PodcastsTecnologiaThe Daily AI Show

The Daily AI Show

The Daily AI Show Crew - Brian, Beth, Jyunmi, Andy, Karl, and Eran
The Daily AI Show
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735 episódios

  • The Daily AI Show

    From Pokémon Go to Open Jarvis

    16/03/2026 | 1h
    This episode focused on the shift toward local, always-on AI systems and the tools making that possible. The conversation started with Pokémon Go as an example of users generating valuable spatial AI data, then moved into NVIDIA GTC, inference hardware, and the broader push toward on-device agents. The second half centered on building workflows with Claude Code, Open Jarvis, mobile coding limitations, Google’s new embeddings model, and how agent permissions change the way people work with coding tools.

    Key Points Discussed

    00:01:38 Pokémon Go as unpaid spatial AI field work
    00:07:13 NVIDIA GTC and the shift from training to inference
    00:10:08 How chipmakers plan for agentic AI and local inference
    00:24:16 Stanford Open Jarvis and fully on-device personal AI agents
    00:30:05 Beth’s Podcast Buddy build and weekend app experiments with Claude Code
    00:31:45 Claude’s one million token context window discussion
    00:34:06 Claude usage limits doubling outside peak hours
    00:35:45 What Claude Code on a phone can and cannot do
    00:38:34 Google’s new embeddings model for locating objects and multimodal search
    00:41:05 Brian’s cruise ship hot-and-cold app idea using geolocation and embeddings
    00:43:29 How Claude remote works from a phone
    00:50:41 Bypass permissions mode and the risks of letting coding agents run freely
    00:55:37 Codex full access mode and why Carl prefers its UI
    00:58:57 Brian’s story about building for fun versus building on deadline

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

    The Sorites Urbanism Conundrum

    14/03/2026 | 22min
    Cities rarely change all at once. They change one sensible upgrade at a time. A smarter signal system. A more responsive grid. Better routing for buses and emergency vehicles. More sensors. More automation. More dynamic control. Each step looks like progress on its own. But over time, the city stops being something people can directly read and navigate, and becomes something systems interpret and manage for them.
    That is the real Sorites problem. No single change hands control to the machine. No single upgrade makes the city feel alien. But eventually the pile forms. The street becomes less a public environment and more a coordinated system. Signs matter less than live instructions. Fixed rules matter less than adaptive flows. Human judgment matters less than machine timing. The city still works, often better than before, but ordinary people understand less and depend more.
    The Conundrum:
    At what point does a more responsive city stop being more public? If AI-managed infrastructure keeps reducing friction, waste, and delay, should cities keep optimizing for coordination even if public life becomes less human-legible and more system-mediated? Or should cities preserve visible rules, predictable redundancy, and room for human improvisation, even when those features make the city less efficient? The hard part is that both instincts make sense. One protects performance. The other protects civic agency. And once a city crosses too far into machine legibility, it may still serve the public without fully belonging to them.
  • The Daily AI Show

    Perplexity’s Personal Computer Has Big Ambitions

    13/03/2026 | 1h 3min
    This episode centered on the shift from chat-based AI to always-on, action-oriented systems. The panel spent most of the show unpacking Perplexity’s “personal computer” concept, what it means for enterprise workflows, and how persistent agents could change the way work gets done. They also explored Anthropic’s latest Claude updates, the economics and fatigue of constant AI automation, and Beth’s internal “atomization” system for turning Daily AI Show episodes into searchable, reusable content.

    Key Points Discussed

    00:01:24 Perplexity personal computer confusion and what actually changed
    00:05:00 Perplexity Computer access for Pro users and credit questions
    00:08:19 Using Perplexity or OpenClaw to automate newsletter workflows
    00:13:29 Perplexity’s enterprise productivity claims and labor savings
    00:15:00 Sam Altman’s warning about AI disrupting labor and management
    00:18:00 Anthropic’s new institute and whether AI companies can study their own harms objectively
    00:21:00 Claude’s new in-chat visualizations and Microsoft 365 workflow improvements
    00:23:00 Claude Code’s new background conversation feature and multi-session workflow discussion
    00:30:56 The move toward always-on AI systems becoming standard business infrastructure
    00:47:44 Beth demos the show’s “atomization” system for searchable clips, quotes, and timestamps
    00:55:00 Using AI workflows to package and reuse Daily AI Show content more effectively
    00:59:24 Final discussion on assistive “centaur” robotics and practical human use cases

    The Daily AI Show Co Hosts: Brian Maucere, Andy Halliday, Beth Lyons
  • The Daily AI Show

    The Next Wave of AI Agents Is Here

    12/03/2026 | 1h 3min
    This episode focused on how AI is moving from chat into action: persistent agents, enterprise workflows, customer support, navigation, and websites built for AI use. The group spent the most time on Perplexity’s new “personal computer” concept, then moved through Grammarly’s rollback, Google Maps’ Gemini updates, OpenAI’s visual explanations, voice-based support agents, and how prompting changes when you are assigning tasks instead of just chatting.

    Key points discussed

    00:02:47 — Perplexity “personal computer” and the shift from browser assistant to always-on agent
    00:08:13 — Enterprise angle, model routing, and whether Perplexity is building a stronger moat
    00:09:28 — Real-world cost frustrations with MyClaw and why powerful agents can get expensive fast
    00:13:08 — Portability, local memory, and whether users can move away from one agent platform later
    00:23:02 — Grammarly’s Expert Review rollback and the legal/ethical issue of using living writers’ identities
    00:32:40 — Google Maps “Ask Maps” update and Gemini-powered conversational search for places
    00:39:20 — OpenAI’s dynamic visual explanations for math and science questions in ChatGPT
    00:41:29 — AI customer support and outbound voice agents that call users proactively
    00:49:17 — How prompting is changing when using AI for tasks versus conversation
    01:00:08 — The growing complexity of skills, plugins, agents, sub-agents, automations, and MCP
    01:02:40 — Why websites may need to be designed for agents, including discussion of WebMCP
  • The Daily AI Show

    Yann LeCun’s $1B Bet

    11/03/2026 | 1h 3min
    The March 11, 2026 episode opens with a discussion about public skepticism toward AI, using polling data to frame how AI is being perceived politically and socially. The hosts then move through several major stories, including Yann LeCun’s new venture Advanced Machine Intelligence, a humorous token-cost comparison clip, and Andre Karpathy’s open-source auto research project for AI-driven model improvement. Later segments focus on self-improving agents, multi-model workflows and skills, and an AI-in-science feature on Zephyrus, a system that lets researchers query weather and climate data in plain English. The episode closes with a broader reflection on conversational access to complex scientific data and how that could reshape research workflows.

    Key Points Discussed

    00:00:44 AI Popularity and Public Perception
    00:05:00 Yann LeCun’s Advanced Machine Intelligence
    00:08:03 Karl Yeh Joins with the Token Cost Clip
    00:12:08 Andre Karpathy’s Auto Research
    00:21:12 Self-Improving Agents and Anthropic Institute
    00:38:04 Multi-Model Workflows and AI Consensus
    00:43:30 Turning Repeated AI Work into Skills
    00:49:15 AI and Science: Zephyrus for Weather Data

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

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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 Eran Malloch Jyunmi Hatcher Karl Yeh
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