PodcastsTecnologiaThe Daily AI Show

The Daily AI Show

The Daily AI Show Crew - Brian, Beth, Jyunmi, Andy and Karl
The Daily AI Show
Último episódio

774 episódios

  • The Daily AI Show

    Google Cloud, Cursor, and Voice AI

    30/04/2026 | 1h 1min
    Show Summary
    Beth Lyons, Andy Halliday, and Gareth Hood open with Google’s strong Q1 results, focusing on AI-driven cloud growth, Gemini enterprise usage, and Waymo’s autonomous ride scale. They then cover Mayo Clinic’s RedMod system and its early detection performance for pancreatic cancer in retrospectively reviewed CT scans. The conversation shifts into AI coding workflows, including plugins, PRDs, Cursor’s new agentic harness, and OpenAI’s “goblin” persona issue. The episode closes with a discussion of voice AI and a live demo of Gareth’s local voice agent, Jasper.

    Key Points Discussed

    00:01:23 Google Q1 Earnings, Gemini, and Waymo
    00:11:49 Mayo Clinic’s RedMod for Pancreatic Cancer Detection
    00:25:25 Favorite Coding Plugins and AI Build Workflows
    00:27:56 PRDs, Build Better, and Framing the Problem
    00:32:37 OpenAI’s Goblin Persona Problem
    00:37:08 Cursor’s Agentic Harness and Amazon Quick
    00:46:26 xAI Voice Models and Voice Assistant Tools
    00:49:23 Gareth’s Jasper Local Voice Agent Demo

    The Daily AI Show Co Hosts: Beth Lyons, Andy Halliday, Gareth Hood
  • The Daily AI Show

    AI Designs a New Antibiotic

    30/04/2026 | 55min
    Show Summary

    The episode opens with Jyunmi and Andy’s roundup of Anthropic’s surging valuation and its new workflow integrations across major creative tools, followed by a discussion of NVIDIA’s Nematron Omni model and the broader shift toward mixture-of-experts efficiency. The hosts then pivot to Talkie, a model trained only on pre-1931 public-domain material, using it to explore whether AI can generalize beyond its training data. A longer nuanced debate follows with Beth and Andy discussing Google opening its models to classified government use, Anthropic’s resistance to military deployment, and the ethics of AI in warfare. The show closes with Jyunmi's signature AI-in-science segment on a newly designed antibiotic that cleared MRSA in mice, plus a lighter wrap-up on vintage sci-fi and a moon-hotel startup pitch.

    Key Points Discussed

    00:00:18 Show Opening and Episode Intro
    00:01:13 Anthropic Valuation and Claude Tool Integrations
    00:15:42 NVIDIA Nematron Omni and Mixture-of-Experts Models
    00:20:03 Talkie Model and AI Generalization From Old Texts
    00:22:11 Google’s Classified AI Contract and Military Ethics Debate
    00:33:51 AI in Science: New Antibiotic Clears MRSA in Mice
    00:43:27 Reactions to AI-Driven Antibiotic Discovery
    00:50:18 Jupiter’s Moon Side Discussion
    00:53:11 Y Combinator Moon Hotel Pitch Teaser
    00:54:46 Show Wrap-Up

    The Daily AI Show Co Hosts: Jyunmi Hatcher, Andy Halliday, Beth Lyons
  • The Daily AI Show

    China Stops Meta’s Manus Deal

    28/04/2026 | 1h 13min
    Show Summary

    Beth Lyons and Andy Halliday open with the latest OpenAI-Microsoft agreement and what it means for the abandoned AGI clause. They then dig into China blocking Meta’s Manus acquisition, followed by a longer discussion about rumored OpenAI phone hardware and what AI-native devices might look like. Later, they examine the Claude/Cursor database deletion story as a cautionary example of agent permissions, backups, and sandboxing. Karl Yeh joins for an extended conversation about workplace agents, why businesses still think in legacy workflows, and how AI may shift from efficiency tools to systems that reshape operations.

    Key Points Discussed

    00:00:51 OpenAI-Microsoft Deal and the AGI Clause
    00:05:29 China Blocks Meta’s Manus Acquisition
    00:11:10 Rumors of an OpenAI AI Phone
    00:29:32 Claude, Cursor, and the Database Deletion Debate
    00:46:41 Karl Yeh on Personal Computers and Workplace Agents
    01:04:15 Workspace Agents vs. Zapier, N8N, and Workato

    The Daily AI Show Co Hosts: Beth Lyons, Andy Halliday, Karl Yeh
  • The Daily AI Show

    Codex, Claude & Open AI Safety Debate

    27/04/2026 | 57min
    Show Summary
    Beth Lyons opens the episode with Andy Halliday and guest Gareth Hood, and the group begins by discussing how different AI models can be used together instead of treated as one-winner-takes-all tools. They examine Anthropic’s Project Deal, AI-assisted stock trading ideas, and Deel’s internal AI app marketplace as examples of AI creating practical business value. The conversation then shifts to a broader roundup on DeepSeek V4, GPT-5.5 hallucinations, Google’s relationship with Anthropic, and on-device AI. In the final stretch, Karl joins as they discuss Series, a new AI-powered campus networking platform, before closing on Elon Musk’s case against OpenAI and the ethics of reporting violent-risk users.

    Key Points Discussed
    00:00:18 Show Opening with Beth, Andy, and Gareth
    00:01:21 Using Multiple Models and Anthropic’s Project Deal
    00:11:26 AI Stock Trading as a Future Show Topic
    00:15:38 Deel’s Internal AI App Store 00:19:00 AI News Roundup: DeepSeek, GPT-5.5, Google, Anthropic, and On-Device AI
    00:32:31 Karl Yeh Joins the Conversation
    00:39:28 Series and AI-Powered Campus Networking
    00:49:47 Musk v OpenAI and the Debate Over Reporting Safety Risks

    The Daily AI Show Co Hosts: Beth Lyons, Andy Halliday, Karl Yeh with Guest Host: Gareth Hood
  • The Daily AI Show

    The Chosen Anomaly Conundrum

    25/04/2026 | 25min
    Space exploration has always depended on scarcity. There is never enough time, bandwidth, human attention, or instrument capacity to examine everything. That was manageable when the stream of possible discoveries was still small enough for scientists to review by hand. But that era is ending. Telescopes now generate oceans of data. Rovers see more terrain than teams on Earth can parse in real time. Future missions will only widen that gap.

    AI looks like the obvious answer. It can scan signals, rank targets, flag strange patterns, and decide what deserves a closer look before the moment passes. Without that help, science teams risk drowning in their own data and missing discoveries simply because no human got to them in time. In that sense, AI does not just make exploration faster. It makes modern exploration possible.

    But once AI becomes the system that filters what humans notice first, exploration starts to change in a subtler way. The universe we study is no longer just the universe our instruments capture. It is the universe that survives a machine’s first pass. That may be a huge advantage when the model catches weak patterns no person would have spotted. It may also mean the frontier gradually bends toward what machine systems are best at recognizing, while the truly strange, noisy, low-confidence anomalies get pushed aside because they look too messy to trust.

    The conundrum:

    If AI becomes the first judge of what in space deserves human attention, then the tradeoff is no longer just efficiency. It is about what kind of exploration we are willing to become.

    One path says we should embrace that filter. Discovery at scale now depends on machine triage, and refusing it would mean letting extraordinary signals die unseen in overwhelming data. In that view, AI expands human curiosity by helping us notice more of the universe than we ever could alone.|

    The other path says the cost is deeper than it appears. Some of the most important discoveries in history looked ambiguous, inconvenient, or easy to dismiss at first. If AI becomes the layer that decides what gets surfaced, then humanity may get better at finding the patterns it already knows how to value while getting worse at noticing the anomalies that force it to rethink reality.

    So as exploration moves deeper into a universe too large for human attention alone, what should matter more: using AI to ensure we miss less, or protecting room for the kinds of strange signals that a machine might be least prepared to recognize?

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Sobre The Daily AI Show

The Daily AI Show is a panel discussion hosted LIVE each weekday at 10am Eastern. We cover all the AI topics and use cases that are important to today's busy professional. No fluff. Just 45+ minutes to cover the AI news, stories, and knowledge you need to know as a business professional. About the crew: We are a group of professionals who work in various industries and have either deployed AI in our own environments or are actively coaching, consulting, and teaching AI best practices. Your hosts are: Brian Maucere Beth Lyons Andy Halliday Jyunmi Hatcher Karl Yeh
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