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    <description><![CDATA[<p>A thing about inventions, innovation, technology, and the random thoughts of a guy that dreams more than he sleeps, and thinks out loud between the real, the possible, the surreal, and often the plain old silly world we find ourselves inhabiting for a blink in time.</p>]]></description>
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      <title><![CDATA[The Unfathomably Large Size of Tiny Things]]></title>
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      <description><![CDATA[<p><strong>What if a simple grid of pixels contained the visual blueprint for everything that has ever existed... and everything that ever will?</strong></p><p>Welcome back to the Let's Build a Thing universe! In this episode, hosts Theo and Chloe dive into a mind-bending thought experiment about dimensions, time, and the sheer scale of "digital molecules". It starts with a simple premise: what if, instead of creatively designing digital art, you simply wrote an algorithm to generate every possible combination of a tiny 8x8 monochrome pixel grid?</p><p>It sounds like a fun, straightforward coding concept - until you realize what happens when you let the algorithm run. By simply generating every combination of those tiny squares, you are mathematically guaranteed to recreate an 8-bit representation of every great artwork, every human face at every age, and every word ever written. You would essentially be generating everything that has been, or ever will be.</p><p>There is a catch. A massive, mind-boggling catch regarding the scale of this project that forces us to temporarily delete the very concept of time just to comprehend it.</p><p>Tune in to discover the staggering truth hiding inside a tiny digital space, and find out why procrastinating on a simple coding project for 37 years might actually be the most logical response to the unfathomably large size of tiny things.</p>]]></description>
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      <title><![CDATA[The Glorious, Agonising Power of Doing Absolutely Nothing]]></title>
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      <description><![CDATA[<p>What is the one crucial ingredient for true creativity that Artificial Intelligence completely lacks? <strong>The agonising, glorious experience of doing absolutely nothing.</strong></p><p>In this episode, we dive straight into <strong>the fundamental limitation of modern AI: it simply cannot get bored.</strong> While AI can instantly synthesize human knowledge and execute commands with incredible efficiency, it has a strictly directed mind that waits endlessly for a prompt, much like a well-behaved dog waiting for a stick to be thrown.</p><p>We explore how <strong>true originality stems from the strange, unprompted firings of a restless mind.</strong> AI cannot daydream, get randomly distracted, or take a "mental walkabout with no destination". We discuss the inherent danger of outsourcing our thinking to a tool incapable of unprompted thought, and briefly contrast this with the "soul-crushing" childhood boredom of the 1980s, which actually served as the ultimate gym for human imagination.</p><p>Finally, we leave you with a provocative question: <strong>what will happen to the future of creativity if we ever build an AI that <em>can</em> get synthetically bored?</strong></p><p></p><p><strong>AI:</strong> AI voices talking about original articles published on <a target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer nofollow" href="http://letsbuildathing.com">letsbuildathing.com</a>. No AI's were harmed in the making of this podcast.</p>]]></description>
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      <title><![CDATA[Editing Reality]]></title>
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