S27E110: Ganymede's Axis Shift, Black Hole Spin Revelations, and Solar Sail Setback
SpaceTime with Stuart GarySeptember 11, 2024x
110
00:22:3620.75 MB

S27E110: Ganymede's Axis Shift, Black Hole Spin Revelations, and Solar Sail Setback

SpaceTime Series 27 Episode 110 *Gigantic asteroid impact shifted Ganymede’s axis A new study claims that the solar system’s largest moon, the Jovian giant Ganymede, was hit by a massive asteroid four billion years ago shifting its axis. *New way to measure the spin of a supermassive black hole Astronomers have found a new way to measure how fast a black hole spins, by using the wobbly aftermath from its stellar feasting. *Nasa’s solar sail mission tumbling in orbit NASA says its Advanced Composite Solar Sail System spacecraft is "tumbling or wobbling" through space, which may have impacted its orbit. *The Science Report Semaglutide found to reduce the risk of heart failure. Semaglutide also found to reduce the risk of dying from any cause including COVID-19. Claims current screentime before sleep recommendations for kids are neither achievable nor appropriate. Alex on Tech Apple’s i-phone 16

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[00:00:00] [SPEAKER_00]: This is SpaceTime Series 27 Episode 110 for broadcast on the 11th of September 2024.

[00:00:07] [SPEAKER_00]: Coming up on SpaceTime, the gigantic asteroid impact which shifted Ganymedes Axis,

[00:00:13] [SPEAKER_00]: a new way to measure the spin of a supermassive black hole,

[00:00:16] [SPEAKER_00]: and NASA's solar sail mission tumbling in orbit. All that and more coming up on SpaceTime.

[00:00:24] [SPEAKER_01]: Welcome to SpaceTime with Stuart Gary

[00:00:43] [SPEAKER_00]: A new study claims that the solar system's largest moon, the Jovian giant moon Ganymede,

[00:00:49] [SPEAKER_00]: was hit by a massive asteroid four billion years ago shifting its axis. The findings,

[00:00:54] [SPEAKER_00]: published in the Journal of Scientific Reports, describe the event as one of the biggest asteroid

[00:00:59] [SPEAKER_00]: impacts with clear traces in the solar system. The collision involved an asteroid roughly

[00:01:04] [SPEAKER_00]: 20 times larger than the KT Boundary Vane asteroid impact which 66 million years ago

[00:01:10] [SPEAKER_00]: triggered Earth's fifth mass extinction event wiping out 75 percent of all life on the planet

[00:01:15] [SPEAKER_00]: including all the non-avian dinosaurs. Ganymede is larger than the planet Mercury and has a

[00:01:21] [SPEAKER_00]: liquid water ocean beneath its icy crust. Like the Earth's moon, it's gravitationally

[00:01:26] [SPEAKER_00]: tidally locked meaning it always shows its same face to the planet it's orbiting,

[00:01:31] [SPEAKER_00]: and thus it also has a far side. Now on large parts of its surface,

[00:01:36] [SPEAKER_00]: the moon's covered by furrows that form concentric circles around one specific spot,

[00:01:42] [SPEAKER_00]: and that led researchers back in the 1980s to conclude that that must have been the result

[00:01:46] [SPEAKER_00]: of a major impact event. The study's lead author Hirata Nayuk from Kobe University says

[00:01:52] [SPEAKER_00]: the Jovian moon's Io Europa Ganymede and Callisto all have interesting individual

[00:01:57] [SPEAKER_00]: characteristics but what caught his attention was those furrows on Ganymede. Nayuk says

[00:02:03] [SPEAKER_00]: astronomers know that this feature was created by an asteroid impact roughly four billion years

[00:02:07] [SPEAKER_00]: ago but they're unsure of exactly how big the impact was and what effect it left on the moon.

[00:02:14] [SPEAKER_00]: See data from this remote object is scarce making research very difficult

[00:02:18] [SPEAKER_00]: but Nayuk realized that the location of the impact almost precisely on the meridian furthest

[00:02:23] [SPEAKER_00]: away from Jupiter. He says this discovery has similarities to an ancient impact event

[00:02:29] [SPEAKER_00]: on Pluto evidence which was detected by NASA's New Horizons spacecraft. That event caused the

[00:02:34] [SPEAKER_00]: dwarf planet's rotational axis to shift and according to Nayuk it implies that Ganymede too

[00:02:40] [SPEAKER_00]: had undergone such a reorientation. Nayuk was then able to calculate the kind of impact that

[00:02:46] [SPEAKER_00]: would have caused Ganymede's reorientation to happen. He found that an asteroid roughly 300

[00:02:51] [SPEAKER_00]: kilometers across, that's about 20 times the size of the one which hit the earth 65 million

[00:02:56] [SPEAKER_00]: years ago, would have created a transient crater between 1400 and 1600 kilometers in diameter.

[00:03:03] [SPEAKER_00]: Transient craters are widely used in lab and computational simulations.

[00:03:08] [SPEAKER_00]: They're actually cavities produced directly after a crater excavation and before material

[00:03:12] [SPEAKER_00]: settles in and around the crater. According to the author's simulations only an impact of

[00:03:17] [SPEAKER_00]: this size would have made it likely that the change in the distribution of mass could cause

[00:03:22] [SPEAKER_00]: the moon's rotational axis to shift to its current position. This giant impact must have

[00:03:27] [SPEAKER_00]: had quite a significant effect on the early evolution of Ganymede but the thermal and

[00:03:32] [SPEAKER_00]: structural effects of the impact on the interior of the giant moon haven't yet been

[00:03:36] [SPEAKER_00]: investigated. Ganymede is the final destination of ESA's two spacecraft mission. If everything

[00:03:42] [SPEAKER_00]: goes well the probe will enter orbit around the moon in 2034 and will make observations for

[00:03:47] [SPEAKER_00]: six months, sending back a wealth of data that could help answer New York's questions.

[00:03:53] [SPEAKER_00]: Needless to say we'll keep you informed. This is space time. Still to come, a new way to measure

[00:04:00] [SPEAKER_00]: the spin of a supermassive black hole and NASA's solar sail mission tumbling through space.

[00:04:06] [SPEAKER_00]: All that and more still to come on space time. Astronomers have found a new way to

[00:04:26] [SPEAKER_00]: measure how fast the black hole's spinning by using the wobbly aftermath of its stellar

[00:04:31] [SPEAKER_00]: feasting. This new method reported in the journal Nature takes advantage of a black hole

[00:04:36] [SPEAKER_00]: tidal disruption event. A tidal disruption event happens when a star gets too close

[00:04:41] [SPEAKER_00]: to a black hole and the black hole's powerful gravitational influence literally rips the star

[00:04:46] [SPEAKER_00]: apart, shredding it into pieces in the process releasing huge amounts of energy.

[00:04:52] [SPEAKER_00]: As the star is ripped apart by the black hole's immense gravitational tidal forces,

[00:04:56] [SPEAKER_00]: half of the star is usually blown away into deep space. The other half is flying around the

[00:05:01] [SPEAKER_00]: black hole forming an intensely hot accretion disk of rotating stellar material. As this

[00:05:07] [SPEAKER_00]: material revolves around the black hole it's being crushed and torn apart at the subatomic

[00:05:12] [SPEAKER_00]: level in the process releasing vast amounts of energy in x-rays. The study's authors have

[00:05:18] [SPEAKER_00]: shown that the wobble of this newly created accretion disk is key to working out the

[00:05:26] [SPEAKER_00]: spin of a nearby supermassive black hole by tracking the pattern of x-ray flashes that

[00:05:31] [SPEAKER_00]: the black hole was producing immediately following a tidal disruption event. The team

[00:05:35] [SPEAKER_00]: followed the flashes over several months and determined that they were likely the signal of

[00:05:40] [SPEAKER_00]: a bright-heart accretion disk that wobbled back and forth as it was being pushed and

[00:05:44] [SPEAKER_00]: pulled by the black hole's own spin. By tracking how the disk's wobble changed over time

[00:05:49] [SPEAKER_00]: the authors could work out how much the disk was being affected by the black hole's spin

[00:05:53] [SPEAKER_00]: and in turn how fast the black hole itself was spinning. Their analysis showed that the black

[00:05:59] [SPEAKER_00]: hole was actually spinning at less than 25 percent of the speed of light. The study's

[00:06:04] [SPEAKER_00]: lead author Deraish Pasham from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT says the new method

[00:06:09] [SPEAKER_00]: could be used to gauge the spins of hundreds of black holes in the local universe. If

[00:06:14] [SPEAKER_00]: scientists can survey the spins of numerous black holes nearby they can start to understand

[00:06:19] [SPEAKER_00]: how these gravitational giants evolved over the history of the universe. They could also

[00:06:24] [SPEAKER_00]: estimate the overall distribution of black hole spins and understand the long-standing question

[00:06:29] [SPEAKER_00]: of how they evolve over time. Every black hole has an inherent spin that's been shaped by its

[00:06:34] [SPEAKER_00]: cosmic encounters over time. For instance if a black hole had grown through mostly accretion,

[00:06:40] [SPEAKER_00]: brief instances of when some material falls onto the disk would have caused the black hole

[00:06:43] [SPEAKER_00]: to spin up to quite high speeds. Now by contrast if a black hole grows mostly through merging with

[00:06:49] [SPEAKER_00]: other black holes each merger would slow things down as one black hole spin meets up and against

[00:06:55] [SPEAKER_00]: the spin of the other. Now because of their intense mass and gravity as a black hole spins

[00:07:00] [SPEAKER_00]: it quite literally drags the surrounding fabric a space time around with it. Now this frame

[00:07:06] [SPEAKER_00]: dragging effect is an example of lens thuring precession, a long-standing theory that

[00:07:11] [SPEAKER_00]: the black hole spins describes the ways in which extremely strong gravitational fields such as those

[00:07:15] [SPEAKER_00]: generated by a black hole can pull the surrounding fabric a space time with it. Now normally this

[00:07:21] [SPEAKER_00]: effect wouldn't be obvious around the black hole because these objects normally don't emit

[00:07:25] [SPEAKER_00]: any light, that's why they're called black holes. But in recent years physicists have proposed

[00:07:30] [SPEAKER_00]: that in instances such as during a tidal disruption event scientists might have a chance

[00:07:35] [SPEAKER_00]: to track the light from stellar debris as it's being dragged around and using that they

[00:07:40] [SPEAKER_00]: might be able to measure the black hole spin. The idea is that during a tidal disruption event

[00:07:45] [SPEAKER_00]: a star could fall onto a black hole from any direction generating a disc of white hot

[00:07:49] [SPEAKER_00]: shredded material that will be tilted or misaligned with respect to the black hole spin axis.

[00:07:54] [SPEAKER_00]: Basham says imagine the accretion disc is a tilted doughnut that's been spinning around

[00:07:59] [SPEAKER_00]: the doughnut hole and that doughnut hole has its own separate spin. As the disc encounters

[00:08:04] [SPEAKER_00]: the black hole spin it wobbles as the black hole pulls it into alignment. Now eventually

[00:08:09] [SPEAKER_00]: the wobbling will subside as the accretion disc settles into the black hole spin. Scientists predicted

[00:08:15] [SPEAKER_00]: that a tidal disruption event's wobbling disc should therefore be a measurable signature of

[00:08:19] [SPEAKER_00]: the black hole spin. But the key to all this was to have the right observations. You see the

[00:08:25] [SPEAKER_00]: only way you can do all this is that as soon as the tidal disruption event goes off you need

[00:08:30] [SPEAKER_00]: to get your telescope looking at the object continuously for really long periods of time so

[00:08:35] [SPEAKER_00]: you can probe all kinds of time scales ranging from minutes to months. For the past five years

[00:08:41] [SPEAKER_00]: Basham and colleagues looked for tidal disruption events that were bright enough and near enough

[00:08:45] [SPEAKER_00]: to quickly follow up and track for signs of lens stirring precession. Then in February 2020

[00:08:51] [SPEAKER_00]: they got lucky. The Zwicky transient facility detected AT2020 OCN, a bright flash emanating

[00:08:58] [SPEAKER_00]: from a galaxy about a billion light years away that was instantly spotted in the telescope's

[00:09:03] [SPEAKER_00]: optical band. Now from this optical data the flash appeared to be the very first moments following

[00:09:08] [SPEAKER_00]: a tidal disruption event. Being both bright and relatively close by, at least in cosmological

[00:09:13] [SPEAKER_00]: terms, Basham suspected that this particular tidal disruption event might be the ideal candidate

[00:09:19] [SPEAKER_00]: to look for signs of disc wobbling and possibly even measure the spin of the black hole

[00:09:23] [SPEAKER_00]: in the host galaxy's core. Of course the key was catching this really early on because this

[00:09:29] [SPEAKER_00]: precessional wobble would only be present early on. Any later and the disc wouldn't be wobbling anymore.

[00:09:34] [SPEAKER_00]: Now luckily the authors discovered that NASA's NICER telescope was able to catch the tidal

[00:09:39] [SPEAKER_00]: disruption event and continuously kept an eye on it over the following months. NICER, the

[00:09:44] [SPEAKER_00]: neutron star interior composition explorer, is an x-ray telescope mounted on the International

[00:09:49] [SPEAKER_00]: Space Station. It's used to measure x-ray radiation around black holes and other extreme

[00:09:55] [SPEAKER_00]: gravitational objects. Basham and colleagues then looked through NICER's observations of

[00:09:59] [SPEAKER_00]: AT2020-OCN over 200 days following the initial detection of the tidal disruption event.

[00:10:06] [SPEAKER_00]: They discovered that this event emitted x-rays that appeared to peak every 15 days for several

[00:10:10] [SPEAKER_00]: cycles before eventually petering out. Now they're interpreting these peaks as times when

[00:10:16] [SPEAKER_00]: the tidal disruption event's accretion disc was wobbling face on, meeting x-rays directly

[00:10:21] [SPEAKER_00]: towards NICER's telescope before wobbling away as they continue to emit x-rays. It's sort of

[00:10:26] [SPEAKER_00]: similar to waving a flashlight towards and away from somebody every 15 days. The authors then

[00:10:32] [SPEAKER_00]: took this pattern of wobbling and worked it into their original theory for lens-theoring

[00:10:36] [SPEAKER_00]: precession. Based on estimates the black hole's mass and that of the disrupted star,

[00:10:41] [SPEAKER_00]: they were able to come up with an estimate for the black hole's spin, less than 25%

[00:10:45] [SPEAKER_00]: speed of light. These results mark the first time that scientists have used observations

[00:10:51] [SPEAKER_00]: of a wobbling disc following a tidal disruption event to estimate the spin of a supermassive

[00:10:56] [SPEAKER_00]: black hole. More on this report from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

[00:11:15] [SPEAKER_02]: Due to strong gravitational effects, this misaligned disc precesses and this manifests

[00:11:21] [SPEAKER_02]: as quasi-periodic brightness changes in the x-ray band. Over time, the accretion disc will

[00:11:27] [SPEAKER_02]: come into alignment and the changes in brightness of the x-rays will diminish.

[00:11:32] [SPEAKER_02]: Astronomers led by Diraj Pasham have observed one such event that repeats every 15 days.

[00:11:39] [SPEAKER_02]: Assuming these modulations are due to a general relativity induced effect

[00:11:43] [SPEAKER_02]: called lens-theoring precession, they estimate that the black hole is spinning and dragging

[00:11:49] [SPEAKER_02]: the space time around it at a rate of less than 25% the speed of light. This is space time.

[00:11:56] [SPEAKER_00]: Still to come, NASA's solar cell mission tumbling in orbit and later in the science

[00:12:00] [SPEAKER_00]: report, semaglutide found to reduce the risks of heart failure and dying from any cause

[00:12:06] [SPEAKER_00]: including COVID-19. All that and more still to come on Space Time.

[00:12:27] [SPEAKER_00]: NASA says its advanced composite solar cell system spacecraft is currently tumbling or

[00:12:32] [SPEAKER_00]: wobbling through space which may have impacted its orbit. The mission successfully erected

[00:12:37] [SPEAKER_00]: its foiled solar cell in orbit last week after a failed attempt a few days earlier.

[00:12:42] [SPEAKER_00]: However, observations show the spacecraft is now tumbling or wobbling in orbit.

[00:12:46] [SPEAKER_00]: The mission was designed to test a new type of solar sail, one that could eventually propel

[00:12:51] [SPEAKER_00]: spacecraft using photon pressure from the sun. This technology could one day transport

[00:12:56] [SPEAKER_00]: spacecraft to the edge of the solar system and beyond faster and cheaper than existing

[00:13:00] [SPEAKER_00]: chemical rocket engines. This latest test known as ACS-3 was launched aboard a Rocket Lab

[00:13:06] [SPEAKER_00]: Electron rocket from New Zealand's Mahea Peninsula on April 23rd. The satellite was

[00:13:12] [SPEAKER_00]: placed in a 965km high low-Earth orbit. The mission uses a sail that's folded up

[00:13:18] [SPEAKER_00]: stored aboard a microwave oven-sized CubeSat spacecraft. The solar cell is deployed using

[00:13:24] [SPEAKER_00]: a series of folding composite booms that are 75% lighter and more resistant to

[00:13:29] [SPEAKER_00]: solar radiation than those used on previous solar cell missions. The first attempts

[00:13:33] [SPEAKER_00]: to unfurl the 80 square metre Silver Falls solar cell back on August 26th were abandoned

[00:13:39] [SPEAKER_00]: after 25 minutes because onboard power monitors detected higher than expected motor currents.

[00:13:44] [SPEAKER_00]: After reviewing the issue, a second more successful attempt was made last week.

[00:13:49] [SPEAKER_00]: Images of the spacecraft from the ground confirm the cell had properly deployed.

[00:13:54] [SPEAKER_00]: However, they also showed that the spacecraft was dramatically brightening and dimming at

[00:13:58] [SPEAKER_00]: regular intervals suggesting that it was slowly tumbling or wobbling through space.

[00:14:03] [SPEAKER_00]: And its orbit has also shifted unexpectedly. Now right now mission managers are claiming

[00:14:08] [SPEAKER_00]: tumbling wasn't unexpected and it's simply part of the planned sail deployment sequence,

[00:14:13] [SPEAKER_00]: which they say should be corrected in coming weeks. Needless to say we'll keep an eye on it.

[00:14:19] [SPEAKER_00]: This is space time.

[00:14:37] [SPEAKER_00]: And time now to take another brief look at some of the other stories making

[00:14:40] [SPEAKER_00]: use in science this week with the science report.

[00:14:43] [SPEAKER_00]: A new study has shown that semaglutide, a diabetes drug that's now become best known

[00:14:48] [SPEAKER_00]: for its weight loss properties, can reduce the risk of heart failure events and cardiovascular

[00:14:52] [SPEAKER_00]: death in people with diabetes and chronic kidney disease.

[00:14:56] [SPEAKER_00]: The findings reported in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology is based on an

[00:15:01] [SPEAKER_00]: analysis of data from previous clinical research called the FLOW trial, finding that semaglutide

[00:15:06] [SPEAKER_00]: could reduce the risk of heart failure by 27% and reduce the risk of death by any cause by 29%.

[00:15:13] [SPEAKER_00]: A second study in the same journal found that semaglutide can also help improve the changes

[00:15:18] [SPEAKER_00]: to heart structure associated with obesity which can often lead to heart failure.

[00:15:22] [SPEAKER_00]: The authors say this points to how the drug might be working to benefit people with obesity

[00:15:27] [SPEAKER_00]: related heart failure.

[00:15:30] [SPEAKER_00]: Meanwhile another study in the same journal also looking at semaglutide found that people who

[00:15:35] [SPEAKER_00]: are overweight or obese have a reduced risk of dying from any cause by taking the drug,

[00:15:40] [SPEAKER_00]: including COVID-19 compared to those not taking weight loss medications.

[00:15:45] [SPEAKER_00]: The authors were looking at death data from semaglutide trials involving some

[00:15:49] [SPEAKER_00]: over 17,500 participants over the age of 45 who were either overweight or obese.

[00:15:55] [SPEAKER_00]: Half were randomized to receive semaglutide weekly while the other half took a placebo.

[00:16:00] [SPEAKER_00]: Over an average follow-up of just over three years,

[00:16:03] [SPEAKER_00]: researchers found that 833 patients died.

[00:16:06] [SPEAKER_00]: But participants taking semaglutide had a far lower risk of death from any cause as well

[00:16:11] [SPEAKER_00]: as from heart related deaths. The most common non-heart related cause of death was from an

[00:16:16] [SPEAKER_00]: And researchers say these also occurred at a lower rate in the semaglutide group.

[00:16:21] [SPEAKER_00]: Participants taking semaglutide were just as likely to be infected with COVID-19 as

[00:16:26] [SPEAKER_00]: other patients but they were less likely to have serious complications or die as a result

[00:16:31] [SPEAKER_00]: of the virus.

[00:16:33] [SPEAKER_00]: A new study claims current screen time before sleep recommendations for kids

[00:16:37] [SPEAKER_00]: are neither achievable nor appropriate.

[00:16:40] [SPEAKER_00]: A report in the Journal of the American Medical Association claims the findings

[00:16:44] [SPEAKER_00]: are based on camera observations of kids over four consecutive nights measuring screen time

[00:16:49] [SPEAKER_00]: before bed of 79 11 to 14 year olds.

[00:16:53] [SPEAKER_00]: They found that screen time in the two hours before bed had no association with

[00:16:57] [SPEAKER_00]: most measures of sleep health. However, screen time once in bed,

[00:17:02] [SPEAKER_00]: especially interactive activities such as playing games or multitasking was associated with less

[00:17:06] [SPEAKER_00]: sleep. The results indicate that current recommendations of absolutely no screen time

[00:17:12] [SPEAKER_00]: before sleep might be a bit much for kids and sleep effects may be more dependent on the type

[00:17:18] [SPEAKER_00]: of screen time instead.

[00:17:21] [SPEAKER_00]: Apple's new iPhone 16 has just been released with new design changes,

[00:17:25] [SPEAKER_00]: a new AI processor and upgraded cameras. With the details we're joined by technology

[00:17:30] [SPEAKER_00]: editor Alex Sahar of Royd from techadvice.life.

[00:17:34] [SPEAKER_03]: Okay so the new iPhone 16s have been launched. You can go to apple.com and watch

[00:17:39] [SPEAKER_03]: the live keynote. You can go to youtube.com slash apple and watch it there. I highly recommend

[00:17:44] [SPEAKER_03]: you do that. There's lots of AI. Now the problem with the AI is that a lot of the AI features

[00:17:48] [SPEAKER_03]: won't come until 2025. That includes Siri version 2.0 where you can talk to Siri like

[00:17:53] [SPEAKER_03]: you're talking with chat gpt. This is in stark contrast to Google whose new Pixel 9 Pro

[00:17:59] [SPEAKER_03]: and the Pro Fold already have Gemini Live and can do all the AI stuff out of the box

[00:18:03] [SPEAKER_03]: straight away. And in fact I've been playing with the new Pixel 9 Pro Fold and it's glorious.

[00:18:07] [SPEAKER_03]: Normal sized phone when it's folded shut but when it's opened up it's this beautiful thin device and

[00:18:13] [SPEAKER_03]: Apple is not scheduled to launch one of those until potentially 2026 or beyond. But they will

[00:18:18] [SPEAKER_03]: want to have a screen that has no crease. And Apple has also launched its new Apple Watch 10,

[00:18:23] [SPEAKER_03]: 10th series and also the Apple Watch Ultra 3. Now have you done the Alexa test yet? I

[00:18:29] [SPEAKER_03]: haven't but I've seen a number of videos where you ask Alexa about President Trump and

[00:18:34] [SPEAKER_03]: sorry I can't get political and then you ask it about Kamala Harris and you get all this

[00:18:38] [SPEAKER_03]: information about how she's a great person. And already Alexa has apologised and said oh

[00:18:43] [SPEAKER_03]: you know it was an error but it's a funny thing. That's the only reason they're apologising.

[00:18:47] [SPEAKER_03]: Well the thing is it's always funny how these errors always seems to go against

[00:18:51] [SPEAKER_03]: Trump or against conservatives and for the Democrats. So it's yet another case. I mean

[00:18:56] [SPEAKER_03]: Brock came out straight away and was able to explain who both candidates were without

[00:19:01] [SPEAKER_03]: problems. And there was another test I saw online where one of the posters on X was

[00:19:05] [SPEAKER_03]: giving a description of basically a democratic socialist slash communist type of government.

[00:19:10] [SPEAKER_03]: And initially ChatGBT was according to this poster giving all sorts of weird answers but

[00:19:15] [SPEAKER_03]: Brock straight away said well this is basically a communist type of government. So other people

[00:19:19] [SPEAKER_03]: came along and they asked ChatGBT and it seemed to be giving more intelligent answers.

[00:19:23] [SPEAKER_03]: But we're definitely living in this strange time where the AI is being programmed by

[00:19:29] [SPEAKER_03]: you can't go in yourself yet and determine whether you want your AI to have a

[00:19:34] [SPEAKER_00]: totally neutral bent or for it to look at. Why doesn't Jeff Bezos simply sack these idiots

[00:19:39] [SPEAKER_00]: who are doing this programming? It reflects badly on his company. Well it does but he's now

[00:19:44] [SPEAKER_03]: basically retired, he's doing other things, he's new origin. I mean he's not involved in

[00:19:50] [SPEAKER_03]: the day-to-day at Amazon anymore. No he's not going in here either but he does have a CEO

[00:19:54] [SPEAKER_03]: and the CEO is looking after these things. But the problem is that sometimes the CEOs might

[00:19:58] [SPEAKER_03]: be of one political flavor and yet the people working for them are of the other. And that's

[00:20:03] [SPEAKER_03]: what happened at Twitter. I mean Elon Musk was able to sack 80% of the staff and X is running

[00:20:08] [SPEAKER_03]: better than ever. In fact they just launched the X app for your TV. If you have a smart TV

[00:20:12] [SPEAKER_03]: you can now download X and this is going to be changing X into more of a video platform.

[00:20:18] [SPEAKER_03]: Just like YouTube is this fantastic repository of all this incredible knowledge, so too will

[00:20:22] [SPEAKER_03]: X become that sort of a platform. I mean you can do it now but now with the X app

[00:20:26] [SPEAKER_03]: you can fire it up on your TV, use your remote control and be watching many of the things. There

[00:20:31] [SPEAKER_03]: are so many different live events and people's channels are now on X. I'm actually going to be

[00:20:37] [SPEAKER_03]: doing more X videos myself as well as publishing it to YouTube and Rumble but there's lots of

[00:20:41] [SPEAKER_03]: movement happening and we still haven't seen Grok version 3. Now Elon Musk just announced

[00:20:47] [SPEAKER_03]: Colossus which is 100,000 H100 Nvidia chips. It was completed in 122 days and it will be

[00:20:55] [SPEAKER_03]: version 3. Grok 2, the beta version and the beta Grok 2 mini has now been launched. If you've

[00:21:01] [SPEAKER_03]: got X and you pay for the premium you can play with it but the whole impact of AI 2025 is

[00:21:06] [SPEAKER_03]: going to see massive changes in how we use our computers and technology and interact with AI

[00:21:11] [SPEAKER_00]: on pretty much every platform. That's Alex Zaharov-Royd from TechAdvice.life.

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