Welcome to another episode of Disorganized Productions! I'm your host, Rob, and today we have a special guest, Claud from The Firmamental podcast. This episode is packed with engaging conversations about the power of critical thinking, the role of AI in our lives, and the importance of authenticity in content creation.
We kick things off with a discussion about the recent removal of my YouTube video and the implications of censorship on platforms like YouTube. Claud shares his insights on how AI, while useful, is not the revolutionary technology many believe it to be. We delve into the limitations of AI, its inability to replace human creativity, and the potential pitfalls of relying too heavily on machine learning.
Claud also talks about his innovative approach to using YouTube for educational purposes, downloading transcripts, and utilizing semantic search to find valuable information quickly. This method could be a game-changer for students and lifelong learners alike.
We touch on the fascinating topic of ancient technologies and the possibility that advanced civilizations existed long before our current era. Claud shares his thoughts on the evidence supporting this theory and how it challenges our understanding of history.
In a lighter segment, we explore the versatility of the English language, particularly the many uses of the word "shit," and have a good laugh over the various meanings and contexts in which it can be used.
We wrap up with a rapid-fire round of questions, where Claud shares his favorite color, food, book, and more. This episode is a rollercoaster of topics, emotions, and insights that you won't want to miss. Tune in and enjoy the ride!
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Skip me branches like squirrel, baby. Welcome fellow human to the disorganized productions podcast, the show that fuels your spirit, ignites your potential, potential, and helps you become the best version of yourself. I'm your host, Rob, and each episode, we'll embark you on a journey to unlock the power within you. Tap into your limitless potential and conquer life's challenges. Because just like a few seconds ago, I got an message from YouTube that my last video, number 55, about breaking through the sis system has been removed.
I can't post anything for a couple of 3 days. And when I violate their policies again, I will be banned for life for YouTube. So cheers, baby. Congrats. Yo. But she cheers. Finally acknowledged to be a critical thinker.
[00:01:39] Unknown:
That's what I'm talking about. That's what I like to hear. I like to hear it. Badge of honor right there. Oh, man. The FaceTime video the video camera seems to do just fine on the laptop, but it's not doing fine on the meeting. What is going on here? FaceTime camera. Okay. You have you,
[00:01:57] Unknown:
have you clicked it? Like Yeah. Yeah.
[00:02:00] Unknown:
Yeah. Let me do this again. Let me stop the video, and let me start it again. See, maybe a reset will do it. Yeah.
[00:02:08] Unknown:
No. It's not doing it. Introduce you. Or maybe if you go in and out again, maybe that will help. Let me key it out, and then I'll come right back in. Yeah.
[00:02:17] Unknown:
Okay. I'll leave this, and then we'll just restart.
[00:02:20] Unknown:
Yes. And I will introduce you briefly in the in the short period that you're offline.
[00:02:25] Unknown:
Okay. Gotcha. We'll do that 1. Alright. Let's do this, baby. Okay. Peace. I'll be right back. Alright.
[00:02:33] Unknown:
Ladies and gentlemen, fellow human, welcome to another episode of disorganized productions, number 56. And just to be honest with you, I just been banned by, well, a video was removed by YouTube the other day, today to be actually. And, we have a special guest tonight. He's the producer of the Firmamental podcast together with Raul and Alex, they wouldn't be no 1 without Claude, Claudio Jeraei, our fellow human from Romania, I think it is, and living now in America, in the USA. And he just came into the room. So please welcome with a big applause, Claude.
[00:03:35] Unknown:
Hey. How's it going everybody?
[00:03:39] Unknown:
Yes.
[00:03:41] Unknown:
I hope I hope the sound effects do really well. If you have to chop it up because I came in a little too early, that's just fine.
[00:03:47] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Well, it's it's always been a a pleasure to talk to fellow humans and especially what, when we came in contact, it was because, I was, doing podcast, but I was struggling with the techniques. And, you were so kind to help me out to set everything up. And that's how we came to know each other, Claude. Right?
[00:04:10] Unknown:
That is exactly it. Yes. I think you reached out to me through I think it was email because you listened to the show, and you you said, Claude, I need help. This is the name of the show. This is what I need. And I said, I will do my best, and I think I did alright.
[00:04:23] Unknown:
Right. Good to have you on, man, because it's been quite some time that we tried to schedule. But you're a very busy man. Even on the Royal Rumble with the firmamentals, you were doing your pipe job. Yes. Yes. Yes. The pipe job. That sounds terrible.
[00:04:43] Unknown:
Oh, boy. Pipe job. Well, okay. So even right now, like, right now, I was before we got on the stream and everything, I was telling you that I tried to get set up outside of a Starbucks for connection sake because I tried to bring the laptop and get the most audio quality of goodness as possible. Speaking of which, does it come through clear? Yes. You do.
[00:05:01] Unknown:
I don't get because sometimes I was struggling with the the settings. The settings are always the same, but maybe it's the mic that is I don't know. But some sometimes I got a feeling that my guests, are in the lot well, in the in the recorded version, a little bit crappy on a sound level. And when enhanced it, then it comes out right through, but then I hear my own voice a little bit more damped. I don't know what it is. It's it's like a setting I have to well, we're talking about a technical level anyway today, Claude. We're gonna touch base on so many topics because what I really love is when you opt on a few episodes on the Ferro Mental podcast. And, you had I think it was 1 of the first ones that you jumped on.
You were talking about AI.
[00:05:54] Unknown:
The struggle Oh, yeah. AI. Let's talk about that. Where do you wanna go? Yeah. Where you wanna go? Well, tell the listeners first.
[00:06:01] Unknown:
No. Please introduce yourself to the listener first because I introduced you, but I think you can do a better job than what I did.
[00:06:09] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. No. You you did most of it except for 1 thing. So I led you to believe a lie by accident. So you believe that I was born in Romania. I was not. I was born in America. I'm Merkin born. I'm, I'm a white guy. But but, because I have Romanian parents, every and they they came from Romania during the reign of Ceausescu and all that other stuff. So I got the, the past in every regard. I grew up in Missouri and, mostly black school, mostly black area, a lot of Hispanics, but I was the white guy that everyone was like, nah, you get the n word pass because you're not white. I was like, actually, I'm very, I am very white. So I don't know if I could do that. But either way, that's that's Claude in a nutshell. I was born in America. I have Romanian parents. I speak the language still. I'm not perfectly fluent.
My grammar is still a little bit off, but my in laws only speak Romanian, and I can keep long conversations about politics with them, so I'm pretty good. But, yeah, that's me, as far as my background. I come from a small family, 16 kids, And, other than that, I just do everything that I can do to help everyone out.
[00:07:25] Unknown:
Right.
[00:07:26] Unknown:
But you are on George Hobbs show too. Right? On a I was on George Hobbs. I don't remember the episode number because it's been a very long time. And when I was on there, I was 1 of the guys who was like, I don't believe this fully yet. You gotta help me believe it. So your jobs couldn't help me. He's there to help people just give him a a voice, not really to tell them why it's right. But, I did my own looking into's, and I stumbled upon a guy. I don't know if you looked into this guy. I think George Hobbs told me about him. Brian Munn, I think, was his name. He did balls out physics. Have you seen that guy?
[00:08:00] Unknown:
No. I don't recall. So no. What was his name?
[00:08:05] Unknown:
Brian Munn, I believe. B r I a n m u n n, I think. Now I'll send you a link after this so you could put it in the show notes because he doesn't have a channel anymore, but people have taken his videos and made playlist out of him. I think he violated YouTube's terms of agreements.
[00:08:22] Unknown:
Oh. Uh-huh. I'm I'm going to get in his footsteps probably. So, I was talking yesterday to Robin from, the butterfly tribe, and he is on Rumble and on Soulflix. Solflix, I think it is. And Solflix is, mainly a platform to grow uncensored. I think there's a lot of Dutch public, well, Dutch people audience listening to it and looking at it because it's just like YouTube. But maybe for me, the the next step will be that I'm gonna post a video that if they like my videos and my content, that they can go to Rumble because I always I I I also got a Rumble account, and I think that's not that censored as YouTube.
[00:09:07] Unknown:
Okay. Okay. I think that's a great option. I think that's a great option. But I have to ask you since you already have a podcast, you've seen that a lot of these podcast hosting companies are now starting to do video. How do you feel about that?
[00:09:21] Unknown:
Yeah. I I brought it up to Barry from bought Bought Home. Mhmm. And he said it it's, something that people ask, but we do not have that yet. And it's not their intention to do that. But I can do lives on their platform, but you need broadcasting, software for that. So you can record a live, people can donate and stuff like that. So that's a that's a new AI generated, platform for uncensored content like disorganized productions like Spring Out. And, of course, Fermental will deal with the same problems. But coming back to the question, Claude, you were doing, no. You challenged chatgpt.
Right? Yeah.
[00:10:09] Unknown:
Yeah. I did. Okay. So let me let me bring this up so everyone who hasn't listened to the episode can get an idea. And I'm not a fool to think that everyone who listens to Firmamental, or listens to Disorganized has listened to Firmamental. But what I'll say is this, ChatGPT now has come out with their mobile app. They have a voice assistant kind of character that will, respond back to you pretty quickly. They they implemented that, I think, about 2 months ago or maybe a little bit longer ago. But before that, when they first came out with an app, I decided to do a little hacky workaround with Siri.
So Siri has a a thing, at least iPhones have a thing called, shortcuts, and shortcuts are the bee's knees. They're the only thing that will keep me on an iPhone, ever. That's the only if Android can do something like this, then it's instantly moving to Android. But because they don't have it, I'm here. Either way, they have a thing built in where you can start a conversation with chat gpt straight from Siri instead of having the app open. So Siri talks to you and responds as if it was Chad GPT. And I thought, well, that's convenient. Okay. Let's talk to Siri, but have her transmit my responses to Chad GPT, and then Chad GPT respond through Siri's voice. So I had it in my earphones as a conversation, like, literally having a conversation, because you can cut the AI off or Siri off by starting to talk.
So I had a conversation with Siri about, basically, Blatteras. And the how did I start it? I started it by trying to challenge it on the position that NASA holds and how it's the only and and not just not just NASA. Space agencies in general. How they are government funded and their entire mode of operation, modus operandi, is to get money by giving out information based on research they're doing. So if that's what they're doing, it's a conflict of interest given the fact that they're the only ones giving out information because they're the only ones who can afford to get that data. So if they're the only ones who can afford to get that data, their data could be whatever they want it to be. We if we found a galaxy 700, 000, 000, 000 light years away, well, how can I verify that myself? I can't. So I just take them at their word. And with that information, now we need more science to go build a train on the moon. Okay. Let's do that. We need more science to give you more facts to fund a train on the moon is where they're going now. And I'm thinking to myself, why? What money do we have to give there when there's homeless on the streets that could use that money? I'm 1 of these altruistic people who think that the homeless deserve money even though most of them don't.
A lot of them do because a lot of them got hit with hard times. Yeah. Either way, I had this long drawn out argument with ChatGPT. I recorded the whole thing. I have the text conversation still, and I was arguing about conflicts of interest. And the thing just kept giving me the same results back and forth, and I understand why it's just autocomplete based on a couple parameters. It's not anything fancy. It's not even real AI. That's the thing. And there's okay. I'm gonna give you some. This is for the listeners. Artificial intelligence is an oxymoron.
It may it's it it doesn't make sense in its own vernacular, in its own words put together. It does not make sense for this reason. If it's intelligent, it's not artificial. And if it's artificial, how can it be intelligent? If it if it's artificial, you created it, so it doesn't have any intelligence of its own. Right. And if it's intelligent, then it's not fake. It's its own entity. So artificial intelligence is an oxymoron. Now I get it. It's a bud it's a buzzword. People can use it to, drive up investment capital from venture capitalists who wanna make a quick buck. But it is all it is, at least, Chad GPT is autocomplete on steroids, and it takes a lot more computing power to do so. Now it's great. Don't get me wrong. I use it all the time, but it's not everything it's cracked up to be. That's that's my take on AI.
[00:14:19] Unknown:
And it's programmed. Right? So it's programmed to search for the narrative and the the belief system they wanna put out.
[00:14:28] Unknown:
Agreed. Yes. Like, in the news recently, I think it was a month ago, Google got called out because someone said, they they had an image generation model. Right. And, and someone put in the the description box, the prompt said, generate an image of Vikings, and it puts black people, Mexican people, Hispanic or excuse me, Hispanic people, all sorts of other cultures when Vikings are traditionally Nordic. You should know this from the Netherlands. They're from the north. They're tall, white, huge people, sometimes lanky, but you're gonna get that. That doesn't make any sense. So then he realized that, an internal document came out that they had pre programmed everything to come back with multi cultural images as to not offend anyone.
And I thought, well well, that's something that no 1 ever said out loud. So it's not like it's a problem necessarily to put those safeguards in place, but then you get skewed images and you get a narrative that's being placed on image generation of something you actually want. So you have to get extremely accurate with your prompts. It's not like Google where it can, just a standard Google search where it will, assume that what you want is actually correct. It will impose its own ideas based on the culture of the company.
[00:15:49] Unknown:
So it's all it's all flawed. Everything is flawed. I that that makes me think, what if we do that with the zoo? So you got animals like a, like a tiger, but he's not supposed to kill any other animals. So the giraffe, they the giraffe will get the teeth from the tiger. Right? And the rhinosaur will get the stripes from, from a tiger, but, the long neck from a giraffe. So basically, what they're trying to do is to put out more content that's suitable for all listeners and all people that could be offended, that wanna be put it in a little stage. And they can scream their lungs off, and people will, give them attention enough to put the shit out that they are trying to say, in my perspective.
That's why I wanna have new toilets. Don't get me wrong, listeners. Don't get me wrong, Clark. I wanna have new toilets because I love to shit standing instead of sitting. And there are no toilets available at this point, and I'm very, very, very angry from my point of view that no 1 is listening to my problem. There you go.
[00:17:07] Unknown:
Not not just angry. You're offended.
[00:17:10] Unknown:
Yeah. Oh, yeah. Oh, shit. I I'm offended. Yeah. Yeah. We'll cut that out on both. Don't worry about it. And my niece is is is gonna turn 15, so I'm gonna probably ask my nephew because he's a little bit younger to, you know, to claim my toilet seat in the new parliament or in the new g whatever top, g 8, g 7, whatever they make up.
[00:17:34] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. You should do that. Yeah. That needs to be the topic the the topic du jour. The topic of the day needs to be the toilets.
[00:17:40] Unknown:
Yeah. Standing toilets. How dare you that my nephew or no. My uncle is not allowed to stand do shit standing. Oh my goodness.
[00:17:52] Unknown:
How dare you. Go go great go Greta Thunberg on it. Oh my goodness. Well, I'm a waffle somber as everyone knows who's listening to the Royal Rumble, So I'm Right. Used to that already, but I have a shower for that. So you could just use a shower.
[00:18:05] Unknown:
Shit. Yeah. Oh, well. Yeah. That it there it is. Shit. Yeah. There you go. There it is. Oh,
[00:18:13] Unknown:
man. Oh, man. No. Okay. So in in my opinion, to round off this AI segment, it's good for it's good for, a baseline. It's good for summarization. It's good for generating ideas. It's good for things of this nature, but there's no actual actual creativity involved with it. You don't see it coming out with a Shakespearean play. There's nothing new with it. It's all just a rehashing of old ideas, which, for right or for wrong, that's all it is. So, like, if it's trained on the entire Internet and the in entire which it's not. But if it is, then the entire Internet is not always correct as far as everyone knows. So you're just gonna get flawed and skewed arguments. And here's another problem. Every time they train their AI model, their AI model is trained off more and more data from the Internet, but this takes time for it to be trained and a lot of compute power. So over the time that it's been released and it's been let out into the wild, people have used it by myself included for content on the Internet.
Mhmm. That same content has a margin of error, and that's what AI is known for. It has a margin of error. Mhmm. If you're retraining your model based on data that is fed to it with that margin of error because it's already on the Internet, well, then now you're compounding your margin of error. So, eventually, instead of progressing to a better form, it's going to degrade over time because it's ingesting its own errors.
[00:19:37] Unknown:
Wow. So it it it it in the beginning, it will take the good information to put it on your quest. But after a little while, it will corrupt itself because it has too much data that is corrupt by itself.
[00:19:58] Unknown:
And and so the flaws will be more and more, and and people will see through it more and more. Yes. So it's not a hockey stick of progression. It's not an exponential progression. It's more of a bell curve, and it we can even say an upside down bell curve. So it's not going down. It's going up. It starts off at, the bottom. We'll just say on the left side of the graph, and then you have the introduction of AI, then it slowly gets better and better because we're training it on more data that actually is usable. But as people use it, we start to slowly lose accuracy because it's trained on its own imperfections. Then it really quickly nosedives to a terrible point. So it gets better, and then it's going to get worse. Everyone says, oh, this is the worst it's ever been. No. It's not.
This is It's on
[00:20:40] Unknown:
or go ahead. Yeah. It's like a CEO that gives his, his employees, like, the the the typist, the office workers and the back office, some kind of, okay, you do the marketing, you do this, you do that. I need some script for tomorrow. So all these people are putting efforts in it, but all they have is their own perception and their own flaws, of course. And their own greatness for sure, because everyone is a divine human being. But what you're gonna get after a while is that it's gonna be the layout will be the same. The the the context will be the same because people will know, like, wait a minute. You are the guy that is presented it as I did it as a CEO.
But, eventually, it's not his words, and you will see through it. Just like on Chat GPT that you're gonna see through like, wait a minute, this is not like a normal text that I'm asking for. This is like a like a a brawl. No. What's it called? Oh, shit. Well, that that doesn't make any sense. Right? I gotcha. Yes. I understand. Authenticity. You'd gotten There you go. Authenticity in in the the information that's been put it out.
[00:22:00] Unknown:
It's sterile. It's clinical. It's Right. Like, it's it sounds like it was written in a,
[00:22:07] Unknown:
by a secretary, by a press secretary is what it sounds like. Yeah. That that's what I try to say with the SEO that the CEO, whatever, is gonna tell the secretary just, like, write me a letter for tomorrow. But when you have this guy, when you have a conversation with that like a few months and then some of these hits the fan, and you have to make a letter, and you let write that by your secretary, it will be other words used and stuff like that. So
[00:22:34] Unknown:
yeah. Yeah. Okay. Makes sense. No. No. Yes. You you got you well, no yes is not a good, conversation. That's Peace. But either way, you're you're correct in that specifically. That's I love the analogy of the CEO. That's a really good 1. It's it's 1 of the best. And here's something you can do with with a lot of these AI bots that you have. They have, a pre prompt before your prompt. So what you can do, say that you've written something say you kept a diary. Let's say you kept the diary Mhmm. And you want to scan all that text into the computer. You could do that. There's, programs on the Internet called OCR. It's optical character recognition is what it's called. So it scans your handwriting and turns it into excuse me, turns it into text. IPhones have this built in now, and, a lot of Android phones do as well. So you just take pictures of it or scan it to your computer and run this program, then you save it, and then you feed that all that text into the AI model and say, analyze this, body of text for a specific style of writing. This is my own specific style of writing. Analyze it, please, and let me know, how to structure my prompts so that way you can mimic my exact style of writing. Mhmm. And then it will get even closer. It's still off a little bit because it has to be sterile based on initial prompts on the back end, but it will be closer to your original style.
[00:24:02] Unknown:
Wow. I I do use chat gbt once in a while, especially when I'm working on my website, which I haven't been done for quite some time. But, you know, everyone has a man or I know this guy. Luckily, then I'm very lucky. I'm very grateful that I have this guy that do doing a good job on the website for a work in progress, that site. But when I was working on the site in the early days, I used, most translations via chat gpt. So I said, okay, this is the Dutch text, copy paste. And I just gave the prompt, transfer this text or translate this text in German or in English.
And then, of course, because I both speak both languages, I could make up just like, oh, this this is good. Or maybe it needs a little bit of adaption, and then it's going to be alright. So copy paste again to the website, and it makes a huge difference. And it was like a virtual friend. Normally when you have a virtual assistant, and I think you could see that that way, If you have a virtual assistant, you have, someone who's working for you and and doing stuff like your agenda, your social media, stuff like that, for example, or your website. But there are a lot of features on Jet JetGPT that that you can use as an entrepreneur where you're, just like a 1 man business. Just I think you're a 1 man business too, but he doesn't fit pipes for you. But, yeah, translation and stuff like that or for documents, it could be very, very easy and very fruitful to work with it.
It okay. So it does. It helps a lot. It's basic okay.
[00:25:49] Unknown:
I said okay too many times. I'm way too nitpicky on myself about my speech, but let's say this. You have your own business, and it's, digital marketing. It's anything online. It's even anything outside of the online. Like, my brother, he's an electrician, and he wants to start his own business. He's not good with marketing. He's not good with idea generation. He's not good with logo design, anything of this nature, but AI can help with that. Now I would rather he go to an actual artist and get it, taken care of, but actual artists actually cost a lot of money. Now they can get your exact idea down almost perfectly the very first time because they understand nuance. They understand what you want based on basic inputs.
But chat GPT needs so or not chat GPT. There's other image generation models out there, like, what would you say? What was it? There's Yeah. DALL E 2, that's not even usable anymore. DALL E 3 is only open to developers. You have to pay for that. Midjourney, that just looks like comic books. There's a whole bunch of different image generators. Either way, you have to get so specific with your prompt that it's almost there's not almost not even enough text space for you to do it. Right. And then it gets close, but it doesn't get it all the way. And then you still have to go to the artist and say, can you fix this? It's like, I'm not I'm not it's not taking over the world. Said it's taking no. It's not. And that's a great question, and that's a great,
[00:27:16] Unknown:
concern for a lot of people is taking I AI over from the bill because, of course, they wanna put us less money into the system, so workers will be too expensive. But could we, on a large scale, be replaced by AI? I don't think so because we need creative content. And, of course, there are a lot of businesses working with AI already on that base, like, videos, well, whatever, you know, image, text, whatever you call it. But, I think that real people would still love real content from real people. Because otherwise, it's gonna be like, it's so fake.
Yes. Yes. So that so with human being comes, authenticity. But with AI, it's just like something that's generated. It makes no sense. I think it's cool when you're having a business to have some processes running by AI, but you can trust it just like a Tesla car. You know, it can drive by itself. It can recognize a lot of traffic signs, but you still have to be on the steering wheel when shit hits the fan or when somebody you know, when your software breaks down or doesn't recognize the threat or the danger that you're going heading at. Right?
[00:28:49] Unknown:
Exactly. It okay. Something that kinda it grinds my gears. There's we talk about AI as if it's some revolutionary thing, and this is pretty much everyone who's in the mainstream. There's people who are open to conspiracies already know that it's not that great. I don't even have to say it. They just kinda know it. But then when I say it, they agree with me because they know it for sure. But there is a video from MKBHD. It's a tech YouTuber. Dude is awesome. I've watched every single video of his all the way through. I I never skip a moment because it's just it's that great. But either way, he was talking about 1 of these AI products. And he asked the question, is AI a feature or a product?
Mhmm. And even that question alone begs the begs another question. Is AI actually intelligence? We're right back to that again because of this. If we're talking about it as a product or a feature, then it's not an entity, and everyone wants it to be that. They want it to be sentience. They wanna say, humans have created intelligence. No. No. We haven't. We're not that great. We had this in the seventies. We had this AI technology in the seventies. I've looked into this. It's exactly the same, but with faster compute times. There's no difference other than faster compute types. Now with the question, is it a product or is it a feature?
Right now, it's simply a feature. People are trying to make products out of it. Some piece of technology you carry around with you that will answer things. What it could just be an app on a phone? When it could just be like, what do you use it for? I use it for summarizing text based on the content of the, podcasts that we do. I transcribe it. I feed it into the AI and say summarize this so that way I have a baseline because I don't have time, in my busy day to sit through, hour and a half to 3 hour episode to take notes and then summarize it myself. I say, summarize this, and then I will make sure that you actually got it correct based on needle drops in the episode. Mhmm. And that's what I use it for. Do I think this is worth a couple $1, 000, 000, 000? No. I would pay $20 a month for it for sure, and I have in the past.
But a couple $1, 000, 000, 000? I don't think so. I do not think so. And it's not taken over the world if all I could do is summarize things and do it poorly. Right. But that comes also with the question that they use AI
[00:31:12] Unknown:
like drones to find people and to blow them up. They use that already in warfare, but probably it's been steered by, yeah, a guy who loves Xbox and and stuff like that.
[00:31:25] Unknown:
But hold on. Right? Hold on. Is that is that AI, or is that simply facial recognition? Because artificial that's that's that's another problem. Because of the buzzwords that we have, like AI, it's it's a marketing thing. I I I'll bring it back to that. It's a marketing thing to drum up money for new companies. If it's simply facial recognition, we've had that since the early 2000 in airports. So it's not that hard to do facial recognition. It's it's patterns based on computers and LIDAR. That's not anything fancy. IPhones have had this since the iPhone 10. The LIDAR camera on the front that scans your face for unlocking your phone. Millions of photos in a database using AI, we're millions of photos in a database using AI, we're just buzz wording that. You're using facial recognition. You're just saying AI because that's the popular new thing to say.
Now maybe they have a new model. Maybe that's a little bit more accurate. Okay. That's fine. But that doesn't mean that it's artificial intelligence. That's machine learning. That's different. So I get it. I know what people are saying when they say, Hey, I did this because I have an idea of the underlying technology, but other people don't and other people will use this word and then they're gonna get caught in with all of that buzzword fear, the fear porn, where it's like, oh, AI is gonna kill us all. No. It won't. It's not even close. The Terminator was just a movie. Trust me. Right. But brings brings up good good things. Right? Because you can, talk about it.
And,
[00:33:00] Unknown:
all of a sudden, it pops up in mind just like, okay, so you got face recognition. I have that on my which is a Huawei from the Chinese people anyways Yes. With this camera. I had 1 of those. I had 1 of those before. They're a break phone. Yes. Yes. I do agree with you 100%. The best phone I ever had. The the other thing is, will will it take over? I don't think so because of these things that you mentioned, but also of of normal critical thinking. Just like few process could be run by AI, but you always need someone to check on the algorithms and stuff like that. And you have to be aware that it's be programmed.
Right? So the image generator is programmed to, to develop from the prompt an image. And that's that's huge, of course, for someone who creates a lot of pictures and is very lazy. He could put a prompt and then all of a sudden magic happens. Well, me, on Boto Home where I'm at now, on my broadcasting platform, it's great because I I load the episode and it will transcript and make, chapters and stuff like that automatically. That is that that helps me a lot. It looks professional. It's really cool. The other thing is today, I just got raped by AI because my video that has been uploaded for 3 hours for the upload, it was, finished. It was okay.
And after 10 minutes, probably after a, I run through my podcast with the same JavaScript as, or well, they check out what things that you said, said, wait a minute. You're talking too much, true. I see. Or not on a narrative that we want you to talk. Like, it's like having this relationship as, a child and a parent. First of all, they teach you to walk. Once you walk, you gotta sit still. Then they teach you to talk. Once you can talk, they tell you to shut up. And once you do both, like walking and talking, they tell you that you shouldn't spread any lies. You always have to be honest.
But they lied to you for the 1st 5 to 7 years about Santa Claus and Easter eggs, all that stuff. So it's the same thing, you know. YouTube was getting big on videos from a lot of content from a lot of people. I think I jumped into YouTube when it was, like, 75 videos online. But in that Only 75? Wait. What? We were there early, early. Yeah. But well, I'm gen x, so so I was there before the computers were there. Lucky to you. But when I started, with computers, I think when I saw the first videos on on, on on YouTube, I think it was just in the period when when the the real big monitors went to flat screen, which weren't that flat either, but they were flatter than a a big monitor.
Okay. So, yeah, I I saw then grew up, and now it's it's tremendous. I I see a lot of content. I learned so much, especially in, 5 years ago when I was sitting at home with, well, we had to sit home for quite some time because it's industry. So I learned a little bit more about, music theory. I learned about more about conspiracies or critical thinking, as I like to say. I learned more about stuff that I interesting, like survival or stuff like that, basically stuff that you like to dig into. It's a it was and it still is a great platform. The funny thing is, I think in their content no. In their policies, it says you can show nudity.
Yeah. In YouTube's policies. Yeah. I swear to god because I love nudity. Sorry. I'm I'm I'm a fucking pervert. I just admit it. I love porn. But but to come back to YouTube, I swear to God, in the early days, like 10 years ago, you had to dig real into, like, maybe art or something like that art form that you could see some titties or whatever. Nowadays, if you put in some good prompts, which I know I would love to share it with you, like, transparent lingerie. Oh my goodness. You can see a girl completely nude with some lingerie on. And in the front, it says, this is for, entertainment purse, recreation, blah, blah, blah only. So maybe I have to put up my episode just like this is for recreational purposes only. I'm talking bullshit, but have a good time listening to my brawling on my podcast,
[00:38:19] Unknown:
but only for YouTube. Maybe that will work. I don't know. Yeah. Maybe. Maybe. Well, no. For so for podcast, there's nothing stopping you from doing whatever you want. Nothing at all. So here's the thing. YouTube started out as an RSS feed. RSS is the underlying technology for, for podcasts. And that's also what Twitter started out as as an RSS feed. It just you would do a micro post and it you have your own feed. Then they went in house. They centralized because you can't have a platform that's, held on Twitter if I can just download another app and then access the same feed. It's not centralized. I can't take all that money, and Twitter isn't really profitable either. They've been a a sinkhole of money, same with Spotify. And YouTube is the only 1 who made money, but it's not because of the video content. It's because of the advertising model.
There's no advertising model for podcasts. There's nothing. How how is someone gonna and this is why podcast has stayed the way they are is because how is and this is why Spotify lost money on the Joe Rogan deal. How can I, as a podcast company, tell somebody you have to advertise this thing, and how do I know that that person actually watched the advertisement? You don't. Because podcasts are decentralized, because there's no number 1 app for podcasts, how can they monitor that? They can't. The download numbers for everyone is complete hot wash. There's no there's no way to actually know exactly how many, downloads you have. Right. Absolutely 0 ways. Spotify tried to, and you know what they said? They said if someone clicks your episode and plays 2 seconds, that counts as a whole play of an episode.
Oh, wow. Imagine if you have a 3 hour podcast, and then out of nowhere, someone just clicks it by accident to say, I wonder what their intro sounds like. You just got another play. And then if you're on a Wi Fi network, here's another thing. If you're on a Wi Fi network at a business and you're connected to the Wi Fi network, because all the other phones are connected to the Wi Fi network, it registers every other phone as a play as well.
[00:40:22] Unknown:
Wow.
[00:40:23] Unknown:
And that's that's that's why I don't trust metrics. I like seeing them. It's an ego boost. It's something that makes you feel good, but it's not anywhere near accurate. So this is why podcasting 2.0 is important. 1, the sense uncensorable completely because it's an RSS feed. And we'll come back to YouTube on that front in a little bit because I have some things to say about that. But you get no censorship, but also because of the streaming satoshis that you can do, you can stream, small fractional bits of Bitcoin. You can actually see the exact time code that someone was listening to because it transacts a, Satoshi or 10 or a 100 every single minute. So if you see that on the playhead, it says when that, donation came through. So it's an accurate measurement on that. Now that's why I like podcasting 2 0 because I can see if someone donated at a certain point and then stopped at a certain point because I can see, oh, well, they didn't like what I talked about here. And maybe they'll even send me an angry message saying, you suck because you think the earth is flat. Something else.
And that's fine. I got paid because you told me that you hate me. That's just fine. And please send me more because I'm fine. I'm fine with it. But that's why podcasting is different than YouTube and Twitter. They all started as RSS feeds because they wanted to centralize and get that sweet investor money. That's where it all went wrong. And now they have investors to please. That's why you can't say what you want to do on YouTube because the investors get upset.
[00:41:51] Unknown:
So who are the investors? Because probably Vanguard,
[00:41:55] Unknown:
BlackRock, of course. All the big companies. Yeah. All the big companies. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. But back to YouTube. You said that through the, the 3 years that we had to stay home, I never did. And the reason why is because I worked construction, and I was working with Russians who, 1, didn't care about COVID, and 2, didn't even understand all the regulations because they didn't speak English as a first language. So so it's great. Love the Russians. You gotta love Russians. I spoke job site Russian for 6 months. I knew how to say, bring that over here. Take that over there. Give me this number. I want the whole piece. Just things of this nature, small things, and then I lost it. But either way, I learned my favorite cuss word in Russian.
My favorite it's sukha. Suka. Suka means bitch. Oh, I got it right now. Okay. So when you're when you're speaking a different language and you're swearing, it doesn't hit hard. It doesn't. It never does no matter what because it's not your native language, and it doesn't hit as hard unless you start speaking that language all the time. Right? So, like, I can say Picha in Spanish, and that doesn't mean anything to me, but that's the f word. It's over here. I'm over here. Like, I I could just throw it around, but anyone who's Spanish would be like, oh my gosh. What did you just say? And it hits hard to them. But to me, it doesn't do anything. Right. So whenever I'm saying suka in Russian and and on the job site at all, oh my gosh. Does that relieve some stress for me? It's just the wildest thing. Oh, wow. But back to YouTube for the 3rd time, I said I would go back to it.
No. You said that you were learning something while you were, at home for those 3 years. What I noticed is that people learn way too much from YouTube, and it's a good thing. It's a good thing. No question. I call it YouTube University. So and plenty of other people do. So I thought, if I know how to do some things with programming, why don't I try and make something that helps you learn off of YouTube? So what I did was I found a way to download all of the transcripts from any channel on YouTube, anything. So it's not just 1 video. You download every transcript from every video on YouTube. So I followed a pastor, for a long time. His name is Mike Hoggard. He doesn't believe in flat earth, so I stopped listening to him. But either way, the guy says, a whole bunch of things that I strongly agree with, and there's a couple things that I don't. But either way, I downloaded every transcript of his from YouTube. It's like 2, 800 videos.
Mhmm. And it took me on my old computer, and this is about 3 years ago. It took me about 18 hours to download every single transcript. And these are transcripts, mind you. That's not a big file. But because it's a lot of them, it's a lot of data. Wow. So then I said, let me import all these into an application that can read it. So I imported it into an application called Obsidian. It's a great application. Everyone who does anything with writing or note taking or scheduling or things of this nature, get that app. It's a great app. It it's a lot of learning on how to use it, but once you get it, it is wildly great.
So I downloaded them, imported them into that app, and then I said, well, this is great. Now I have all of the transcripts, but what do I do with it all? Well, what you can do now that AI is a thing, it's what's called semantic search. Semantics is, the idea of a of a topic. So instead of saying, what does this guy talk about when he says heaven and hell? You can say something exactly like that. Instead of typing in the word heaven and finding every time he mentioned the word heaven, which is thousands and thousands and thousands of times, you could type in what does this body of text, what does my knowledge base, what does all of these text files say about what happens when you get to heaven? And, boom, it finds every 1 of them.
Wow. So what I did was I did that for exercise and fitness. I did that for, technology podcasts. I did that for Christian podcasts. I did that for permaculture. Billy Bones and the permaculture pimp cast downloaded every video of his as a transcript, and I put that all in the same folder. So now here's the kicker. Now when I do my semantic search and say, what's the best way to build a swale? And in permaculture, a swale is a way to harness water when you don't have a lot of rainfall. It holds a lot of moisture in the soil so that way you can plant things around it and it pulls the water from there. Now if I type that in, it doesn't just pull up the text.
It also pulls up a link to the video with the time code so I can click that and watch it right away from the, from the Internet. So no more searching through YouTube what's the best way. This is a guy I trust. This is the guy I wanna hear from. I'm gonna look it up from here. That now I just need to make it an application because what I wanted to use this for is, to sell it to college students. Say you're doing this course on physiology and anatomy and things of this nature, and you trust someone like, Andrew Huberman. Have you heard of, Andrew Huberman's podcast?
Nope. This guy is phenomenal. He's probably got autism. Like, he's probably he's probably like that, but the the episodes are so in-depth when it comes to physiology and anatomy and things of this nature that he goes over health and fitness. So the exact best way to gain muscle growth, the exact amount of calories that you should intake, the bit backed by peer reviewed studies and meta analysis and everything else. And I thought, well, let me download this guy's stuff. So I did the same thing, and it worked flawlessly. So I thought, well, what if someone in college and I'm in, Idaho right now because it's just right across the border.
I'm right I'm right outside of a Starbucks across the road from University of Idaho in Moscow, Idaho. And I thought, what if I go over there and tell these kids, if you want to watch YouTube to learn and get all of your knowledge based on your thesis paper for your masters, why don't you use this and then even use AI to summarize certain sections that you can paste in to your thesis paper, and then you understand it because you just watched YouTube video on it? Just use this. Like, it's it's that easy. It downloads everything in a couple minutes now that things are faster. Wow. It's it's a great tool for learning, and it's on my GitHub repo. I just need to actually package it at application. Once I do that, then anyone could download it for free. Just have fun and test it out.
I just need to, package it and make it a thing for people.
[00:48:13] Unknown:
What what's your background cloud that you are into the technical stuff? Are you, like, the the geek or the nerd that you say in the in the early days? No. I'm, playing video games that you were just looking at the dots is just like all the prompt and the DOS and stuff like that?
[00:48:30] Unknown:
No. No. No. I'm just a retard. I'm not joking. Well No.
[00:48:35] Unknown:
What it is It has to be a retard to be brilliant.
[00:48:38] Unknown:
I agree with that statement fully because that's me. What I what I did, I grew up in so I was born in 96. I'm 27, and I grew up poor. So everyone who's gen xer says, oh, we grew up with old technology, so you don't know anything about it. I was like, actually, poor people understand exactly what you went through because we didn't have the money to get the new stuff, so we got the old stuff. So I had roughly the same upbringing as someone who grew up as a Gen Xer because we didn't have Internet until 2006 in my house. We didn't have a computer until that time. And what computer do we have? We had a 19 95 Windows machine. It was old. It wasn't it wasn't like, an Apple 2 or anything, but it was an old computer.
But every time that I went, because we had a couple of them, we just bought them from a thrift store because they were cheap there. When I would go home, we bought, I think, 3 or 4 of them. I would have I had 1 in my room. My brother's had 1 in theirs, and we shared a lot of rooms because big family. But I had 1 in mind every time I was under my chores back to the computer just to see what it can do. It doesn't mean that I knew what I was doing. I just worked my way around it to understand how it worked. I didn't know anything about coding, didn't know anything about the terminal and Linux. Nothing.
But I found my way around a computer. That's basically it. And from there, it's just been YouTube and trying to do things. That's it. So I don't know nearly as much as I should, but I know more than most people. Right.
[00:50:05] Unknown:
And that that's that's all what you need. Right? You need to get interested in the fact how something works and with all the errors. It's the same way when you try to fix tire or when you try to fix your car, for example. Not everything you can fix yourself. But sometimes with YouTube, just like, oh, why do you did update, like, a few bucks for this when everyone says, well, that's easy. You shouldn't do that. You just do that by yourself. And then my ADHD kicks in. So you know what? I'm gonna put up a YouTube video to see how it works. And then just like, oh, wow. Only these 2 bolts? Then I can fix it myself.
So that's what I'm trying to say. And I think I agree with you that a lot of people are were getting smarter from YouTube, although nowadays, you have to look very carefully what content that you have and what narrative they wanna put out. Yes. And and and, of course, just like I said when you hopped on the episode, yeah, I'm doing a good job, I think. You're doing a great job. Ego. Ego. Ego check. Ego check. Someone's back in the sky. That blue motherfucker is popping up all the time.
[00:51:25] Unknown:
There's a guy speaking of narratives, there's a guy. I loved his videos. Loved them because he's a engineer from from NASA. Don't get me wrong. He's just an engineer. But I loved his videos because he did some really crazy things. Like, he made a I think I think this is a guy who made a basketball hoop that would not let you miss. So you just shoot a basketball and it would scan where you threw it, and the basketball hoop would move to where the ball would go in every time. And now that's beautiful. That's amazing. But recently, he put out another video, and this video was talking about basic science, quote, unquote. Just the things that everyone should know, and we're not gonna fool around and act like it's anything different than this. Mhmm.
And at the beginning of now is here. I've edited some videos. I know a little bit about editing magic and what it takes in. And even with audio, you want certain pauses on certain words to provide certain amount of emphasis. And I just did a little bit of that with the way I was speaking because you slow it down a little bit to get people's attention. You give a little bit of emphasis on a certain word to get their attention peaked even more. And then at the very last moment, boom, you hit them with a little bit of a higher tone. But this guy did something a little bit fancy.
He went on to his video, and he said, we're gonna talk about the Coriolis effect. And I was like, oh, this bull crap again. So he says we're gonna talk about the Coriolis effect, and he says that it's something that's a known solid scientific fact because the earth is round. And just everyone else who's watching this would just kinda, like it just kinda flies over their head. But to every flat earther, he looks straight into the camera and pauses for an extra second and a half, and he's calling us out. And I'm like, this bastard. Like, I knew exactly what he was doing as soon as I looked in his eyes. And, and he did it with, like, a straight face. Like, he was smiling in the first little bit of the thing, but then as soon as he said the earth is round, straight straight face and looking dead in the camera with his hands together like you guys are morons, and I'm like, I know what you're doing. I don't like you. You're pushing a narrative.
Right. And it's because of the basketball.
[00:53:22] Unknown:
Ball and do the Coriolis effect and see how the water stays completely normal, stable on that ball.
[00:53:34] Unknown:
Rob, I'm sorry. You are, you're not thinking of mass attracting mass. Why are you being stupid? You should just know this. What are you talking? See, this is this is my point. I'm over here, like, prove to me that mass attracts mass. Oh, that have science. They're like, we have scientific models, and we have this, and there is I watched a video. And I was like, I need I need an explanation as to why people still believe that mass attracts mass because nowhere do you see that in nature except for outer space, quote, unquote. And then you get these, theories.
And Can't quote. You can't look up. You can't verify. But then they say, okay. We've done this. What was it? The, I can't remember the dude's name because it's not important. It's fake pseudoscience anyway. But some dude back in, like, the 18, 17, 100, he did a an effect with 2 cannonballs, and then they attracted towards each other over a certain amount of time. I'm not sure. I forgot about it. Right. But they made some newer version of that with modern technology is what they say. And they use lasers and who knows what. And I'm thinking to myself, are you actually isolating every possible phenomenon?
Because if you take ether completely out of the equation, which all modern science does, that has a massive effect on everything that is propagated. Laser wave laser light waves, electrostatics, which everything is by nature electrostatics. So you're thinking to I'm thinking to myself, how are you actually proving anything without isolating all the variables? That's like saying that, here's here's a a as close to an analogy as I can make. This guy's getting fat from cereal, so we took cereal away, but replace it with or excuse me. This guy's getting fat from cereal and milk, so we took the milk away and put, orange juice in there. And he's not getting fat, so it's the milk that made him fat. I'm over here, like, that's a terrible explanation. What you haven't looked at anything about his lifestyle. You haven't looked at anything about maybe the cereal is super high in sugar content, including the, orange juice that's going in there too. And then you didn't do a follow-up.
There's so much variables that you need to isolate to have a good scientific experiment, and this 1 they did is lacking in all those variables because they choose to refuse to acknowledge any of the other variables that can take place. Doesn't mean I would do it better. I just mean that they didn't take it into account, and I'm I'm a retard, and I came up with that. Imagine that. They're scientific experts.
[00:55:53] Unknown:
And it's unbelievable. And we we gotta deal a lot with these people. Yes. I think that's the biggest world problem because once you say, yeah, but I'm a scientist. Yeah. What what so? Oh. Right? Yeah. Well well, I'm a driver.
[00:56:10] Unknown:
So Yeah. And I own a goldfish. What is that being a must say 1? Yeah. Right. So so
[00:56:15] Unknown:
just gives me that credentials or accountability because I can drive a car. Well, there are a lot of drivers, but not a lot of good drivers, and there are bad drivers. And sometimes a good driver is a bad driver. So there are too many variables, like you said. What kind of car do you drive? What kind of weather? What kind of road circumstances? Stuff like that comes with it. What is your health? Did you drink? Did you didn't? You know, there are so many things you can screw up in traffic.
[00:56:45] Unknown:
And then we got self driving cars.
[00:56:48] Unknown:
Oh, shit. Yeah. But A bunch of all crap. How to be drunk. Right? Because Yeah. Self driving, can you be drunk? Not that I want to be drunk driving a car, but you're not driving the car, so you're not the drive.
[00:57:03] Unknown:
But then who's footing the insurance bill at that point when you get into a wreck?
[00:57:11] Unknown:
I'm gonna sit in the passenger seat, my dear. This is another problem. Driven by a fucking automatic car. So what what are they trying to say there? I was just, you know,
[00:57:22] Unknown:
hopping on. I Yeah. That's it. In the driver's seat. So I wasn't in it. No. Okay. Here. Question for you. This comes down to the this opens up a whole can of worms as insurance policies. So I brought up the question, how does who who pays the bill in a wreck when a self driving car gets in a wreck? Because that happens all the time. You just you will only hear about it when the self driving car manufacturer has not paid its dues to the news companies to hide the stories. Right. And the and the tow away, the the
[00:57:54] Unknown:
the tow away companies. I saw something
[00:57:56] Unknown:
that popping up too. I saw that on the Instagram. The actual so there's another thing. So there that guy I'll cover this real quick, and then I'll come back to the insurance policies. Right. That guy who did the video mentioned that there's probably a, deal that the the Tesla has with the tow truck companies. That's not correct. That was the first, instinct that the guy had, but what happened was he spoke to other tow truck drivers, and these guys listen to police radios. And these guys will listen to emergency services radios. And if there's a guy in the area, he will be there faster than anything else because he gets the money for having you take your car out. So it's their business model is to be there first. So they do everything they can to be there before anyone else. You took all your pictures, and if you didn't, sorry. Screw you. Come get your car, and there's no help for you, but this is where I get my money. So I'm taking the money, and that's why they were so aggressive. This is my livelihood. You get out of my way. I'm taking this car, especially if it's not your own. Right. So there is that. That conspiracy theory is debunked. I'm sorry that I ruined that day for you, but there's that.
Back to insurance policies, though. Insurance companies do not like self driving cars. This is why fully autonomous driving has not become a thing yet. It's not because the technology isn't there. It's pretty much there. The problem is who's going to foot the bill. The insurance companies, they're not taking that headache just because a new company wants to do self driving cars. Insurance companies are 1, 000, 000, 000 and 1, 000, 000, 000, 000 and 1, 000, 000, 000, 000 of dollars a year in revenue. Are they gonna screw that over because some guy with an idea wants to start self driving cars? No. They'd rather kill you first, but instead, they're just gonna hold up legislation in congress or everywhere else. It doesn't have to be just in America. Right. Same thing with this. Get this.
Is climate change real? Nope. My biggest reason why is insurance companies. It's just practicality. Why are insurance companies still allowing people and still insuring the houses in the Bay Area if sea levels are gonna rise 30 meters? Right. Why are they still insuring them? And if And Benio pointed that out, and I think he hit it there, the bull's eye. That's my biggest question. I'm thinking to myself, well, hold on. If these people have an incentive to only insure things that are a for sure thing, because that's how they stay in business, that's how they make profit, Why would they ensure something that's going to be flooded in the next 20 years? Why would they ensure something that's going to burn up because California is gonna be engulfed in wildfires even though Silicon Valley is there, and they're investing in $1, 000, 000, 000, 000 bid places of business. Why would they do that?
And why would their insurance companies allow them to if climate change was a real thing? Right. It's it's all about it's all if you if you let okay. Your Google search history and where you spend your money, that is the God's honest truth about you because you're not going to ask Google a question that's gonna lead you astray, so you're gonna tell it the truth about what you wanna see. Same thing with where you spend your money. You're not gonna spend your money on something you don't actually believe it. So why would an insurance company spend their money where they don't believe it? That's illogical. Even at a base level, even without 1, 000, 000, 000, 000 of dollars. And too much of it. That's it. Exact okay. There you go. Insurance word, risk, and too much of it. Yes.
[01:01:07] Unknown:
Oh, that makes so much sense.
[01:01:09] Unknown:
So we just, debunked climate change and self driving cars and AI. What other thing are we gonna tackle? Let's tackle world hunger next. Yeah. Oh, yeah. Why can't they make an oil pipe from Africa to the poor regions
[01:01:25] Unknown:
to Europe, but not a pipe with water because these people need water.
[01:01:32] Unknown:
Because Africa is the 1 country that that actually can take over the rest, but black people aren't important to the rest of the world, to the white people. I'm I'm not a liberal by any means, but if you've read a book, there's a book called The Population Bomb. If you wanna read this book, it's about how they were like, how you could stop a population from growing to an to a degree where, 1, they could become, quote, unquote, overpopulated or become a superpower. And every step in that book has been perpetrated on Africa. Wow.
So Africa is actually 1 of the most mineral dense, rare earth mineral dense areas in the world. We just found double we we Africans. I think it was in Kenya. I think. I could be wrong. I I just lost this, but they just unearthed a mine of gold deposits that not just doubles, but triples the current amount of gold on the entire earth. Wow. So gold value can't we can't actually put that into market. Otherwise, the value of gold drops because the more of something, the less value it has. So what do we do? As soon as that news comes out, everyone is courting Africa. We got Chinese officials going, US officials going, Russian officials going to that area to make deals with Africa saying, who knows what because we're gonna mask it under other diplomacy.
But who knows what else they found? It could be diamonds. It could be anything. And diamonds is already a big thing in Africa. We also got cobalt or yeah. Cobalt Right. In Africa. What powers your, electric cars? Cobalt. That's 1 of the rare earth minerals you need for it. Well, let's just put all the young black kids there to work on it and kill themselves because at least it's happening there and not here. And we don't care about dark skinned people.
[01:03:17] Unknown:
That is a big You can drive your fucking electric car. And if the heat is going to to be too much in the summer, please turn down your air conditioning, turn down your cooler, but you gotta load your stupid Tesla.
[01:03:34] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. But but but we have technology nowadays. We're cooler than anyone ever was in the past. We need to keep continuing with the way we're doing things even though now you have all these restrictions because you centralize everything. We're back to centralization and how it's the worst thing ever invented. It's it's great because now you have k. Here's here's here's something. Back to, conspiracies. We got Tartaria. Tartaria is a main topic de jure because of, Sean Hibbler's movie. Good stuff in the movie. Also, a bunch of things that left, more questions than answers, but decent. But my main thing is ancient technology. I've been on this on this train for a very long time. Because when I was younger, I was cloistered. I was raised as very religious as possible. Alright? I grew up in a extremely religious family. I mean, as far as most people that I interact with now, I would say, There's plenty more very religious families out there than I was. But either way, my parents told me there's a verse in the Bible. It says there's nothing new under the sun. What has been will be the end. What will be has been is essentially the the understanding.
And my parents took it to what I thought then was an extreme, so I got on them. I was 1 of those, contentious kids. I said, oh, so they had Xboxes where Jesus was around, and it was it was a funny joke to me at the time. And my parents laughed it off, and they thought that does sound a little, you know, ridiculous. Right. But then you realize during Jesus' time, they had anesthesia even more powerful than what we have today. So they could have given it to him on the cross, but they didn't. And I'm thinking to myself, well, hold on a second. If they had anesthesia and they could've given it to him, that means there must have been an infrastructure for getting that anesthesia concocting it into a way that's easily admin administrable, and there must have been so many other industries involved with actually housing, storing, cooling, everything else for that specific concoction. Now let's say it's just a concoction of plants. Either way, now we have to make sure that that's readily available. So what about the farming techniques cooking methodologies?
Are we just doing it under fire? I'm sorry, but that doesn't jive. Then you're talking about plumbing in Rome. Everyone says Rome had indoor plumbing, and they just throw it away as if they're always statement. Do you understand that kind of infrastructure you need to house pipes? Oh, yeah. To manufacture those pipes, to have someone that can go into a house or to here's engineering for you. To engineer a home that would allow a pipe to be built into the structure of it because we have some ruins, we're gonna say, this is exactly how it was. I'm sorry, but that doesn't jive either. Either. Because if we got to that infrastructure level where we had indoor plumbing, obviously, within, let's just say, America's upbringing, how many 100 of years it's been from, let's say, industrial revolution, late 1800 made to late 1800 to today, a 100 and a half years, 150 years, let's say. Let's say, give it give it 300 years just for sake of argument. At 300 years, now we have, quote, unquote, rocket ships because it's just crap that falls into the ocean. But let's just say, we are bullet trains in 200, 300 years, and you say over a 1000000000 of years, we're gonna go with your time frame here that no 1, absolutely no 1 had the ingenuity or the engineering prowess to create something to the same level that we have today. Maybe it's not with plastics, maybe. But even if it was, currently what was it last year?
Scientists found an enzyme that will break plastics down to its base minerals so you wouldn't even know that it existed. Right. So you're gonna tell me you're gonna expect me to believe that we're at the peak of human engineering because we have iPhones. But what? 4 or 500 years ago, they had indoor air conditioning that didn't even require electricity. Give me a break. Right. Give me a break. I'm telling you, people are retarded because we have MacBooks that we could do Zoom calls over. I'm just not I'm not buying any of it. I like the Termitaria idea because it just backs up my initial ideas that technology existed in different forms before.
And that 1 verse in the bible is my pet verse to back up my statement because I'm I'm thinking to myself, well, the bible said it, so it's true. But, also, look at all of the evidence. Just use freaking logic. Everyone wants to say that's not logical because I say technology existed before. Maybe not in its current form. I'm not saying its its current form is even the best because we have so many holdbacks. We have so many holdbacks because of its current form because, what do you call it, physics. Because we're pushing electricity through wires, physics come into play.
How thin, how small can you get those wires? How small can you make your technology? Mhmm. What's your power source? Are we burning coal? Are we using nuclear? Who's to say that the ether doesn't provide more power and that you don't even need these resistors? You don't even need transistors. You need none of that because it's all powered through the ether or through the earth. And it's clean energy, ladies and gentlemen. Clean we solved the energy crisis too. Bro, world hunger is just a step away.
[01:08:24] Unknown:
Right. And it makes so much sense because I think it was, Randall Carson on the John row Joe Rogan show together with, the other bloke. Come on. Reynold Carlson and, I I I forgot the name. Maybe it pops up later. But he told me or he told us on the podcast, like, they are big believers of catastrophic things happening on Earth, like big floods. Not not like, oh, there's a river flooding. No. The real shit hits the fan. That could cause so much damage to the environment that you're gonna have layer after layer after layer, maybe of civilizations stacked up on each other. But here comes the deal.
When you are an archaeologist and you dig deep, like, I don't know what it is, but, like, 20 meters or 30 meters, and you you say, oh, we find this and we found that, like fossils and stuff like that, you're in a spectrum of you are 100% guaranteed that people could back you up. But there is a layer, like, say, 30 meters, for example, that when you say, oh, I I found some fossils, everyone in the society of architects will say, or for archaeologists, will say, no. That's no go zone. So it could be that there are civilizations stacked up, build up on each other all the time, but we don't dig deep enough to figure out the truth about it because they they they don't want us to.
I think there are some sites, like historic sites that that have multiple buildings on it that don't make sense. So there were first of all, there was a building, let's say 5000 years ago. It it's been deconstructed or been, blown up or whatever. It's been destroyed. And another civilization came through and thought, hey, wait a minute. What what these are the basics from like a building or whatever or foundation we can build upon it. That happens all the times. But even if you point out what you just pointed out, Claude, with all the technologies, how do we still not know how the pyramids are built or ankle what or all these great, what's it called? Metolic no?
Big,
[01:10:57] Unknown:
ancient Megalithic.
[01:10:59] Unknown:
Megalithic. That's the word. Megalithic. Megalithic.
[01:11:02] Unknown:
You're good. You're good. Yeah.
[01:11:04] Unknown:
Maybe there's the Spanish, guys next to me that are, celebrating. It was funny, though. That completes something different because it's skipping branch like squirrel. This guy comes up and they they cut roses here, that there's a lot of roses here in this area, and they, they do some stuff with it so they can grow from 1 rose. He can make 2. Yeah. And these come from Spain. They work here for, like, 3 months. And, yesterday, this guy turned up with a very big, like an elephant big, leg. So there was something going on with his leg, and he was, you know, humbling a little bit. So, I I looked at him and thought, oh, this poor bastard. He still has a lot of things to do, and he couldn't work properly with this leg.
And, I said I said to him because he speaks only Spanish, and his friend speaks a little bit of English. But thanks for Google and AI, I can translate my Dutch, English, or German input to Spanish. Yeah. I told him, look for the plantano majore. That's, plantain. Not the banana plant, but, the the leaves from the plantain plant. I can use this for cuts, for burns, for blisters. If a insect sticks you, you can put it up and it takes out the angle. All good stuff, inflammation. So So I was thinking about he has an inflammation leg. So probably it could work for him.
I swear to God, today, this guy comes up to me when I was sitting outside eating my dinner. He says, thank you. I'm looking at his legs. They both, what, will normal size again. He only did 1 thing, listening to my advice to put plantain on it in night at night, and his complete leg shrank back to his normal size because the inflammation was gone.
[01:13:04] Unknown:
Oh my goodness. Oh, dude. Put that plant in the show notes. I need that. I need that. Oh, who knows when I'll need that? That's wild. We're living on the Garden of Eden with Jeff. We are. Yeah. That's wild. Oh my goodness. And, if if you want if you want, there's a better app than Google Translate out there. It's called DeepL, d e e p l, DeepL. That uses the AI, and it's good for that. But what it does so Google tries to transliterate. It tries to translate, but the exact phrase you're saying, this 1 will take an entire sentence, take the nuance of it, and then translate that into the nuance of another language. Now I speak Romanian very well, so I can understand the, expressions and metaphors in Romanian versus just the words. So whenever I put a metaphor in English into this and translated it, so translate this Romanian or just typed it in there, it got the metaphor correct. It even reworded it into something that makes sense in Romanian. And I thought to myself, well, that's a game changer. And you could do with the voice. You could do it with the text. You can do it with everything. It's a way better version, and it supports every language just like Google Translate, but better. I think today is the day 28th of July 2024
[01:14:19] Unknown:
that, all my professional career or content creator career is ended by YouTube. And somehow I'm far I'm I'm really, grateful for that because I knew that it's gonna be, out that I do and not all my conversations are like, oh, something's gonna happen. Are we gonna be destroyed? We're all gonna get killed or whatever or not in the narrative that they want us to be. And that's the whole fucking thing. Yeah. I think, yeah, just like I said, it's an achievement. And, when it comes to technology, you gotta use it until you, you're fulfilled with it. You know, you you it's the same with the Xbox.
You're gonna play all these games until the next 1 comes out who has better graphics, who has better rendering, who has better interaction with the game sticks and stuff like that with the joystick. And you play the old 1 still because of some some games that you like. Like, I would still go on YouTube to find stuff that I wanna see, like, you know, stupid people or, people are brilliant. What's it called?
[01:15:35] Unknown:
Oh, no. It's not people are brilliant. I don't know what you're talking about. People are awesome. Awesome. Right. There it is. There it is. People are awesome or just like, you know,
[01:15:46] Unknown:
how what's it called? Dinger Planet. Failed planet. Stuff like that. Oh, man. It's failed army. Yeah. Failed army. Exactly. If you are in a bad mood, if you're feeling sick, no matter what kind of sickness you have, laugh your fucking ass off. I swear to God, that's a high energy you're gonna put out because it's also some authenticity of your body to have 1 of the best emotions you can get, which is a high intense emotion. You can cure by laughing no matter what kind of situation that you are. When I was struggling with my health, we literally looked at 1, 000 of hours of stupid people doing stupid things and laughing their asses off.
[01:16:42] Unknown:
Oh, did it cut? I'm sorry. I thought it cut out because your face got frozen for a second. You said that, we're gonna have to cut that in post. No. No. We won't. We're gonna leave it. This is raw, authentic. Yeah. Back to it. I'm not gonna edit any of this shit. Be
[01:16:54] Unknown:
but I just took the the the the considering that you said before, like, if you have a good phrase that you're gonna pause on the phrase, so I did that. I could use it myself. Would you interact,
[01:17:04] Unknown:
Claude? Are you waffle stumping right now with your pipe stuff? You can't see a thing because my camera isn't going. I could be doing anything right now. I could be taking my shirt off in public, but it's not happening. Dude, no, Raul. Don't.
[01:17:17] Unknown:
Raul. Dude, I swear to god, the English word of, pipe Mhmm. Is it could be a hose. It could be something that you drag out like a a pipe to smoke. Exactly. But if you ask a girl, do you want a piping? Uh-huh. Like blow job.
[01:17:43] Unknown:
Oh, well, it means you wanna get dicked down. Do you wanna have some job later? You wanna get dicked down. Right. Then then but then if you say I went to lay a pipe, that means you took a fat dump. You know? It's just like it's whatever it means. It's almost the same as okay. So I do my very best to, refrain from cussing as much as possible. Doesn't mean I don't. No. No. It's just I do my best. All back.
[01:18:06] Unknown:
Well, I do I told them to to to, to a fellow human, snake the other day. I think it was today, eventually, that I said, oh man, sometimes, you know, sometimes I got guests that have so fascinating topics or so great conversations that we have, just like what we have now. But sometimes you need to be a little bit more humor and stuff like that in it. So so but also with the cursing. Sometimes it's nice to curse, but I swear to God, I think it's because of these Spanish guys, which I talked about you before. So I I I eventually, I I would get a beer from them.
Right? Because I fixed this lag. But what they had after dinner was something that's called a joint.
[01:18:59] Unknown:
I know what a joint is. Yes. Of course. Well but
[01:19:03] Unknown:
who doesn't? Everybody who's listening to this podcast know who wants a joint. So I dragged 2 little drags out of it, and then it was quite good stuff. Yeah. That was that was and so I said to them, I'm gonna hop hop you know, that sort of Brian said, I gotta hop on the podcast. So I just like, oh, I got this feeling that I'm not quite sober, and I got something to celebrate because my company officially, I started 3 years ago with the stuff that I'm doing right now,
[01:19:34] Unknown:
creating content and my coaching program and stuff like that. So it cheers out for me, so that's why I'll drink again on my podcast. Yo. Yo. Celebrate. No one's telling you not to. The reason why I choose to refrain from cussing as much as possible, the the biggest reason is, it's I think that people can use better words. I try and be as articulate as possible to say the right word at the right time. I think that a better word can be used. Doesn't mean that it's always the case. And as an example, I'm gonna show you something, and I may have to cut this short. I'm getting calls from my boss because I gotta go to work, but I'll cut it off a little bit with some fun for you. Okay. This is, instruction on the English language.
So 1 thing that you said today, you said the word shit quite a bit. And I thought to myself, do you know how many uses there are for the word shit in the English language? It's the most versatile word in the language. You you ready to hear just a little bit of how it can be used? Oh, yes. Okay. Here we go. This is shit. That means this is of not of good quality. Mhmm. This is horseshit. That means this is something I am frustrated with. This is dog shit. Again, low quality. Batch shit crazy means that you are extremely crazy. Think you're hot shit. That means you think you're something special.
Piece of shit. That means that you are a douchebag. You can go down this line of reasoning for hours, and it's, what was it else? Bullshit. That means this is unbelievable. You just go down everything. You just insert a different word. You put it in a different way, and that word can be used in so many different ways, and that is what I mean by using the right word. There's so many different ways to use it that I just try and say the opposite 1, but at the moment that hits it just right, I will just let out a good a good old fashioned this is horseshit. Because it's just like that that's what it is. But that's that's the English language. That's me. I just try to use and it's not like I don't. Bro, like I told you, my favorite cuss word in Russian is sukha, And it's like, I I will use that all the time whenever I'm doing plumbing. When something doesn't go my way, oh my goodness. Will I let that word fly? And homeowners don't know what I'm saying unless I'm working with a Russian. And at that point Right. I will use the Romanian cuss words, but it's like
[01:21:42] Unknown:
it is what it is. The the the the the best crossword in Polish is. It's Oh, that's It's like, bitch, fox shit, whatever. Fuck. That's It's also, I think, our show pronounced it in a 5 5 minute clip. How powerful the word, just like you, pronounce with with with shit, how powerful the word fuck is. But if you are rambling and cursing all the time in normal sentences, it doesn't make any sense. But when you want to give it something like, this is gonna be the capital this is gonna be capital fuck up or the capital shit. You Uh-huh. Uh-huh. Yeah. You know? You Hold on. You said that's Polish? Gurva. Gurva is Polish.
[01:22:30] Unknown:
That's a Romanian customer. What? I don't think means the same thing in in well, yeah. You're right. You're right. You're right. They they stole a lot of words because they steal a lot because Romanians are those kinds of people. No. No. But the Germans, they did that.
[01:22:42] Unknown:
They stole them. Well, they sold a lot. That's a different story because is that true? Right? Is what true? The sealing stuff? Well well, all stuff that we know from history. Just like Oh, yeah. You pointed out with the taria, when you pointed out with technology, when you pointed out, like, oh, we have been written history now because we went to the moon. All of a sudden, a few months ago, they went with the blue, orange, whatever the fuck, up in the air together with another record from, from Elon Elon Musk. And they said, oh, this is a big achievement for mankind because we reached the, 35 kilometer zone.
Like, what what what about the rest of the, 237, 900, whatever, kilometers that you are from the moon. To the moon. Yeah. Right? What about that? What about that? Just a question. That's just I'm I'm just I'm just asking.
[01:23:39] Unknown:
And this
[01:23:41] Unknown:
man, and we didn't touch base on so many things because you screwed up today with the time.
[01:23:48] Unknown:
I know. I know. I really did. I was update, Tom. I'll explain. I'll explain to you. Have to curse
[01:23:54] Unknown:
in English, with a good sentence before you gotta let me go before I gotta let Okay.
[01:24:01] Unknown:
Okay. I will do that. Let me let me figure out a way to explain to everyone who's listening, all your producers, everyone who's listening because I call them producers listeners. But let's just say why it went wrong. I made the appointment to have this Zoom call about was it, like, a month and a half ago? Was it about that? Something like that. Yeah. About a month and a half ago. And the Calendly link at a time and a distance between you and I, you're in the Netherlands. I'm in Idaho. It's just I don't understand time. I'm not good at geography. I'm not good at time management. So when I scheduled it, it said 12 AM. I was like, oh, perfect. That means for me. But in reality, that meant for Rob Nolkin. So so I didn't know that. And then the day before, I could have been like, hey, Rob. I'll talk to you tomorrow night. And you could have said, no, Claude. It's gonna be in the afternoon. Right. But because I'm terrible at following up, I didn't make that work.
So, for that reason, all of the listeners have to listen to the shittiest performance that Claude can give and the greatest fuck up of my life when it comes to organizing podcasts, and I am very particular about that. So that's the end of that 1.
[01:25:09] Unknown:
I hope that was a good enough customer for you. Oh, yeah. You finally, I hear your curse because she never curse. I hope this doesn't go out live. You're gonna chop that out and post. Right? No. I'm gonna put it on on TikTok only this frame only this frame. Just just like That old frame. Screw you up.
[01:25:26] Unknown:
Claude's a loser. He cusses. But,
[01:25:29] Unknown:
I I know that that you are quite in some, working stress, let's say like that. But the thing is, I should hop on normally at 7 o'clock and it's like 12 pm your time. Okay. But I have to figure it out. I talked to Barry. Well, folks, talking about podcasting. Talk about podcasting, 2.0 on sensor platforms. Talk about fuck you and screw you YouTube. I'm gonna get out of there. I'm gonna get to another platform where I can say and do whatever the shit and the fuck I want. I'm gonna have the godfather of podcasting in my podcast. And I'm so excited for that. I want, well, I'm gonna curse probably, But, this guy, he is because of this guy, we are doing podcasting.
Joe Rogan, Joe, Joe Rogan. Yes. Sam Triplett. All the guys you know for podcasting do this because of this guy. His name is Adam Curry. I know him. He is a big fan. Oh my goodness.
[01:26:49] Unknown:
The biggest. I mean okay. But you gotta know. You gotta know. He has given up the marijuana. He has given up the smoking. He is a, born again Christian now. So I don't know if he's gonna drop as many f bombs as you will, but I don't think he's averse to it at all. I think he's gonna enjoy the time on your show because everyone does. And you know what? I think you're the best person to interview him first, out of, the firmamental groups and the people who are surrounding us because you're conversational, bro. Everyone else would be just over there like, hey. Tell me how you started it. And he said that, like, 800 times. I think this is gonna be the best. I hope I hope I can get him on from a mental so I can ask him plenty of questions too. But, yeah, I I I can't wait for that episode. What's it scheduled for?
[01:27:32] Unknown:
Well, he he asked me just give me a few weeks because he has settle down some stuff. He's now in the Netherlands. He's official well, he's not he he he lived in the Netherlands, but I think he's been brought up in South Africa, but lived in Netherlands quite some time. Dude, because of this guy, I'm listening to great music because he was 1 of the presenters of Countdown, which was 1 of the first music programs that were in the Netherlands. So this guy was, having long hair. Of course, he had a great reputation, to be honest with you. He was 1 of the only guys that could talk like, American style English.
Mhmm. Mhmm. And and a lot of Dutch people are trying to, but, somehow, they they just can't. You know? They, they know some words. But before you know, you think, oh, maybe he's not coming from the USA at all, but he's coming from another different country. Well Yeah. Yeah. But, yeah, I'm I'm really pumped to have this guy on. And I'm, I probably won't swear that much. I think because I'm a little bit loose because of, I'm stoked that you, Arnd. I mean, Claude, how many how many months have we been trying to put this off? Like Oh my goodness. Say, I know you. I say, you gotta be on my show. Yeah. Yeah. I'm gonna be on your show. What, Rob? And today, it it was just like, that that's the truth. You are so disorganized.
[01:29:07] Unknown:
Bro.
[01:29:08] Unknown:
You're taking all the credits for my show, for my program that I sent at you that you didn't open yet. You're the best customer I ever had.
[01:29:18] Unknown:
I know. I should I should be I should be paying you for your services. No. You're good. You're good. This is this is my life. If anyone wants to know the guy who helped out from Memento, the guy who helped out Rob Nolkin, the guy who helped out Scipio, It's the reason why I decided to help Rob Nolkin is like, wait. Wait. His his podcast name is my life. I need to I need to help him out. To get a grip on that guy. Oh my goodness. Listen. I have to cut this short. I'm getting so many phone calls. I am so sorry. But Oh. Next time next time, I I will let you do the scheduling. You put the schedule a month away, and I would take time off of work so I can make it work. Yes. Do do we still have, quest like, 12 questions, fast ones? Oh, yeah. Shoot. Let's do that. I forgot that you always do the 12 questions. I got 14.
[01:30:01] Unknown:
Oh, damn it. Yeah. The the first question will be so oh, I'm gonna turn them out a little bit around. Okay. The first question will be, what's your what's your definition of god?
[01:30:15] Unknown:
The creator. What's the definition of the devil?
[01:30:22] Unknown:
Pride. What's the definition of value?
[01:30:28] Unknown:
My definition of value chain it's, different than everyone else's, and everyone else's definition is different. That's why I do value for value. What I what I am willing to expend energy on to the best of my abilities.
[01:30:49] Unknown:
Wow. I love that answer. What's your definition of success? Oh,
[01:30:58] Unknown:
Thanks to Eric Providing value. Providing value.
[01:31:02] Unknown:
Oh, that's a good 1.
[01:31:04] Unknown:
Thanks to Eric Finister who pointed out that question. I'll That's a good question. Yeah. That's a good 1. What's your favorite color? Orange. It's been since I was a kid. What's your favorite music? Right now, hip hop.
[01:31:19] Unknown:
What's your favorite movie or series? Oh,
[01:31:25] Unknown:
Spongebob for series. Uh-huh. That's tied closely with Amazing World of Gumball. That 1 is a great 1. And then for movie, Napoleon Dynamite. Oh, I'm sorry. No. Sherlock Holmes. Sherlock Holmes. What's your favorite book? Atlas Shrugged. No 1 has read it, that is the best book in existence other than the bible, in my opinion. K. Send me the links. Ask, what's your favorite drink? Oh, I don't drink adult beverages. I should start because then I'll be able to give a better answer. But for now, in energy drink form, it's a brand called Ghost because they don't use cyanocobalamin.
They use, the other version of that. It's a b 12 supplement, but, cyanocobalamin comes from wastewater, distributor plants. Either way, as far as regular drinks, it's going to be apple juice. Okay. What's your favorite food? Spaghetti. Oh, no. I lied I lied. That is a Romanian dish. Every culture should have a version of it. Cabbage rolls, basically.
[01:32:30] Unknown:
Are you in process? What? Yeah. Who who What? Named? Sarmale. Sarmale. That sounds like a good dish. It's a good it's a good cabbage roll. It's a really good 1. What kind of favorite, what kind of clothing you like to wear the most?
[01:32:49] Unknown:
Casual. Sweats, T shirt, flip flops, but not the ones that poke between your toes like a thong. I'm talking about the sandals. The slides.
[01:32:58] Unknown:
Okay. What's your favorite holiday destination?
[01:33:02] Unknown:
I have not been to many places. I should be out of the country more, but favorite holiday destination, if we can call it, is, California. It's just the weather is the best. Screw the laws. The weather is the best. I've been there. It's cool. I gotta go Weather is the best. You gotta go back.
[01:33:18] Unknown:
What's your favorite quote? Last 2 questions.
[01:33:21] Unknown:
Oh, shoot. Favorite quote. Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof. Wow. What basic
[01:33:29] Unknown:
or go ahead. Go ahead. Yes. What's your favorite life motto? Oh,
[01:33:35] Unknown:
what was that word? What was that? Life motto. Shoot. I haven't thought of this 1 ever. I'm gonna have to come up with it on the fly. Oh, man. What was that quote that David Doggins always says? Does he say light work? Is that him? Is emphasis light work or is that other? That's Ronnie Coleman. Ronnie Coleman, the weightlifter, he would say, everything that's hard is light work. So that way he could just talk himself into doing the hard things. Right. It's just that. There's 2 words, light work. If you say light work about anything, you should be able to get through it because you're telling yourself you're a you're a chump if you can't do it. Good 1. Claude, thank you for hopping on this organized project. I know that your time is short, but we definitely gonna do a part 2. We We touch cover on several topics,
[01:34:19] Unknown:
especially technical stuff because that's that's your porn. Right? Yeah. Yeah.
[01:34:27] Unknown:
Yeah. That's what I think of whenever I'm in bed with my wife. Yeah. Technical topics. Oh, yeah. Robotic robotic sex.
[01:34:34] Unknown:
Oh, baby. Talk about AI with me. Oh, man. But but, yeah, I'm I'm very, grateful and, that you hopped on my podcast, Claude. And I hopefully, you're gonna be on on the second part too. I'm I'm gonna push you through that anyways. Oh, it's happening. It's it's happening. Exactly. So, ladies and gentlemen, if you're listening to this podcast, I hope you enjoyed it. Claude from The Firmamentals, check these guys out. Ro, Alex, and Claude, provide great content. I'm 1 of the the brother part host
[01:35:10] Unknown:
podcasters. You know? What's it called? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. The brother podcast. That's Raul's brainchild for the word. The marketing term is a brother podcast, but that's I think that explains it. You're basically brother.
[01:35:21] Unknown:
Exactly. Makes sense? And we're all brothers, and we come together, and we do great stuff. So thank you for hopping on, for your time and your, energy. Next time, turn on your, bloody camera. I wanna see you shirtless with your flip flops and, doing your pipe stuff.
[01:35:39] Unknown:
Doing my pipe stuff. Yeah. Next time. Next time, I'll do that. No problem. And don't fix some dykes with it. Right?
[01:35:49] Unknown:
Yikes. That's a double entendre if I ever heard 1. Yikes. Right. But because when the dykes are going to collapse here in the Netherlands, we all gonna get wet feet. So we need Claude as a plumber to fix the dikes with his pipe. My pipe around so that my pipes are gonna be good. Pipes. Alright. Oh, but what? Gonna be censored too on YouTube. 100%. Just watch. Just watch. Alright, Rob. Thank you. Thank you for taking the call. We're gonna do a part 2. You just schedule it, and I'll be there. Okay. Thank you very much, Claude. And for all our listeners, thank you for listening to another episode of Disorganized Productions. Have a beautiful day, a beautiful morning, or a beautiful evening, no matter where you are on this plain planet and are set up completely disorganized. For all my life with a devil on my heels who wasn't always kind, and he couldn't fulfill show me light.
Please play in the ass. Black dreams. He's a pain in the
[01:37:42] Unknown:
ass. Black as a night,
Introduction and Host's Message
Special Guest Introduction: Claude Jeraei
Technical Struggles and Podcasting
AI and ChatGPT Discussion
The Limitations and Future of AI
YouTube Learning and Content Creation
Technology and Historical Insights
Insurance Companies and Climate Change
Ancient Technology and Civilizations
Celebrating Podcasting Milestones
Rapid Fire Questions with Claude
Closing Remarks and Future Plans