Utility + Function

A podcast by Matthew Putman

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53 Episodes

  1. Chris Miller: Unpacking the Chip War

    Published: 5/4/2023
  2. Anwaar AlMahmeed: Solving the false scarcity problem

    Published: 4/18/2023
  3. Zoe Weinberg: On the future of our informational democracy

    Published: 4/5/2023
  4. Tom Irvine: Sensory Data and Operational Jazz

    Published: 2/13/2023
  5. Björn Lomborg: Climate Change, Public Spheres, and Technological Solutions

    Published: 11/7/2022
  6. Serge Faguet: Who are we, what have we accomplished, and where are we going?

    Published: 10/13/2022
  7. K. Eric Drexler: Envisioning Abundance Through Artificial Worlds

    Published: 9/23/2022
  8. S3-E2: Andre Watson: Personalized Medicine, Our Antidotal Future

    Published: 9/15/2022
  9. Ranjit Singh: Seeing through the Database

    Published: 8/5/2022
  10. S2. E18. George Kurtz - Thrill of Entrepreneurship

    Published: 9/3/2021
  11. E 17. Gaurab Chakrabarti - Understanding the White Space of the Unknown

    Published: 7/9/2021
  12. E 16. Henrik Fisker - Designing for Experience

    Published: 6/25/2021
  13. E 15. Gerald Posner - Investigating For Truth

    Published: 6/18/2021
  14. E14. Gustav Söderström - The Evolution of Music

    Published: 5/27/2021
  15. E13. Kate Darling - Robots: Sufficiently Like Us

    Published: 5/5/2021
  16. E12. TONY ARCABASCIO - From ALife to the AI-Life

    Published: 4/16/2021
  17. S2 - E11 - Sarah Williams - Reimagining Cities

    Published: 3/18/2021
  18. E 10. Shawanna Vaughn - Strength in Community

    Published: 2/26/2021
  19. E9. Alan Murray - Task Above Ego

    Published: 1/26/2021
  20. E8. Kweku Mandela - Considering Ourselves Human

    Published: 1/13/2021

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Utility + Function, a multifaceted, eclectic, and probing podcast hosted by Nanotronics co-founder and CEO, Matthew Putman, covers subjects from Machine Learning, to Jazz, to Community Development. Utility Function, a definition: individual preferences for goods or services. It calculates desire, and therefore, is relative.