We’ve reached the tipping point — the moment when humans and AI produce about the same amount of content. What does that mean for creativity, work, and our future with intelligent machines?
In this Digital Dialogues episode, Mike and Ronald explore a world where robots fold beds, Amazon drivers wear AI-powered glasses, and Microsoft Co-pilot learns your memory, mood, and meetings. From OpenAI’s Atlas browser to Amazon’s delivery robots and the rise of “men in the prompt” attacks, this discussion spirals from fascination to reflection. Are we heading toward frictionless convenience — or a frictionless collapse of what makes us human?
Expect sharp insights, playful debate, and a technosophical deep dive into automation, agency, and the art of staying human in an increasingly robotic world.
In this episode:
- Figure 3 and Unitree robots: reality check on autonomy vs speed
- Amazon’s AI glasses for drivers and robotic logistics
- Microsoft Copilot’s new features such as Groups, Memory and RealTalk
- OpenAI’s new Atlas browser and security risks (“Man-in-the-Prompt”)
- The philosophical risk of frictionless living
- The Content Singularity: who will create more next year, humans or AI?