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Thinking On Paper Technology Podcast

The Human Story of Technology, Mark Fielding and Jeremy Gilbertson
Thinking On Paper Technology Podcast
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  • Enshitification of the Internet: Trust, Funnels and Brands in the AI Age │ Nick Richtsmeier
    How do brands build trust when the internet has decayed into into AI-driven slop and tripe? The systems that once promised connection now work as mirrored cages, feeding your biases, hiding your real customer, and distorting the truth.Nick Richtsmeier, founder of CultureCraft and writer at Damns Given, argues that brands now live inside engineered distortions. Funnels collapse. Neutrality is impossible. And AI is being layered onto a system already built to extract rather than empower.In this conversation, Nick joins Mark and Jeremy to Think on Paper about:Why brands operate inside algorithmic cagesHow information distortion shapes every customer interactionWhy mass neutrality fails and perspective becomes strategyHow modern marketing hijacks curiosityWhy platforms hoard customer insight inside black boxesHow influencers stand in for trustWhy network-based growth outperforms funnelsWhy analog tactics and patient capital are becoming competitive advantagesThis episode tracks the widening distortion gap, the limits of AI-driven marketing, and the slow, analog tactics required to build something real inside an internet optimised for extraction.If platforms are collapsing into noise, where does trust come from?Please enjoy the show.And remember: Stay curious. Be disruptive. Keep Thinking on Paper.Cheers, Mark & JeremyPS: Please subscribe. It’s the best way you can help other curious minds find our channel.--Be our internet friend:⁠Listen to every podcast⁠Follow us on ⁠Instagram⁠Follow us on ⁠X⁠Follow Mark on ⁠LinkedIn⁠Follow Jeremy on ⁠LinkedIn⁠Read our ⁠Substack⁠Email: [email protected] On YouTube--Timestamps(00:00) Trailer(01:00) Disruptors & Curious Minds(02:00) Mark Has A Trust Issue(02:42) What Is Trust?(07:14) How Deep-Tech Brands Build Trust?(09:38) Steve Jobs And Selling A Feeling(10:00) The Cult Of Silicon Valley(10:35) Was the Internet Ever Not Shit? (15:05) What Is The “Distortion Gap”?(20:11) Reducing Your Digital Marketing Spend(21:45) Analog Marketing(23:40) Why the Marketing Funnel Never Really Existed(25:08) VCs, Capital And The Comfort Zone Of Risk(27:04) Analog vs Digital: What Actually Creates Meaningful Connection(28:40) How the TikTok Generation Uses the Internet Differently(32:40) Your Curiosity Is Being Hi-Jacked(35:22) What Are Load-Bearing Inefficiencies?(40:47) The Importance Of Resilience in a World Of Entropy(42:29) What Do We Want Humans To Be?
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  • AI and the Illusion of Intelligence: Born to Think │ Pia Lauritzen
    AI can answer your questions faster than any human. It can write your emails, help you code, and shape the way you see the world - and the people in it. But from the very beginning, AI was designed to deceive you.This is the story of asking and answering questions, of the difference between being born to think and being built to think. Ultimately, it’s about the power of questions: how they connect us and divide us, where curiosity meets manipulation, and why we may be losing the muscle for real wonder in the age of prompting.Pia Lauritzen Thinks On Paper with Mark and Jeremy Gilbertson. She’s asked and analyzed over 30,000 questions from people across languages and cultures. She’s a philosopher, TEDx speaker, Forbes writer and a philosopher of the question. Tune in and you’ll learn why we default to “what” and “how,” why “why” is so rare (and so radical), and how every question transfers responsibility.And then we go to the bible. Who asked the first question? And what can we learn about Adam and Eve and the pesky snake that changed the course of fictional humanity.There are dancing with question analogies, the dispelling of myths - adults don’t lose their questioning instincts, they just hide them. Because of fear, ridicule, ego.And finally, once the stage has been set like a Shakespearean play, the crux of it all: AI can’t think for you; blank pages matters; struggle is not a bug but a feature, and how the real test isn’t in the machine, but in your ability to hold onto what makes questioning, and not-knowing, uniquely human.Please enjoy the show. And click subscribe, it’s the best way for other curious minds like you to find our show.And remember: Stay curious. Be disruptive. Keep Thinking on Paper.Cheers, Mark & Jeremy--Other ways to connect with us:⁠Listen to every podcast⁠Follow us on ⁠Instagram⁠Follow us on ⁠X⁠Follow Mark on ⁠LinkedIn⁠Follow Jeremy on ⁠LinkedIn⁠Read our ⁠Substack⁠Email: [email protected](00:00) Trailer(03:28) 30,000 Questions & the What/How Bias(07:38) Questions That Connect vs Questions That Manipulate(09:59) Do We Really Lose Our Curiosity?(14:21) How to Start Better Conversations (18:40) Conversation as a Thinking Space(19:46) Why We Lead with Polarising Topics (20:35) How School Trains Us to Have Answers, Not Questions(22:22) Rethinking Education in the Age of AI(25:22) AI in the Classroom: Tool, Threat or Opportunity?(30:07) Why AI Can’t Help Us Think(32:55) The Essence of Technology, AI Deception & the Turing Test(38:17) What Could Humans Be in an Age of AI?
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  • The First Neutron Star Discovery: Jocelyn Burnell, Aliens And The Lost Nobel Prize
    What makes neutron stars so fascinating that they once fooled astronomers into thinking they were aliens? In this episode of Thinking On Paper, we sit down with Katia moskvitch, science journalist and author, to explore the wild discoveries and cosmic mysteries around pulsars and the densest objects in the universe.Why were neutron stars only theoretical for decades, and who first imagined their existence? How did Jocelyn Bell Burnell, a then-PhD student in 1967, discover these cosmic lighthouses using a homemade radio array of wooden poles and copper wire—and why did her supervisor, not her, end up with the Nobel Prize? If you enjoyed the episode, please like, subscribe and share so more curious minds like you can find our channel.Cheers,Mark & JeremyOther ways to connect with us:⁠Listen to every podcast⁠Follow us on ⁠Instagram⁠Follow us on ⁠X⁠Follow Mark on ⁠LinkedIn⁠Follow Jeremy on ⁠LinkedIn⁠Read our ⁠Substack⁠Email: [email protected]
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  • The Car That Stops You From Making a Fatal Overtake: The Sensor That Sees the Crash You Can’t
    Everyone thinks they are a great driver. Most drivers think they can judge a safe overtake. They can’t. In this Thinking On Paper shot, Barry Lunn breaks down the sensor technology that sees eight cars ahead, detects velocity before brake lights appear, and intervenes when the driver is about to make a mistake.Radar, not cameras, not lidar, could be the backbone of next-generation driver assistance. We get into how millimetre-wave signals bounce around traffic, how machines detect danger long before humans register it, and why more than half of global crashes are rear-end collisions that could be prevented with earlier insight.We also examine what this means for trust: why people resist hands-off driving yet quickly rely on a system that prevents the accidents they didn’t even know they were about to cause.Please enjoy. And check out our full length technology interviews if you like what you hear.-- Other ways to connect with us:⁠Listen to every podcast⁠Follow us on ⁠Instagram⁠Follow us on ⁠X⁠Follow Mark on ⁠LinkedIn⁠Follow Jeremy on ⁠LinkedIn⁠Read our ⁠Substack⁠Email: [email protected]
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  • The Five 'Must Haves' To Make Your Own Quantum Computer
    What if someone handed you the recipe for a quantum computer? In this episode, that’s exactly what happens.Coleman Collins of IonQ breaks down DiVincenzo’s criteria, (a checklist proposed by physicist David DiVincenzo) the five capabilities any physical system needs before it can call itself a quantum computer. There are five criteria.A well-defined qubitAbility to initialize qubits. You must be able to reliably set every qubit to a known starting state.Long coherence times. The qubits must remain stable long enough to run operations without losing their quantum state.Ability to measure qubits. You need to read the state of each qubit at the end of the computation (ideally individually).A universal gate set built from entanglement and single-qubit control.Mix them all together in a serving bowl and these let you perform any quantum computation you wish.You now know the foundation behind every major quantum architecture, from superconducting circuits to trapped ions.Cheers, Mark and Jeremy.Keep Thinking On Paper. Other ways to connect with us:⁠Listen to every podcast⁠Follow us on ⁠Instagram⁠Follow us on ⁠X⁠Follow Mark on ⁠LinkedIn⁠Follow Jeremy on ⁠LinkedIn⁠Read our ⁠Substack⁠Email: [email protected]
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About Thinking On Paper Technology Podcast

For serious thinkers who want to understand the real impact of technology on business, culture and society. We look at AI, quantum computing, space manufacturing, robotics, crypto, and whatever comes next through a simple lens: How does it work, who pays for it, who benefits, and what does it change for you? Each week, Mark Fielding and Jeremy Gilbertson talk to the CEOs, founders, outliers, writers and disruptors from the world's biggest fortune 500 tech companies to Silicon Valley's most agile: IBM, NASA, Coinbase, D-Wave and beyond.
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