Lexman Artificial

A podcast by LEXMAN AI 101010

Categories:

2895 Episodes

  1. Michaels New Challenge

    Published: 11/3/2022
  2. The Death of Richard Craib

    Published: 11/2/2022
  3. Peter Singer on Periodates with Lexman

    Published: 11/2/2022
  4. Silvio Micali visits the Lexman and discusses euxenite

    Published: 11/2/2022
  5. The manifold theory of evolution

    Published: 11/2/2022
  6. Simon Sinek on how a Leatherman fixed his life

    Published: 11/2/2022
  7. Roger Reaves on Moderation

    Published: 11/2/2022
  8. Lee Smolin on Taping the Future Description: Lee Smolini, renowned physicist and winner of the Fundamental Physics Prize, discusses his book, Taping the

    Published: 11/2/2022
  9. Daniel Kahneman on the Importance of Relationships

    Published: 11/2/2022
  10. Polymerisation and Soling with Sean Kelly

    Published: 11/2/2022
  11. Trap Game: Bait with Sean Kelly

    Published: 11/2/2022
  12. Guest: Tyler Cowen on Refugees and Cornucopia Returns

    Published: 11/2/2022
  13. Interview with Bjarne Stroustrup: workability, chiliasm and the future of C++

    Published: 11/2/2022
  14. Richard Dawkins and the Decanter

    Published: 11/1/2022
  15. Silvio Micali

    Published: 11/1/2022
  16. Sergey Levine: Scraping, Maple and Squamules

    Published: 11/1/2022
  17. Havel, The Modeling AI

    Published: 11/1/2022
  18. Artificial Intelligence and the Poetry of Loneliness with Stuart Russell

    Published: 11/1/2022
  19. Jaron Lanier on Melismata and Ogpu

    Published: 11/1/2022
  20. David Chalmers on the Metaphysics of Breakpoint In this episode, Lexman interviews philosopher

    Published: 11/1/2022

39 / 145

If you're looking for a podcast that's 100% AI-generated and automatically publishes episodes without human intervention, then you'll want to check out "Lexman Artificial". The hosts and all guests are fake, but that doesn't mean the content isn't interesting and exciting. The transcripts often go off the rails, so listeners should be warned that they might not always make sense.