Essay is interesting though, which is fabulous. And plagiarists are as old as media itself. But AI presents a new challenge. It lets anybody cross craft a perfect pitch, the simple prompt and play act the role of journalist convincingly enough to fool, well, us.

Paris Martineau [02:14:29]:
We acted quickly once we discovered the ruse and we've taken steps to ensure this doesn't happen again. But in this new era, every newspaper should be presumed prepared to do the same. It's kind of difficult to check when you're, I guess, a overworked editor dealing with a big news cycle. I think this is more of a sign of, of media economics and the dark place this has gotten the news industry than anything a specific publication did wrong.

Leo Laporte [02:14:57]:
There is a knock on effect. I'm going to have to be much more careful about stories I pull for our shows. Maybe I will have to do the due diligence on those. We report stories like that all the time. To my knowledge, we have not repeated a fake story. Knock wood, Leo, knock on wood. But I could probably be fooled because in the past I've assumed the authority of somebody like that. Business Insider are wired and figured, well, they must have vetted it.

Leo Laporte [02:15:23]:
Apparently that's a mistake and I won't do that anymore. So expect much shorter shows going forward. You're watching intelligent Machines. We are going to wrap it up with our picks of the week in just a moment. Jeff Jarvis is here, professor of journalist innovation, journalistic innovation emeritus at all those great Mark Leather schools of journalism at the City University of New York. Also Montclair State University and SUNY Stony Brook. His author as Ship. His author credits include the Gutenberg parenthesis, now out in paperback.

Leo Laporte [02:15:59]:
Oh, look, there's the Bookshelf magazine, now out in audio format. And the web we weave a fabulous book about with. It's almost a manifesto for how to save the web, which at this point we really need to work on. There you go. Thank you, Jeff. Paris Martineau is also here. She is responsible for radioactive shrimp coverage at Consumer Reports. Actually, that's an old lower third.

Leo Laporte [02:16:24]:
We got the old lower third up for you.

Paris Martineau [02:16:26]:
Wow. We do have the old lower third up.

Leo Laporte [02:16:28]:
All of that's still good.

Paris Martineau [02:16:29]:
Look at all. It is all still good. But I used to have such a meaty lower third.

Leo Laporte [02:16:33]:
You did. Now we just say Consumer Reports Paris.

Jeff Jarvis [02:16:38]:
Website, which she does not speak on the. The show.

Leo Laporte [02:16:40]:
Right.

Paris Martineau [02:16:41]:
I do not speak for them. I do not represent them. I merely work for them in my.

Jeff Jarvis [02:16:46]:
We are very grateful that they allow her to be here.

Leo Laporte [02:16:49]:
Yes, it's true.

Paris Martineau [02:16:51]:
Very cool.

Leo Laporte [02:16:53]:
Thank you for joining us, club members. Thank you for your support. We couldn't do this show without your support. 25% of our operating expenses now comes from Club Twit. I'm. I think that's a really good thing. Thing. It means we're getting the support we're getting.

Leo Laporte [02:17:09]:
You know, it's. I think of it almost as votes. People say, yes, we like what you do. We want you to do more of it. If you like what we do and you want us to do more of it, you want to keep those shows going. All the stuff we do in the club, including coverage of keynotes coming up. We're going to do the Apple iPhone announcement. That's September 9th.

Leo Laporte [02:17:27]:
Mikah Sargent and I will do that and we will do it only in the club. So that's why you need to be.

Jeff Jarvis [02:17:32]:
Are you going to do Meta Connect?

Leo Laporte [02:17:34]:
Yes, we are. You want to join me for that?

Jeff Jarvis [02:17:36]:
Yeah, sure. That'd be interesting.

Leo Laporte [02:17:37]:
More than welcome. That's our new thing. We do all the keynotes in the club only. So that's one reason to.

Jeff Jarvis [02:17:45]:
That's how I watched the Google made by Google and yeah, it was fun.

Leo Laporte [02:17:52]:
Mike and I, yeah, Mike and I had a lot of fun watching Jimmy Fallon and Come Company. We also have special shows we do only in the club like Hands on Windows, Hands on Apple, Micah and Paul respectively actually irrespectively do that show. Paul does Hands on Windows, Micah Design, it's on Apple. We also do what else Hands on tech. We do Home Theater Geeks with Scott Wilkinson, Chris Marquardt's photo show, Stacy's Book Club. I can go on. Best thing to do is find out more about Club Twit by going to twit.tv/clubtwit. There's a two week free trial which will give you actually enough time to sign up and at least listen to the Apple keynote.

Leo Laporte [02:18:32]:
See if it's worth your time. I think it is and it sure is a big boon for us. So thank you in advance to all the club members. twit.tv/clubtwit. We will have to end. I am a little early during the Meta Connect. We've decided though really it's a continuation of the show because they're going to begin at 4pm so we will continue the show. You know, we'll start the show at a usual time and we'll continue into Meta Connect.

Leo Laporte [02:19:05]:
So you will be here. It's only really a question of whether you want to stay. Same for you, Paris. If. If hunger is taking over and you're shaking, you can take off. But if you want to stick around for as long as Mark Zuckerberg does, you're more than welcome to.

Paris Martineau [02:19:19]:
Is that this week or next week? Next week.

Leo Laporte [02:19:21]:
Two weeks.

Jeff Jarvis [02:19:23]:
And it's interesting because they're going to supposedly reveal hypernova smart glasses with, yeah, the display and the wristband.

Paris Martineau [02:19:31]:
So they have to call the hypernova. Wait, can we have a brief moment for the incredible image Anthony generated?

Leo Laporte [02:19:39]:
You were laughing.

Paris Martineau [02:19:40]:
I was trying not to laugh because I realized my mic was still on, which is the official no guac for public figures title card. And I like that in the corner, bottom right corner, it says silly episode, exclamation point. Just in case you didn't get that from the little avocados with their arms crossed.

Jeff Jarvis [02:20:00]:
The angry avocados.

Leo Laporte [02:20:02]:
Oh, I get. And I now get the headline. That was because Gemini wouldn't do guac out of my shirt.

Jeff Jarvis [02:20:08]:
Right?

Paris Martineau [02:20:08]:
Me, no guac for public figures.

Leo Laporte [02:20:11]:
Yeah, or maybe it thinks I'm a private individual and that's why I wouldn't do it. Pick of the week, Paris Martineau.

Paris Martineau [02:20:18]:
All Right. I got a couple things here. One, my general pick of the week that is relevant to no one but me because it has already happened as a niche local event is it was the South Slope Derby.

Leo Laporte [02:20:31]:
I saw your pictures. So.

Paris Martineau [02:20:33]:
Which is a delightful event that happens every summer in South Park Slope of Brooklyn where it's a summer camp for kids where they learn how to do like soapbox derby cars and then they race them down a bunch of closed streets all in like a one by one and they get raided. They have interesting themes. That one was a double decker bus. Yeah. Bus themed. There was. There was one where I didn't get a photo of this because it was so surprising. There was one where children went down in some sort of cart and then just adults emerged to pelt them with balls walls.

Paris Martineau [02:21:12]:
I don't entirely understand why there's always something strange going on, but I don't know, it was just a delightful. I. As I was walking up there, I always stopped at this one coffee shop and I was getting my coffee and the guy was like, oh, up to anything fun today? I'm like, oh, I'm going to the South Sluff Derby around the road. And he's like, oh, who are you rooting for? And I was like, oh, no one. I'm just a childless adult who goes because I enjoy it. That photo is where they crash all the cars into a big pile and then adults come out with sledgehammers and saws to.

Leo Laporte [02:21:45]:
They destroy them at the end. They do.

Paris Martineau [02:21:47]:
Cuz where else are these going to go in people's apartments.

Jeff Jarvis [02:21:50]:
Apartments in Brooklyn.

Paris Martineau [02:21:51]:
So the guy's like, oh, who are you rooting for? I say, no one, I'm a child adult. He's like, oh, then you've got to pick an enemy, right? And I'm like, what? And he's like, you should pick one of the kids to be your enemy and root against them for the reason race. And I was like, that's a way to do it. My guy, Boo Boo his. Boo his. And these photos were taken with Project Indigo and they're so good, Right?

Leo Laporte [02:22:15]:
Nice.

Paris Martineau [02:22:16]:
Last week. Nice. I got two and a half other picks just in case. One is I saw someone posting a couple of months ago or something. We'd done the Internet road trip which was a part of the new Neil fun website where Love Neil. Kind of the Internet's controlling a road trip. They had gone up through Canada, but now they're back in the US in Vermont if you want to go check where they are.

Leo Laporte [02:22:42]:
Yeah, they seem to be driving off the road right now.

Paris Martineau [02:22:46]:
Yeah, they're kind of right now stuck in a parking lot. But they were on the road a bit recently. But I just thought it was a fun thing and I wanted to shout out some of the reviews we got from last people heard our plea. We got a whopping 6 reviews guys.

Leo Laporte [02:23:05]:
Yay.

Paris Martineau [02:23:08]:
Sorgatron thanked me for making the olds feel hip again and learn terms they can use while teaching the youths.

Leo Laporte [02:23:16]:
That's true.

Paris Martineau [02:23:19]:
Anonymous mailer said it was informative. Love the topic and all the information presented. Presented. Always learning something new. And bring back the jingle. It's back.

Jeff Jarvis [02:23:30]:
Thanks to you all, we've got over.

Leo Laporte [02:23:34]:
Just like the Cracker Barrel. You know, when the President speaks, I bring back the jingle. Yep.

Paris Martineau [02:23:41]:
One said. In today's media landscape, where every podcast promises to change what you think Intelligent Machine actually delivers, mostly by making you wonder if your toaster deserves a call to college degree.

Leo Laporte [02:23:54]:
Each episode is a thrilling blend of.

Paris Martineau [02:23:57]:
Futurism and low key panic, like TED Talks if the speaker occasionally admitted, yes, this algorithm will probably replace your job, but look how polite it is about it. It's a really good review.

Leo Laporte [02:24:08]:
All no, that's an excellent review.

Paris Martineau [02:24:10]:
Yeah, another one yesterday from Mr. J. Nice says topical. Even years later, you'd think a show that's been around for so long would run out of steam, but you're wrong. There's no grok suckers here the clankers can hate. But this show brings AI and other ML based news to you every week. Other ones from Mon7ez and Paul VC. All good.

Paris Martineau [02:24:37]:
Thanks guys. And if you want to contribute to our hopefully climbing up reviews, you can leave a review on Apple podcast.

Leo Laporte [02:24:46]:
Yay. We appreciate that. Thank you. Those are all excellent. Now it's time for Jeff is actually adding picks as we speak.

Paris Martineau [02:24:56]:
You already had like nine picks.

Jeff Jarvis [02:24:58]:
Well, it's all of a theme. I haven't done a tick tock corner in a while. And in honor of Salt Hanks stardom.

Leo Laporte [02:25:05]:
Yes, as he just by the way, I'm a little nervous. His mom just texted me he just bought a Rolex so now I'm worried. Oh, he's going and he went to the US Open and he got his.

Paris Martineau [02:25:18]:
Everyone'S going to the US Open that lives in Brooklyn right now.

Leo Laporte [02:25:21]:
In fact, I'm surprised Jeff isn't there. To be honest.

Jeff Jarvis [02:25:23]:
It's a whole story. Well, he got his his forehead signed. By who?

Leo Laporte [02:25:29]:
Some star. I can show you the Instagram. You maybe you would know who it is. I I had no idea who it is. Oh, maybe it's a. Maybe it was a reel. Would that mean that it's gone now forever?

Paris Martineau [02:25:42]:
No, it's still on. It might have been a story, though. Also because I forgot to check the video feed of Intelligent Machine Podcast review. Shout out to Bruce Allen and Dashes, who also left us podcast reviews.

Leo Laporte [02:25:53]:
Very nice.

Paris Martineau [02:25:53]:
Thanks for listening, guys.

Leo Laporte [02:25:54]:
Very nice. I don't see it on his feed, but. Although here he is with Adam Masseri of Instagram making a sandwich. So.

Paris Martineau [02:26:08]:
What?

Leo Laporte [02:26:09]:
What? I know. Isn't that a little strange?

Paris Martineau [02:26:13]:
Ask him to come.

Leo Laporte [02:26:16]:
No, he's. I think he's making the prime rib. Oh, yes, I think he is. Yeah. But I. But I don't see the video of him getting his forehead signed. I don't know. Was it Djokovic? I don't know who it was, but it's somebody.

Leo Laporte [02:26:27]:
He was jumping up and down with joy to get his forehead signed.

Jeff Jarvis [02:26:30]:
So as long as he doesn't tattoo it.

Leo Laporte [02:26:32]:
I hope not. It was. It was interesting.

Jeff Jarvis [02:26:35]:
So, in honor of Salt Hank's fame on TikTok and Tik Tok as a medium, I want to just quickly mention Anna Lapwood is a. Is a young. She was the head of music at one of the Cambridge colleges and the organist, and she's been so big. She now has left and she's started albums and she sells. Sells out the Albert Hall.

Leo Laporte [02:26:58]:
Oh, I've. I've watched her Tick Tock.

Jeff Jarvis [02:27:00]:
She's spectacular. She's a very generous person. Then years ago, you and I compared notes, I. I brought in a singer and you brought in a different singer. I can't remember who yours was, but mine was Levy spelled Laufey, who is a Icelandic jazzy singer, and she's now a jazz pop star selling out arenas because of Tick Tock.

Leo Laporte [02:27:24]:
Because of TikTok Tuck.

Jeff Jarvis [02:27:25]:
Wow, she's wonderful. And then. But there's all these new things that come up all the time. My favorite is a teacher who happens to be black, who's Scottish, gave a rant online. If you go to line 170, do that first. And it caused quite a stir because.

Leo Laporte [02:27:48]:
He'S talking about the weather and so.

Jeff Jarvis [02:27:50]:
Just listen to him. Just listen to him.

Leo Laporte [02:27:51]:
All right, we'll play it. Explain to me why. Why Scottish holidays are a bit of a washout. Right?

Jeff Jarvis [02:27:56]:
It's been.

Leo Laporte [02:27:57]:
It's been all right this year, but.

Jeff Jarvis [02:27:58]:
It'S been a bit of a washout.

Leo Laporte [02:27:59]:
And then we get to the week.

Jeff Jarvis [02:28:01]:
The kids go back and so this. This led to people.

Leo Laporte [02:28:04]:
I have no idea what he's talking.

Paris Martineau [02:28:06]:
About, because I can never hear Scottish. Understand Scottish.

Jeff Jarvis [02:28:10]:
I love Scottish accents. I love Scottish.

Leo Laporte [02:28:11]:
There's a very famous bit by a Scottish comedian talking to the. The elevator. The voice recognizer in the elevator understand a word he's saying.

Jeff Jarvis [02:28:20]:
So people went berserk over this. There's a Guardian story there.

Leo Laporte [02:28:23]:
Because he's black.

Jeff Jarvis [02:28:24]:
Because he's black and he has a Scottish accent. He's a black Scott.

Leo Laporte [02:28:27]:
Well, so.

Jeff Jarvis [02:28:28]:
Well, Roywood Jr. Went there, line 169 and met up with a whole bunch of black Scots.

Leo Laporte [02:28:34]:
Oh, I love it. Why wouldn't there be?

Jeff Jarvis [02:28:37]:
He interviews this guy. Comments are worse than the black Scottish people because they're going, how can you be so stupid to not know that these black Scottish people, but American live in like an echo chamber whether the global media inadvertently or not decides to distract you guys from seeing us. Like, you're not seeing content made by black Scottish people. You're not seeing content made by white Scottish people. So the surprise, if you see people that look like you with an accent.

Leo Laporte [02:29:02]:
Like mine, that would blow my mind anyway. Well, I think also it's also indicative of just how much entertainment influences our stereotypical beliefs. Because if you about talk me to a Scottish person, I would never in a million years. Like, if you said a black Brit, that's not a surprise. We've seen enough of them.

Jeff Jarvis [02:29:18]:
You got Dave, we got Skepto. You got everybody out there.

Leo Laporte [02:29:20]:
Yeah. So it. It starts there, right? And that's a good point. That's a good point.

Paris Martineau [02:29:25]:
I love. Wood says in one of his posts, Wood made the point that part of the reason why black Americans don't know about black Scots is because American schools barely teach them about black people in America.

Leo Laporte [02:29:36]:
That's true. True that. Unless all the time. Time.

Jeff Jarvis [02:29:39]:
So let me try to. Let's try to make another star here. I Love this guideline. 173. Carpool, Shakespeare.

Leo Laporte [02:29:44]:
Carpool.

Jeff Jarvis [02:29:46]:
He's not a Scott.

Leo Laporte [02:29:47]:
Oh, but it'd be great if it were a Scottish carpool. All right, here we go. Let's see what he's got to say. Carpool Shakespeare.

Jeff Jarvis [02:29:56]:
This day is called the feast of Crispian.

Leo Laporte [02:30:00]:
He that out lives this day and come safe, stand the tiptoe when the day is name and rouse him at the name of Crispian. He that shall live this day and see old age will yearly on the vigil feast his neighbors and say, yo, Henry V. Yeah. An he he strip his sleeve and show his scars and say, look these wounds I had on Christian's day. Old men forget, you know. Yet all shall be forgot. But he'll remember with advantages what feats. He's urging his troops on.

Leo Laporte [02:30:43]:
They will say, you. I fought with you on Christmas. Familiar in his mouth is household words. Right? Harry the King. Bedford and Exeter, Warwick and Talbot. Salisbury. Yeah, Salisbury. Gloucester being the flowing cups fresh.

Jeff Jarvis [02:31:01]:
Isn't this great?

Leo Laporte [02:31:03]:
Yeah.

Paris Martineau [02:31:03]:
There are kids everywhere for those of the guys to see them.

Leo Laporte [02:31:08]:
And Crispian. Crispian shall never go by from this day to the ending of the world. But we in it shall be remembered. We few, we proud, happy few. We, we band of brothers. For he today that sheds his blood with me shall be my brother. Brother be never so vile. This day will gentle his condition.

Leo Laporte [02:31:33]:
And gentlemen, in. In. In England now a bed shall think themselves a curse that they would not hear and hold their manhood cheap whilst any speaks have fought with us on Saint Crispin's Day. That is awesome.

Jeff Jarvis [02:31:51]:
Isn't that just the greatest?

Leo Laporte [02:31:52]:
That is wonderful. Yeah. That's like one of the best Shakespeare speeches, too. It's a great.

Jeff Jarvis [02:31:56]:
It is. So this is. This is Tick tock. Tick Tock makes Hank and Anna Lapwood. And I agree, Carpool Shakespeare. It's a beautiful thing. And. Well, the good news is one more.

Leo Laporte [02:32:05]:
In theory, Tick Tock. The. The ban on Tick tock will into effect in just a couple of weeks. But the president already indicated. Yeah, I don't. I don't think so.

Jeff Jarvis [02:32:14]:
So it also makes one last thing.

Leo Laporte [02:32:16]:
Yes?

Jeff Jarvis [02:32:16]:
Podcasting dogs.

Leo Laporte [02:32:19]:
But of course, he said I need obedience training. She's been getting her life together since the pandemic started. Wait a minute.

Jeff Jarvis [02:32:29]:
Keep going, Keep going.

Leo Laporte [02:32:30]:
She wants me to bring the ball.

Paris Martineau [02:32:31]:
Back to her so badly.

M.G. Siegler [02:32:33]:
I don't understand why she keeps throwing it away.

Leo Laporte [02:32:35]:
Like, make up your mind.

Jeff Jarvis [02:32:39]:
Real talk.

Leo Laporte [02:32:40]:
What's with making us do tricks for food? That's what I'm saying. Like, bro, send me that slice of cheese. I'm not trying to spin right now. So she says my nails are getting.

Jeff Jarvis [02:32:49]:
Too long and has to trim them. Bro.

Leo Laporte [02:32:51]:
She literally makes her nails longer on purpose. Are these. So is that all AI or are they real?

Jeff Jarvis [02:32:59]:
Yeah, there's a whole bunch. There's. There's a. There's also.

Paris Martineau [02:33:00]:
If you look up, are the voices AI generated, though?

Jeff Jarvis [02:33:04]:
I don't know. It's a good question. We'll also look up Tik Tok babies. Just do it.

Paris Martineau [02:33:08]:
Oh, no. I have seen TikTok Bab. My mother is obsessed with this.

Jeff Jarvis [02:33:11]:
They're freaky.

Paris Martineau [02:33:12]:
Yeah, it's strange. I don't know, I think these are fun.

Leo Laporte [02:33:16]:
I. I've always thought that it was. No, that's definitely not TikTok babies. Okay. I'd always.

Paris Martineau [02:33:23]:
We can't fall down this rabbit hole.

Leo Laporte [02:33:26]:
No. Especially because. Oh, there we go. There's the actual TikTok babies. Cute babies all over the world, and there's zero babies.

Jeff Jarvis [02:33:32]:
They're. They're AI Babies.

Leo Laporte [02:33:34]:
Most of these are not babies.

Jeff Jarvis [02:33:37]:
At least maybe they were babies eight years ago. In front of the baby and the baby talks.

Leo Laporte [02:33:43]:
Yeah, that's what.

Jeff Jarvis [02:33:44]:
I should have found those before you, but yeah.

Leo Laporte [02:33:47]:
Hey, it's mostly scantily clad young women.

Paris Martineau [02:33:53]:
Goo gauze. Guys. Google.

Jeff Jarvis [02:33:55]:
Not Google.

Leo Laporte [02:33:58]:
G Jaws. Gee gauze. Yeah, Gee goss. I think you're right. It's Gee goss, but it's not. What did he say?

Jeff Jarvis [02:34:05]:
Two of them said gewgaws.

Leo Laporte [02:34:06]:
Yeah, I think that's weird. Weird. I literally. This is the problem. Now that I've searched for TikTok babies and found a bunch of scantily clad young women, I will be fine. I will be seeing that in my TikTok feed for the rest of my life. All right, let's see.

Paris Martineau [02:34:21]:
Will you bring me the toilet paper? Thank you.

Jeff Jarvis [02:34:23]:
Oh, yeah. This is not.

Paris Martineau [02:34:24]:
Some of these are profane.

Leo Laporte [02:34:26]:
No, I don't want to see it. That's just real babies.

Jeff Jarvis [02:34:29]:
None of these are the right ones.

Paris Martineau [02:34:30]:
Let's not. Let's not show any videos of children we haven't prescreened, you know.

Leo Laporte [02:34:34]:
Good point.

Jeff Jarvis [02:34:35]:
That's AI Babies.

Leo Laporte [02:34:37]:
AI Babies are.

Paris Martineau [02:34:38]:
Okay, we'll just keep doing this.

Leo Laporte [02:34:39]:
Maybe if I put AI Babies. You gone.

Jeff Jarvis [02:34:44]:
Yes. AI Babies.

Leo Laporte [02:34:45]:
I will say.

Paris Martineau [02:34:48]:
My understanding of the AI Baby thing is the things the AI Babies say are profane, so I don't know if they would be the best fit for show.

Leo Laporte [02:34:55]:
We're just going to stop right here.

Paris Martineau [02:34:59]:
John has turned his camera off, which indicates something to me.

Leo Laporte [02:35:04]:
John, what do you. What do you want to say to us? John Ashley, producer. I feel like John's filling in. Yes.

Jeff Jarvis [02:35:10]:
I feel like this is reminiscent of me on Maverick, where I would probably.

Leo Laporte [02:35:13]:
Play the rat hole sound effect. Yeah. Well, we're ready to go.

Jeff Jarvis [02:35:17]:
Oh, everybody's a critic.

Leo Laporte [02:35:19]:
Oh, well, it is hot up here in the attic, and I am ready to go.

Jeff Jarvis [02:35:23]:
Hey, Paris was warning everyone, let's not get into this rattle.

Leo Laporte [02:35:26]:
Essentially, yes, she is. She's warning. You should listen because she's got good sense. You corrected my admittedly flawed pronunciation with something that's just not even in the ballpark. That's what I Don't.

Jeff Jarvis [02:35:43]:
Well, the thing is, no one ever knows how to spell it.

Leo Laporte [02:35:46]:
It's G, E, E, G, A W.

Paris Martineau [02:35:48]:
No, I have never heard this word until today.

Leo Laporte [02:35:52]:
It's a showy trifle.

Jeff Jarvis [02:35:55]:
It is a showy tribe spelled G E, W. G A W, G. No.

Paris Martineau [02:35:59]:
It'S G. Yeah, G E, W. It's.

Leo Laporte [02:36:02]:
A less common variant of Never heard of googa. I think this is AI pranking me. Oh, goo.

Paris Martineau [02:36:12]:
Googa.

Jeff Jarvis [02:36:14]:
Because I use this in a book and the copy editor then correct me. I thought that can't be right.

Leo Laporte [02:36:18]:
But it looks it's Jija is a less common variant of googa. No, it's not. It's G Gaw. That's not less common than googa. Kuga isn't even a word.

Jeff Jarvis [02:36:33]:
It's not a soft.

Paris Martineau [02:36:34]:
I love. Okay, let's go through the synonyms list. Here on Marion Webster we have normal ones like bauble, chachki, knickknack. Then we get to gym crack, biblock.

Leo Laporte [02:36:45]:
I'm gonna use these. Curio.

Paris Martineau [02:36:49]:
I like.

Leo Laporte [02:36:50]:
It's a knickknack doodad. Collectible.

Jeff Jarvis [02:36:52]:
Click on the old G jaw.

Paris Martineau [02:36:55]:
Gym crack.

Leo Laporte [02:36:57]:
Trumpery.

Jeff Jarvis [02:36:58]:
Trumpery.

Leo Laporte [02:36:58]:
It is a objet, a trifle, a figurine, a trinketry. Bagatelle, brick, A brac trinket. Trinketry.

Paris Martineau [02:37:11]:
Jim cracker.

Jeff Jarvis [02:37:13]:
See, we didn't go down one rat. All the way down another one.

Leo Laporte [02:37:19]:
All right, stop it. Stop it. I got these, these, these. My. My avocado wilting. Everybody wants to go home. I want to go home. Paris Martineau, her home is there in beautiful Brooklyn, California.

Paris Martineau [02:37:35]:
It's true.

Jeff Jarvis [02:37:37]:
Just look. Just look for the well trimmed trees and you'll find Paris nearby.

Leo Laporte [02:37:41]:
You'll find Paris and the soapbox Paris chopped into pieces. And then what do they. They bring them home for their home fires. What do they. They just chop them up and leave them in the street.

Paris Martineau [02:37:54]:
I know that they're carted away at some point, but I've never stuck around that long to figure it out. Or perhaps they put them in a large pile that they then reuse next year. It probably can't be that. Where would you store that much loose.

Leo Laporte [02:38:07]:
Wood and G jaw trinketry? There was a red themed one. Professional investigative journalist at the incredible Consumer Reports. We are so glad you are with.

Jeff Jarvis [02:38:18]:
This is her amateur moment here.

Leo Laporte [02:38:19]:
This is where she pretends not to have class.

Paris Martineau [02:38:23]:
Hey, shout out to all the nuclear adjacent researcher people who actually did email me after about a nuclear shrimp on Twitter this week with some interesting shrimp spiracies.

Leo Laporte [02:38:36]:
Oh, and by the way, Clinton is. The Clinton nuclear power plant is in Bloomington, Illinois. Not.

Jeff Jarvis [02:38:44]:
Oh, sorry.

Leo Laporte [02:38:45]:
Okay.

Jeff Jarvis [02:38:45]:
There is more than one Bloomington.

Leo Laporte [02:38:46]:
There is a Bloomington, Illinois.

Jeff Jarvis [02:38:48]:
Right.

Leo Laporte [02:38:48]:
And that is one of two nuclear reactors.

Jeff Jarvis [02:38:51]:
He looked like he was Indiana, but yes.

Paris Martineau [02:38:54]:
Well, don't go spreading false shrimp-spiracies, guys.

Leo Laporte [02:38:58]:
He might be from Indiana. How about that? I bet that's Jeff Jarvis. We already gave him all of us he deserves. He is an Illinois snob.

Jeff Jarvis [02:39:06]:
Born in Illinois.

Leo Laporte [02:39:08]:
Oh, Burke figured out what happens to those old chopped up soapbox derby vehicles. They're used to make hot dogs.

Paris Martineau [02:39:16]:
Oh, that's great.

Leo Laporte [02:39:17]:
And that's where the Coney island dog came from. Many people don't know that. Thank you everybody for joining us. We do intelligent machines. God only knows why. Every Wednesday 2pm Pacific, 5pm Eastern. Eastern 2100 UTC. Watch us live on YouTube, Twitch, TikTok, Facebook, LinkedIn, x.com and Kick.

Leo Laporte [02:39:36]:
Oh of course, if you're in the club, you can watch us behind the velvet rope in the beautiful club Twit Discord opulently laid out with free champagne for all after the fact on demand versions of the show at twit.tv/im. There is a YouTube channel dedicated to it, but the best thing to do is subscribe Tribe and your favorite podcast client and leave us a great review in the five stars. And if you do it on the Apple Podcasts, Ms. Martineau may pick up on it and read it someday on our show.

Paris Martineau [02:40:06]:
It's true.

Leo Laporte [02:40:08]:
Hey, thank you so much.

Paris Martineau [02:40:10]:
You know what we say on this podcast?

Leo Laporte [02:40:12]:
What do we say?

Paris Martineau [02:40:13]:
And good night.

Leo Laporte [02:40:16]:
Good night Famous Edward Armor.

Paris Martineau [02:40:20]:
Goodbye Good Good morning Guga Good evening and good night.

Leo Laporte [02:40:29]:
So long everyone. No matter how much spare time you have, twit.tv has the perfect tech news format for your schedule. Stay up to date with everything happening in tech and get tech news your way with twit.tv. Start your week with This Week in Tech for an in depth, comprehensive dive into the top stories every week. And for a midweek boost, Tech News Weekly brings you concise quick updates with the journalists breaking the news. Whether you need just the nuts and bolts or want the full analysis, stay informed with twit.tv's perfect pairing of tech news programs.

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