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Intelligent Machines (Audio)

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IM 855: When You're Right, You're Right - Why Firefox Still Matters

Jan 29, 20262h 30m

About This Episode

Can AI stay open, ethical, and for the people? Mozilla's president joins the show to reveal their game plan—and $650 million war chest—for taking on Big Tech's monoculture with a "Rebel Alliance" approach to AI.

  • State of Mozilla 2025/26
  • Codeless: From idea to software - Anil Dash
  • Clawdbot is the new AI techies are buzzing about — and it's renewing interest in the Mac Mini
  • Qwen3-TTS Demo - a Hugging Face Space by Qwen
  • I Let AI Analyze My Davos Reporting Trip. Here's What It Missed
  • Dario Amodei — The Adolescence of Technology
  • Proof of Corn
  • Trump admin reportedly plans to use AI to write federal regulations
  • Wikipedia volunteers spent years cataloging AI tells. Now there's a plugin to avoid them.
  • China Lagging in AI Is a 'Fairy Tale,' Mistral CEO Says
  • How Playing Pokémon Became the Ultimate Test of AI's Intelligence
  • Sir Demis Hassabis becomes the latest to say that ChatGPT is a dead-end and that we must turn our focus to world models
  • Claude's new constitution
  • "Infinite Jest" Has Turned Thirty. Have We Forgotten How to Read It?
  • Sony's TV business is being taken over by TCL

Hosts: Leo Laporte, Jeff Jarvis, and Paris Martineau

Guest: Mark Surman

Download or subscribe to Intelligent Machines at https://twit.tv/shows/intelligent-machines.

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IM 864: And Artemis Too - Journalism In The Age Of AI

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In this episode of Intelligent Machines, hosts Paris Martineau and Jeff Jarvis welcome Kate Lee, editor-in-chief of the newsletter and AI site Every.to. The conversation explores the intersection of journalism, culture, and emerging technology, focusing on how Every has integrated AI into its editorial workflows. Lee explains that their approach is not about replacing writers with machines, but rather using AI as a "facilitator." She details how the platform has developed proprietary tools—such as a writing assistant called Spiral and an AI word processor called Lex—to help writers refine their work, maintain consistency, and automate repetitive tasks. A significant portion of the discussion centers on the use of a comprehensive, 400-rule style guide that helps train their AI models to maintain high editorial standards, tone, and rhythm. The hosts and Lee discuss the shifting perception of AI in media, addressing the balance between human creativity and machine-assisted productivity. Lee emphasizes that for her team, AI is an optional tool for "builders" that allows them to focus on high-level analysis and storytelling by offloading technical and stylistic drudgery to their AI partners.

IM 863: Fire and Ash - Hot Takes on Tech Trials

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In this episode of Intelligent Machines, hosts Jeff Jarvis and Paris Martineau are joined by veteran tech journalist and entrepreneur Marshall Kirkpatrick. The conversation opens with an exploration of Kirkpatrick’s latest venture, a browser extension called What's Up With That. Designed to reduce cognitive load, the tool uses various AI models to analyze web content, providing users with real-time insights, identifying truly novel information, and offering structured analytical techniques to place articles into a broader context. The hosts pivot to a timely discussion on AI safety, sparked by recent security concerns at the RSA Conference. They examine the critical risks of supply chain attacks—specifically the recent malware found in the popular Python library LightLLM—and discuss the importance of keeping human oversight when using AI agents. The episode features insights from industry experts regarding the development of new, secure standards for AI agents to manage API keys and credentials without exposing sensitive data. Finally, the group touches upon the broader, shifting landscape of artificial intelligence, including the industry’s ongoing debate over the definition and feasibility of achieving AGI.

IM 862: Ménage à Claude - AI, Human Agency, and Economic Value

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IM 860: You Gotta Get Computer - Claude Surges to No. 1

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