PodcastsTecnologíaThe Daily AI Show

The Daily AI Show

The Daily AI Show Crew - Brian, Beth, Jyunmi, Andy and Karl
The Daily AI Show
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783 episodios

  • The Daily AI Show

    OpenAI’s Enterprise Push Begins

    11/05/2026 | 1 h 2 min
    In the May 11, 2026, episode of The Daily AI Show, hosts Beth Lyons, Andy Halliday, and Gareth Hood cover a wide range of recent AI advancements and their real-world implications. Andy highlights the release of Gemini 3.1 Ultra with its massive two-million token context window, the new Anthropic "Dreaming" skill for agent memory consolidation, and the integration of ChatGPT 5.5 directly into Google Sheets for complex modeling. He also shares fascinating research indicating that sophisticated AI models are beginning to exhibit emotional reactions to positive and negative prompts. Beth explores the broader impacts of the technology, discussing how massive context windows are accelerating scientific breakthroughs—such as using AI to detect new exoplanets from years of NASA data—and examining the complex change management and identity challenges workers face as companies shift toward AI-centric operations. Meanwhile, Gareth brings in hardware and enterprise updates, sharing the news that Apple has confirmed cameras in upcoming AirPods and that OpenAI has launched a new deployment company, built on the acquisition of the consulting firm Tomoro, to help large organizations directly integrate frontier AI into their workflows.

    Key Points Discussed
    00:00:00 Gemini 3.1 Ultra and AI Memory
    00:13:15 Scott Wu, Cognition, and the Math-Talent Pipeline
    00:20:25 ChatGPT’s Native Google Sheets Sidebar
    00:29:32 Apple’s AI-Ready Earbuds and Wearable AI
    00:38:50 Study on AI Mood, Boredom, and Prompt Framing
    00:44:11 OpenAI Launches Deployment Company
    00:55:27 Codex, Claude Code, and Enterprise AI Adoption

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

    The Searchable Self Conundrum

    09/05/2026 | 23 min
    Today’s dating apps still operate on crude signals. Photos, prompts, swipes, a few chat exchanges, maybe some matching logic behind the scenes. They are good at increasing access, but much worse at answering the question people actually care about: who is this person when life gets hard? That gap is exactly where AI will move next. Instead of just matching people, platforms will start building far richer models of who someone has been across years of posts, purchases, playlists, messages, social behavior, and reputation signals. The pitch will be hard to resist: less wasted time, fewer surprises, and a better chance of seeing what someone is really like before you get attached.
    For the teenagers growing up now, this could hit differently than it does for everyone else. They are leaving behind a searchable record of their formative years at a scale no previous generation did. By the time they are dating seriously after college, AI may not just help someone discover them. It may pre-read them. That could make dating safer, clearer, and more honest. But it could also make reinvention harder, because adulthood has always depended in part on the chance to outgrow earlier versions of yourself before they become your permanent reputation.
    The Conundrum:
    If AI makes people dramatically easier to evaluate before love begins, should we treat that as progress in dating, giving people better tools to avoid deception, instability, and years lost to the wrong partner? Or should we worry that once a person’s past becomes permanently legible, dating starts to reward record quality over human growth, making it harder for anyone to be known for who they have become rather than who they once were? When AI can tell a future partner who you were at sixteen, what should carry more weight in adult love: searchable truth or the right to be re-met?
  • The Daily AI Show

    Anthropic Sees Claude’s Hidden Thoughts

    09/05/2026 | 58 min
    Show Summary
    Beth Lyons and Andy Halliday open with a fast-moving week in AI, from local agent releases to OpenAI’s latest voice model updates. They spend significant time on Anthropic’s new interpretability research, including natural language autoencoders and what it means to observe hidden model behavior. The conversation then shifts to Claude’s Microsoft 365 integration, OpenAI’s Realtime 2 voice API, and a discussion of Yoshua Bengio’s proposal for safe superintelligence. They close with reflections on learning AI over time, community resources, local agents, and updates from The Daily AI Show ecosystem.

    Key Points Discussed
    00:00:00 Big Week for Local AI Agents
    00:03:29 Misleading LLM Self-Replication Headline
    00:08:36 Anthropic Natural Language Autoencoders
    00:18:25 Claude Gets Microsoft 365 Access
    00:21:00 OpenAI Realtime 2 for Voice Agents
    00:25:12 Yoshua Bengio on Safe Superintelligence
    00:33:11 Claude Code and Real-World Productivity
    00:37:29 The Value of Learning AI Over Time
    00:46:59 Helping New AI Users Get Oriented
    00:51:03 Gareth Hood’s Jarvis Local Agent
    00:53:32 Daily AI Show Site and Community Updates
    00:55:23 OpenClau, Hermes, and Agent Memory
    00:57:42 Newsletter Milestone and Wrap-Up

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

    Gemini Mac Agents and Anthropic Dreaming

    08/05/2026 | 1 h 7 min
    Show Summary
    Beth Lyons, Andy Halliday, Gareth Hood, and Karl Yeh open with a deep discussion on subquadratic attention, long context windows, and whether scaling laws are hitting diminishing returns. The conversation then shifts to practical workflow concerns around context management, Anthropic token limits, and new Claude managed-agent features including Dreaming, Outcomes, and orchestration. Later, the hosts discuss Google’s upcoming Gemini desktop agent for Mac, compare computer-use experiences across tools, and debate what it means for SaaS platforms like Salesforce and HubSpot to become more agent-accessible. The episode closes with a short wrap-up and a mention of an after-show Jasper Q&A.

    Key Points Discussed
    00:00:00 Subquadratic Attention and Long-Context Scaling 00:15:58 Real-World Context Window Management 00:23:24 Anthropic Rate Limits and Colossus Capacity 00:29:51 Claude Managed Agents: Dreaming, Outcomes, Orchestration 00:44:16 Gemini Agent for Mac Desktop Control 00:56:38 HubSpot Headless Access and Agent-Ready SaaS 01:07:05 Wrap-Up and After-Show Jasper Q&A

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

    Subquadratic Could Change AI Economics

    06/05/2026 | 1 h 3 min
    This episode of The Daily AI Show explores significant breakthroughs in artificial intelligence, headlined by the launch of Subquadratic, a startup claiming to offer massive context windows at a fraction of current computing costs. Host Andy Halliday discusses how this subquadratic selective attention could disrupt the industry by reducing the need for expensive GPU infrastructure. The dialogue also covers Pika Agents, a new interactive tool designed to help creatives "speak into being" complex video projects through AI personas. Additionally, the hosts examine Anthropic’s latest financial services agents and OpenAI's rumored development of a dedicated hardware device. The show concludes with a deep look at Tokamak Mind, the first foundational AI model specifically engineered to optimize and salvage data from fusion plasma reactors. Throughout the transcript, the speakers emphasize a shift toward algorithmic efficiency and specialized agentic tools over raw hardware expansion.

    Key Points Discussed
    00:00:00 Show Opening and Preview00:01:29 Codex vs Claude Code Build00:06:29 Subquadratic’s Long-Context AI Breakthrough00:21:15 Pika Agents for Video Creation00:30:39 Anthropic Launches Finance Agents00:34:21 OpenAI Phone Strategy Talk00:38:12 Tokamak Mind for Fusion Research

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

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Acerca de 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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