Here. And another song reference, come on up to, of course, you heard of the Solar Eclipse. But have you heard about The Sun Eating Squirrel . I learned a lot this week about the eclipse and some unique stories and teachings passed down by native americans. I think youd like them to. So were going to share some of that coming up all right. Well be watching have a great show, victor. Thank you very much. Lets start the show right now. Well, first of all, this is an Inflection Point in the israelhamas war. President biden has now issued the ultimatum to israeli Prime Minister benjamin netanyahu. Biden says that he will change us policy if more is not done to address the humanitarian crisis, or at least consider changing it its a response to the idf strikes that killed seven aid workers from world central kitchen on tuesday. White house says the president was heartbroken and frustrated well now the administration is waiting to see if israels government follows through. If more aid will re
the same again? what we were seeing was the emergence of something called generative ai, and although this was only a tiny part of artificial intelligence as a whole, it got us all talking about the possibilities and the risks. to the evening, when we re watching our favourite streaming service and it s recommending what to watch. but suddenly, people were interested and fear seemed to transcend excitement. and next week, world leaders are going to be meeting at bletchley park, the world famous computing site, for the ai summit, to discuss all of the issues that al has kicked up. so, we thought we d give you a reminder of some of those issues, plus some of the benefits of letting computers learn from billions trillions of pieces of data. we start with ben derico in chicago, and then marc cieslak s in scotland. ai art has taken a massive leap recently. i mean, this one sold for over $400,000 at an auction at christie s in 2018. with image generators like dall e and stable di
in a dramatic final. morning, all. heavy overnight rain continues to push its way steadily north and east. it will linger for much of the day across southern and eastern scotland accompanied by gail with gusts of winds. elsewhere it is a blustery sunday afternoon, sunny spells and scattered showers, but some of those will be heavy in bunbury. all of those details coming up bunbury. all of those details coming up shortly. heavy and thundery. it s sunday october 29. our main story: the israeli prime minister, benjamin netanyahu, has warned that the war with hamas will be long and difficult after his ground troops entered gaza, supported by heavy air strikes. israel has told residents of gaza city to leave what it calls the battlefield , claiming more humanitarian aid will be available further south. israel says it is targeting hamas, which is designated as a terrorist organisation by the uk government, following the attacks of october 7 that killed 1,400 people and saw mo
images, pictures of things that have never actually existed. and then came text. at the back end of 2022, ai chatbot chatgpt emerged and within a few months people were in a frenzy. werejobs, education, love letters ever going to be the same again? what we were seeing was the emergence of something called generative ai, and although this was only a tiny part of artificial intelligence as a whole, it got us all talking about the possibilities and the risks. and for years we ve been talking about how ai can enhance our lives, from the moment we wake up in the morning and our smartphone recognises our faces to the evening when we re watching our favourite streaming service and it s recommending what to watch. but suddenly people were interested and fear seemed to transcend excitement. and next week, world leaders are going to be meeting at bletchley park, the world famous computing site, for the ai summit, to discuss all of the issues that al has kicked up. so we thought we d gi
the production company podot. also with us is lewis goodall from the news agents podcast and tony pastor, the man behind goalhanger, which is the podcast production company he set up with gary lineker and makes all sorts of hit podcasts, including the rest is history, the rest is politics. there s something very intimate about listening to a podcast i mean, in many ways, a bit like radio where people have their headphones on, they re cooking, they re commuting, they re walking the dog and they get very, very close to the people in theirears. they develop a relationship with the people they re listening to on a regular basis. and we find that when we do live events, a lot of the audience comes up to our hosts and treats them like friends, like they already know them and we have to sort of remind ourtalent, our hosts, that, you know, to expect this and it s just one of those quirks that, in part, i think it s the nature of the way you listen to the shows. here s a quote to