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  • 171 - I see dead people…and are AI Agents stupid?
    Feb 19 2026

    Episode Sponsor - Airia.com


    • The AI Compiler Debate: Anthropic’s Claude-generated C compiler has sparked controversy; while marketed as a milestone, hands-on testing reveals it is fragile, significantly slower than traditional compilers (like GCC), and heavily reliant on human-written code.

    • The SaaS "Death Spiral": The traditional "per-seat" licensing model for software is under threat as AI agents begin to do the work of multiple people, leading to massive market cap losses for giants like Salesforce and Adobe.

    • Safety and Ethics Concerns: Beyond the "doomerism" of upcoming AI documentaries, real-world concerns are mounting, including lawsuits against AI-powered surgical tools (TruDi Navigation System) and Meta’s patent for AI that replicates the online behavior of deceased users.

    • Innovation vs. "Vibe Coding": There is a growing shift toward "vibe coding"—prioritizing the speed of AI generation over long-term stability—which critics argue creates bloated software and significant technical debt.

    • The Rise of Autonomous Models: Intelligence is becoming a commodity through high-performance open-weight models (like Qwen and MiniMax), pushing the industry away from human-centric dashboards toward autonomous orchestration.

    • @trikcode

    • @rushicrypto


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    15 Min.
  • 170 - Is AI killing Software or is AI BS?
    Feb 12 2026
    • Market Correction vs. Collapse: Analysis of why the "SaaS is dead" narrative is likely an exaggeration of a necessary shift, where the real threat lies in "sleepy" companies failing to adapt to rapid technological transitions.
    • The Productivity Paradox: Exploration of recent Harvard research showing AI often intensifies workloads rather than reducing them, leading to expanded job scopes, "vibe-coding," and increased cognitive load.

    • The $700 Billion Infrastructure Gamble: Breakdown of unprecedented AI capital expenditures from Big Tech giants like Amazon and Google, and the resulting strain on free cash flow and debt levels.

    • High-Stakes Influencer Marketing: Discussion on the billion-dollar digital ad surge and $600,000 influencer deals used to drive AI adoption, questioning if revolutionary tech should require such aggressive paid promotion.

    • OpenAI’s Financial Projections: A look at OpenAI’s projected $14 billion loss in 2026 and the implications of its massive burn rate for the future of the industry.

    Credit: @Ric_RTP on X

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    13 Min.
  • 169 - I can’t tell is AI moving the needle or not
    Feb 5 2026

    Episode Sponsor - Think AI innovation is complicated or expensive? Think again. With Airia, you can explore the easiest, fastest way to innovate with AI technology—no matter your skill level. Build smarter AI-driven solutions in minutes on a secure, budget-friendly platform. Start for free at airia.com.

    • The "Social Permission" Crisis: Microsoft’s CEO warned that AI must prove its utility quickly. If the industry fails to deliver meaningful results, it risks losing the "social permission" to consume the massive amounts of electricity required to power these models.

    • Legal Tech Bloodbath: A new Claude plugin for legal compliance triggered a massive sell-off in legacy legal stocks. Industry titans like RELX (LexisNexis) and Thomson Reuters saw double-digit drops as investors fear AI will cannibalize business models built on expensive subscriptions and billable hours.

    • The "SaaS is Dead" Sentiment: The episode explores whether we are witnessing the end of traditional Software-as-a-Service. As AI begins to automate complex workflows natively, the market is repricing the value of established software companies that may no longer be necessary.

    • User Pushback and Privacy: Mozilla is introducing a "master switch" in Firefox settings that allows users to disable all generative AI features at once. This highlights a growing segment of the market that remains skeptical or resistant to forced AI integration.

    • Performance Inconsistency: While AI is "crushing it" in coding and data review, it remains "sloppy" in the arts and unproven in sales. Specifically, industry insiders note that AI SDR agents have yet to prove they can consistently book high-quality, real-world sales calls.


      Commercial - https://x.com/tomwarren/status/2019039874771550516

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    14 Min.
  • 168 The Ominous AI bubble Again…
    Jan 29 2026

    Main points

    • OpenAI’s Financial Instability: OpenAI is facing a catastrophic financial burn of approximately $15 million daily, with projected losses exceeding $14 billion in 2026. This is coupled with a mass exodus of key leadership (CTO, Chief Research Officer, and Chief Scientist) and a massive $134 billion lawsuit from Elon Musk.

    • The Component Crisis & Market Saturation: OpenAI's hoarding of GPUs, RAM, and SSDs has caused consumer prices to skyrocket (e.g., DDR5 RAM jumping from $300 to over $1,000). Despite this, newer models like GPT-5 are reportedly disappointing users, while Google’s Gemini has surged to 650 million monthly active users.

    • The "Agent" Marketing Myth: An internal Google playbook reveals that 99% of "AI Agents" currently on the market are merely "marketing buzzword packaging" consisting of simple API calls. True autonomous agents require a rigorous "AgentOps" infrastructure—including four-layer evaluation frameworks and security protocols—that most startups currently lack.

    • Unsustainable Infrastructure & Economics: Experts warn that the AI bubble mirrors the 2008 housing crash. The "fundamental math" is failing: energy and capital costs are quintupling while performance gains diminish, requiring OpenAI to generate $2 trillion in annual revenue (15x current growth) just to remain viable.

    • The AI Layoff Wave: Significant job cuts are being attributed to AI restructuring and automation, with 245,000 tech jobs lost in 2025. Major 2026 layoffs include 48,000 at UPS due to automation and 30,000 corporate roles at Amazon, signaling a shift from human capital to AI integration.

      Referenced X Users

    • @BoringBiz_

    • @nitinthisside_

    • @anon_opin

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    15 Min.
  • Episode 167 - Hey Grok put this girl in a bikini.
    Jan 15 2026

    In this episode, we dive into the murky ethics of AI image generation, the shift in big tech partnerships, and the growing threat of digital misinformation.

    • The "Icky" Side of AI: We discuss the disturbing ease of using tools like Grok to manipulate images and why the lack of guardrails poses a genuine threat to privacy and digital safety.

    • The Death of "Seeing is Believing": Featuring insights from Hedgie on X, we explore "cognitive exhaustion" and why social media users are being forced to shift from baseline trust to constant skepticism.

    • Big Tech Shakeups: Is ChatGPT losing its crown? We break down the massive news of Apple reportedly pivoting to Google Gemini for its "Apple Intelligence" initiatives.

    • The Plagiarism Problem: We look at the data behind Claude 3.7 Sonnet’s ability to reproduce entire novels and ask the hard question: Are these revolutionary tools just high-tech "plagiarism machines"?

    @Rahll

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    12 Min.
  • 166 - Are white collared jobs cooked? What happened over break? AI news and more
    Jan 8 2026

    In this episode, we separate the AI hype from the reality of the 2025 job market and look at why the "AGI" promises of tech founders haven't yet materialized. From "AI washing" in corporate layoffs to critical privacy alerts for Gmail users, here is what you need to know:

    • The "AI Washing" Trend: Ryan explores why companies are using AI as an excuse for layoffs, arguing that replacing human customer service and coders with AI is often a move for headlines rather than actual efficiency.

    • The Innovation Plateau: We discuss whether AI development has hit a wall; while early progress was lightning-fast, current updates feel like minor adjustments rather than revolutionary leaps.

    • Coding vs. Vibe Coding: While tools like Claude Code are making development easier for non-coders, the CEO of Cursor warns that "vibe coding" can lead to shaky foundations and crumbling infrastructure without human oversight.

    • Privacy Red Alert: A crucial breakdown on why Google has automatically opted Gmail users into AI training and the specific steps you must take to opt-out and protect your private data.

    • AI Failures & Market Shifts: From a lawyer losing his career over fake AI citations to ChatGPT's recent 22% traffic drop following the Gemini 3 launch, we look at the growing skepticism surrounding LLM reliability.


      Claude coding - https://x.com/emollick/status/2008253907701821650

      @emollick

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    14 Min.
  • 165 - Its Quiet…Too Quiet on the AI front
    Dec 11 2025

    Some more thoughts check out the substack -

    https://ryanoilrig.substack.com/p/the-pendulum-is-swinging-on-ai

    • The Quiet Front: We discuss the recent lack of major, "sock-blowing-off" AI updates and debate whether this lull is due to the holiday season or a sign that the pace of innovation is slowing down.

    • AI-Proof Careers: We tackle a listener question about finding career paths safe from AI takeover, discussing the value of physical trades, the "small physical component" theory (like dentistry), and why predicting the future remains impossible.

    • The "Dark Leisure" Debate: We explore Fabian Stelzer's intriguing theory that people hide their AI use not out of shame, but because the traditional labor compensation model offers no economic incentive to share productivity gains.

    • The Dark Side of AI Pranks: We review a disturbing real-world example: the Florida woman who used a homeless man’s AI-generated viral image to file a fake assault report, underscoring the serious ethical consequences of synthetic media.

    • The Human Renaissance: We conclude with a final thought from Laura Matsue, appreciating how the increasing "synthetic" nature of the internet is driving people back to "old ways"—physical books, in-person meet-ups, and a greater appreciation for human connection and presence.

    Find the Contributors:

    @Ryanmariebach78 (Ry)@fabianstelzer (Fabian)@lauramatsue (Laura Matsue)


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    11 Min.
  • 164 - ChatGPT under the gun?
    Dec 4 2025
    • ChatGPT is facing scrutiny ("under the gun") following recent developments, though the episode notes indicate a general lack of excitement over Thanksgiving updates like Kling 01 and Runway gen 4.5.
    • The future of coding is seen as mostly AI-driven, with a mention of Mark Zuckerberg's prediction that all coding will be done by AI within 18 months.

    • Major business developments include a partnership between Suno and Warner Music Group, and the expected roll-out of ads in ChatGPT responses by OpenAI.

    • The financial relationship between OpenAI and Nvidia remains undefined, with the Nvidia CFO noting no definitive agreement, supporting the podcast's long-held view that many agreements are non-concrete and OpenAI's profits may be lower than perceived.

    • A strong debate exists regarding the monetization and competition in the AI space, with arguments suggesting that Google's strategy with Gemini (potentially running ad-free and leveraging its search monetization) could force competitors to operate at a loss until they bleed out, giving Google a nearly unfair market advantage.

    @maxescu@slow_developer@Ross__Hendricks@signulll

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    12 Min.