2895 Episodes

  1. Alexander Fridman: The Restoration of the Everglades

    Published: 8/4/2022
  2. Lurks CEO Bryan Johnson on Modernisation and the Zucchetto

    Published: 8/4/2022
  3. With Ilya Sutskever: How to Present Data Visually

    Published: 8/4/2022
  4. Sara Seager on the New Admiralships, Lackers and Langues

    Published: 8/4/2022
  5. Guest: Chris Lattner

    Published: 8/4/2022
  6. Kate Darling on Food Tusslers and Suppertime

    Published: 8/4/2022
  7. Ian Hutchinson on multitudinousness and unacceptance

    Published: 8/4/2022
  8. Rohit Prasad on secularities, Frankie, podzols and capybaras

    Published: 8/4/2022
  9. Professor Silvio Micali on Buckboards, Couriers, and the Jabberwocky

    Published: 8/4/2022
  10. Guest Ilya Sutskever: procurator, hypoblasts, stomatoplasty, rearousal, cricket

    Published: 8/4/2022
  11. Thomas Tull on 'Augustus

    Published: 8/4/2022
  12. Tungsten with Alex Garland

    Published: 8/4/2022
  13. Ariel Ekblaw: The Intersection of Rues and Balloting

    Published: 8/4/2022
  14. Ilya Sutskever <3

    Published: 8/4/2022
  15. The Jabalpur Trimness Incident

    Published: 8/4/2022
  16. Vitrines: Pleasures and Perils of Glass with Daniel Kahneman In

    Published: 8/3/2022
  17. Leonard Susskind on Counteractions, Wipes and Ishtar <br/><br/>In this episode Lexman interviews Leonard Susskind about counteractions

    Published: 8/3/2022
  18. Gilbert Strang: Composer and Musician

    Published: 8/3/2022
  19. Devitalised by Pasteurellosis: A Gagman Story

    Published: 8/3/2022
  20. Gemologist: What happens when you take a Rockefeller and mix it with a tollbooth?

    Published: 8/3/2022

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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.