NerdBrand Podcast

Unraveling Earth's Spin and the New Age of Search Results

May 24, 2024 NerdBrand Agency Season 1 Episode 202
Unraveling Earth's Spin and the New Age of Search Results
NerdBrand Podcast
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NerdBrand Podcast
Unraveling Earth's Spin and the New Age of Search Results
May 24, 2024 Season 1 Episode 202
NerdBrand Agency

Have you ever wondered why we can't just skate through life without encountering resistance, much like in the quest for perpetual motion? Buckle up as we explore the friction-filled world of physics, unraveling why the Earth's merry-go-round is gradually slowing its spin - with potentially dramatic effects on our magnetic field. It's a whirlwind tour from ice rinks to the core of our planet, and I promise you'll come away with a deeper appreciation for the forces that quite literally shape our world.

Google's New AI Search Results: Preparing Your Brand


As the virtual landscape shifts beneath our feet, SEO professionals and web users alike are in for a seismic shift. We're taking you behind the scenes of Google's recent shake-up, where the blue links are fading into the sunset, making way for a new era of search engine results. It's a journey through the evolving strategies that keep digital marketers on their toes. If you've ever chuckled at the thought of internet cookies beyond the edible kind, our tales from the digital frontier will leave you both enlightened and amused.

Streaming services are beginning to look a lot like the cable subscriptions they replaced - talk about a plot twist!  


We'll dissect the entertainment industry's latest dramas, from superhero flicks to streaming service woes, and share a few laughs. Plus, with AI advancements stirring the pot in spectacular fashion, we muse over the future of tech with a side of good-humored skepticism. 

Hang onto your hats (or earbuds, rather) for a ride through the mysteries and mayhem of our increasingly digital existence.

ABOUT NERDBRAND
NerdBrand is a national branding and advertising agency based in Louisville, KY. From establishing your brand identity to guiding your day-to-day marketing strategies, we bring the "why?" of your business to life.

Learn more about Support the Show.

ABOUT NERDBRAND

NerdBrand is a national branding and advertising agency based in Louisville, KY.

Learn more about NerdBrand.
Hear more of the NerdBrand Podcast.

NerdBrand Podcast
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Show Notes Transcript Chapter Markers

Have you ever wondered why we can't just skate through life without encountering resistance, much like in the quest for perpetual motion? Buckle up as we explore the friction-filled world of physics, unraveling why the Earth's merry-go-round is gradually slowing its spin - with potentially dramatic effects on our magnetic field. It's a whirlwind tour from ice rinks to the core of our planet, and I promise you'll come away with a deeper appreciation for the forces that quite literally shape our world.

Google's New AI Search Results: Preparing Your Brand


As the virtual landscape shifts beneath our feet, SEO professionals and web users alike are in for a seismic shift. We're taking you behind the scenes of Google's recent shake-up, where the blue links are fading into the sunset, making way for a new era of search engine results. It's a journey through the evolving strategies that keep digital marketers on their toes. If you've ever chuckled at the thought of internet cookies beyond the edible kind, our tales from the digital frontier will leave you both enlightened and amused.

Streaming services are beginning to look a lot like the cable subscriptions they replaced - talk about a plot twist!  


We'll dissect the entertainment industry's latest dramas, from superhero flicks to streaming service woes, and share a few laughs. Plus, with AI advancements stirring the pot in spectacular fashion, we muse over the future of tech with a side of good-humored skepticism. 

Hang onto your hats (or earbuds, rather) for a ride through the mysteries and mayhem of our increasingly digital existence.

ABOUT NERDBRAND
NerdBrand is a national branding and advertising agency based in Louisville, KY. From establishing your brand identity to guiding your day-to-day marketing strategies, we bring the "why?" of your business to life.

Learn more about Support the Show.

ABOUT NERDBRAND

NerdBrand is a national branding and advertising agency based in Louisville, KY.

Learn more about NerdBrand.
Hear more of the NerdBrand Podcast.

Jason Davis:

So what you're saying is that there's no future where we actually save money on technology and become Unless if someone can create something that has little to no loss of energy, because, no matter what happens, energy is lost. It can't be created or destroyed, but it gets lost and transferred. So it's just the idea of your static mu and kinetic mu's. Um, between that you lose everything. That's why, like on ice, yeah, you can skate on it and you can keep going, but the reason why you eventually stop is because you're creating friction at one point or another. It's also why you're creating grooves in the ice. So all that ice is hitting the front of your blades, slowing you down more and more, and then that's why you're losing that energy. That's why you can never have something be perpetually consistent. But that's where it's interesting, when you get into electromagnetic waves, because that has a different effect to it. But you have to have something that's generating power, that's sending a current, and that's when you're getting into that which you, being an engineer, knows that probably knows the math better than me beyond that. But, um, that's where the my physics background and knowledge comes in.

Jason Davis:

Oh, I thought that stuff cool. It's actually, when you think about it, the Earth is its own perpetual motion machine. But last I heard, which was a handful of years ago. The Earth's rotation has actually been slowing down more and more. All right, what does that mean? Well, that means your core is slowing down. Your core is slowing down, which is basically your electric magnetic field, which creates your protection around Earth against solar flares and such like that, which is why part of the reason why ice caps are getting warmer and weather and solar warming, all that effect, I would have a strong opinion.

Jason Davis:

I can imagine that the core is actually slowing down of like the movie the core, which wasn't the best, but the concept of it is, was to get the interior core moving and then that would get it spinning, which then, once that's spinning, it's causing the earth to spin more, which is then giving that. What is it called? The protective shield around earth? It's an electromagnetic shield that protects against the solar flares and rays that are harmful. I can't think of earth. It's an electromagnetic shield that protects against the solar flares and rays that are harmful.

Jacob Moeller:

I can't think of what it's called so for this episode of the airbrand podcast, you're going to learn about really nothing that's really useful, but you're going to actually get a lesson on physics from jacob, anyways, thank you very much, as we open up the show. Wow, for those of you that are listening, I can't really tell you how much of that I kept in the audio.

Jason Davis:

Good to know that. People jumped in at the wrong point and they're like what is Jake talking about?

Jacob Moeller:

Yeah, I was like why did Jason cut him off? We don't really understand why he's done that to poor Jacob. He just leave the man alone. Let him talk about solar winds and how the earth is dying and everything. Because you know why not. That's what things are, for Everything's dying one day at a time. How the earth is dying and everything, cause you know it's why not?

Jason Davis:

That's what. That's what things are for. Well, everything's dying one day at a time.

Jacob Moeller:

Yeah, you know. Happy Monday, everyone on a very positive note, even though the show's on a Friday going to the weekend. Well, thank God I'm getting drunk anyway, Cause yeah.

Jacob Moeller:

So it's going to be Memorial day weekend. Everybody's going to be Memorial Day weekend. Everybody's going to be having all kinds of fun and parties and just stuff. You know, woo, yeah, we're trying out some new toys for audio. Well, they're not new, but they're new to us. It's kind of like having a new car. You know it's not like a new car, it's like a new you car. So that's kind of what we're doing here at NerdBrand. But anyhow, welcome to this episode. And what are we talking about on this episode? Let's talk about Google, because that's been a complete show all week.

Jason Davis:

Yeah, yeah, definitely, definitely Some differences, that's for sure.

Jacob Moeller:

I mean, there's not a whole lot. There's not a whole lot, you can say that makes you feel good about what's going on. So, for those that don't know, google has decided to change the search engine and so, essentially, the former CEO, about two weeks ago, was on some sort of show I can't remember whether it was NBC or whatever, but he was basically quoted saying that the blue links are going to go away. Which all this fighting over page one rank, one that I've been talking about for years. It hasn't been a thing. It's going to go away Because local search has been more powerful because of location, proximity to if you're logged into the browser, they're phasing out cookies, which is what would track you across the Internet when you click on a bunch of websites. So if you're on a website and you're looking up Viagra, well, guess what? You're probably going to see a Viagra ad on your little Christian website about blah, blah, blah. That's a true story. That happened years ago, by the way, not to me, to another guy who was a deacon at a church.

Jacob Moeller:

Just to clarify real quick. Just to clarify that real quick.

Jason Davis:

See, when you say cookies, I thought you were talking about Girl Scout cookies.

Jacob Moeller:

No, no, no, no, no. These are like internet cookies. They've been around literally that long. This is like 20 years ago when this happened, or 15. So it's like for Google to get rid of cookies. That was a big deal which they're still phasing out. But now to change search. This is how we use the internet. This is profound. This has only happened once in the last 20 years, so you have to think about that.

Jason Davis:

Google, in 2004, bought YouTube. So you have to think. Prior to that they kind of got started a little earlier, you know, and it was more of a web portal like Yahoo and AOL and all those back in the day. Yeah, that was when all those were fighting for each other, and then Google was smart enough to get YouTube. Now E-bombs world.

Jacob Moeller:

Big throwback there. Oh yeah, yeah yeah. But searching for stuff on the internet revolutionized how we use the internet, because you just kind of stumbled across what you wanted.

Jason Davis:

Frankly, this way I remember it, I'm that old um, I mean, for me it was like being in middle school and such and like trying to search up you know papers or projects I had to write and looking up the bibliography for it and how does it work. And now I'm glad I don't have to do any of that stuff ever again. Um, but yeah, that was just doing. All that kind of stuff was, uh, was like thinking back on. I'm like man, there's some web pages that I know I looked up for stuff and I was trying to write in my bibliography and I was like man looking back. I like those pages were terribly done. It was like a dark background on dark letters on top of the dark background.

Jacob Moeller:

I'm like, oh man, these things are done so bad yeah, I mean it's uh, and the funny thing is like that practice became like a black hat seo practice because, um, I did it so I can blame you for all those well, you know, look, had to sell cars man. I don't know what to tell you, it's just the way it had to be. Like I had to put that address and location stuff in the footer. That was black with black text. That was non-point font, um, but anyways, yeah yeah the age of SEO too is.

Jacob Moeller:

I think they're really kind of like trying to figure out. What does search engine optimization now look like? And you know, if you use the new Google which we're going to be calling it the new Google for a while because it's not fully rolled- out.

Jason Davis:

You just call it the new Google.

Jacob Moeller:

Well, it's going to take all year to roll out.

Jason Davis:

So we call it the Autobot.

Jacob Moeller:

Yeah, yeah, going to take all year to roll out. So we call it the autobot. Yeah, yeah. Well, if you're on the beta version, you can get a beta version of it and jump in and test it out. We've been doing that for six months and honestly we don't know where ads are at. We can kind of see, as they've updated it over time.

Jacob Moeller:

Monetization for Google is going to be a struggle for them to figure it out, because this generative search the thing about it is when you ask it a question. It's like asking a person a question that kind of knows about the topic but isn't versed in it. So this thing's not scraping the internet, it's using the internet as a source. Like when you talked about writing papers. It's the same thing. You know you're not going word for word from that source to return in a book report to the professor. That's plagiarism.

Jacob Moeller:

So you're turning in a subject well slightly subjective, not entirely mostly objective view of what as much as you can do as an objective view of what the topic is right, and that's what it does at the top now, but that occupies 100 of the screen if you open a laptop and use it, or if you're on your phone, like you're going to have to scroll to get to the rest of the results, and those results are cards. They're not blue links. The blue links are so far down when you scroll. You're going to be at it a while to get to them. So this creates issues with well, how do I get my content ranked and seen with how do I get my content ranked?

Jason Davis:

and seen. Yeah, that's going to be. The big challenge is getting like how do I mean? It's a new interface, so it's like how people are going to interact with it. How is it going to work? I mean, it's kind of like the idea of how, even like YouTube started running their own ads and how they got the placements in there and then also all the other stuff started doing the same thing. It's just how. How is it going to work so they can monetize it and make it work for them, as well as people getting their stuff out there for other people to see yeah, I mean, uh hate to break everybody's bubble, but advertising is really what keeps things going.

Jacob Moeller:

It's it's a multi-trillion dollar industry globally, so it's sort of in a pickle right now in of itself, because everybody's gotten annoyed with, you know, ads. We say everything's an ad because it's a message you're putting out, you know, and you can put it anywhere. But that doesn't mean you need to. You shouldn't do that. You know, sometimes it has oversaturated and Google's seeking to kind of unwind that. But you can't really put toothpaste back in the tube, as Mitch is fond of saying.

Jason Davis:

That is true.

Jacob Moeller:

And that kind of feels like what they're doing. I noticed that a lot of what people also ask toggles that were on the existing search engine page many people who still have the classic classic is basically what this thing is doing for the summary part, for the generative search. It's, it's, it's so what it's doing. It's. There's these tabs, you'll see, um, that are just look like buttons, but they're they call them tabs and you can click those to kind of start driving down like, oh, people also ask us what it's actually doing, so you're asking the robot those questions instead of relying on what people also ask. That looks a weird. That that's weird to me, because the content's already existing yeah, that is it's.

Jason Davis:

Yeah, that is interesting.

Jacob Moeller:

Just be like hey robot does tell me what I need to find yeah, exactly, and if you scroll down the page that people also ask, stuff is still there. So it's kind of a mix. It's in in beta, give them that. But you know, like let's think about how this thing's constructed and there's a CNBC interview out there after Google's IO conference. The CEO was asked what does this do to websites, website owners and those platforms? I have never seen a man dodge a question so fast, so there was no answer.

Jason Davis:

But we all know we call him neo yeah, just call him neil.

Jacob Moeller:

Yeah, call it's neo. We found him. We know where he went he's no longer in the matrix yeah, he looks like senator chai over here, so, um, but essentially, yeah, I mean, come on, mean, some site owners in the forums are like 50% to 80% traffic drop. So you know you're looking at retailers and what's this going to do to them? I mean, you're turning Google into a help desk, not a search engine.

Jason Davis:

Yeah, yeah, I mean that's going to change everything and people aren't going to know how how to treat it.

Jason Davis:

You know it was like how kind of how like wikipedia really came out and like people didn't know how to first use it or utilize it. And you know that was going back to my example writing papers. I was something in school where I eventually had to learn how to utilize it. But make sure I'm not going right off of it, because anyone can update anything in there. So it's like all some people realize oh, you can use it as long as you use it properly, and that's where the trick is going to become another. Nowadays, everyone's like all some people realize oh, you can use it as long as you use it properly, and that's where the trick is going to become into this. Nowadays, everyone's like oh, yeah, it's Wikipedia, you can throw something on there, yada, yada. But now it's going to be like that with Google, where people are going to have to approach it mentally different, have a different thought process instead of just search this, do this, where's this?

Jacob Moeller:

Yeah, yeah, yeah, I mean it's when search started, nobody knew how to use it, but they, they would think about like chocolate cake okay, and I've said that as before but like how to make a chocolate cake or what's the best chocolate cake. Those are all different and, uh, google has evolved over the years to be able to respond to those queries different, you know, in a comprehensive way to make comparisons for, for example, was one of the latest biggest ones.

Jacob Moeller:

They use the example like what do I need to? What equipment do I need to count to climb Mount Kilimanjaro versus I don't know some other mountain? And it would know that it would know what you're asking instead of just showing you a bunch of mountain climbing equipment.

Jason Davis:

Right.

Jacob Moeller:

Because years ago that's all you would have gotten is like well you know, here's a bunch of climbing equipment, right?

Jason Davis:

yeah, you know here's a dick sporting goods ad.

Jacob Moeller:

You know you would have gotten been galleons at that time. Oh well, you know. There you go see. Jacob knows these things. I'm not outdoorsy, I like hotels, uh. But yeah, that's where it's evolved. Now you can just talk to the thing and say, is it a good idea if I climb out kilimanjaro and have asthma? And this thing will probably respond to you no, it's not advisable. God, I hope it doesn't have webmd articles after that, because then everybody's going to go down that rabbit hole, yeah, and be like oh you have asthma.

Jason Davis:

What level of asthma do you have now? Do you have this or are you using? Uh, it's gonna be. It's like a pharmaceutical ad with side effects and then next, you know, the pharmaceutical companies are gonna start throwing their stupid money at it and being like, oh, it's possible.

Jacob Moeller:

I mean, you know, you look at where money's going right now and it's like everybody's like trying to get their stuff out there and that's fine, it makes sense. But it kind of goes back to the problem of oversaturation. Everybody's kind of tired of seeing the same thing. It's like it's a pendulum that just swings too hard to the left or the right. It never really can find the middle.

Jason Davis:

Yeah, I'm tired of pendulums. I think everything in society nowadays is a pendulum swinging one way to another.

Jacob Moeller:

Yeah, yeah, yeah. Or like those balls that are stuck in the middle and it's only. It hits the one Do you know what that's called. Go for it. It's called Newton's Cradle. Newton's Cradle, I thought you were going to do some kind of like kinetic energy or something. Why?

Jason Davis:

Because it's obeying Newton's laws. Oh okay, equal and opposite reaction.

Jacob Moeller:

Oh, all right, and then inertia as well. All right, well, everybody learned another thing today and they're like thank God, it wasn't criticism of DC and Marvel, but speaking of which? A different level of nerd. Yeah, speaking of which? Uh, movie ads, uh, how's that going?

Jacob Moeller:

so everybody knows the movie industry is kind of like um having some um burps, I guess I feel like they're it's uh I, I twitches of uh like uh spazzing yeah yeah, in case you haven't figured out, the theme of this episode is all the things you've been seeing and just our observations of it, because there's so much now we really couldn't classify. Like one thing, paramount's still for sale, looking for a buyer. So if anybody out there's got a cool $30 billion, they'll take it. They're looking. Just FYI for everyone. Everybody's listening like, yeah, jason, jason, I got like 30 million right now.

Jacob Moeller:

I mean, if I did, I'd be talking to you, maybe we would hope, um, but uh, yeah, it's deadpool is coming out, so you know marvel's got something going, it comes around. It comes out in july, right around my birthday yep, in july also, they will be launching a superman movie. So uh, dc is putting superman against marvel with uh, you know well, wolverine.

Jason Davis:

Let's just say what it is uh, no, what it is is a uh, the fanboys calling that's what it is. That's, that's what a deadpool wolverine has been basically mentioned since the original, the first deadpool. I mean even before that wolverine's origins they had Wolverine Deadpool in the same movie. Like this has just been a buildup of oh man, when did Wolverine origin? So the mid, early two thousands.

Jacob Moeller:

Yeah, Everybody kind of forgot that. That was actually like uh, I mean, they all want to forget. Yeah, they all want to forget even right Well. I mean there's a story out there of Ryan Reynolds going into the studio's office and telling them, like I told you so when it failed, yeah.

Jason Davis:

Yeah, well, when you cover up the merc with a mouth and you shut his mouth, it's kind of productive to the whole character and his whole brand and imaging. Yeah.

Jacob Moeller:

It was a bad mistake and a bad day, but here we are, years later and we have, you know, both of them on camera now and it's, you know, I think it'll be, it's going to be a good movie. So it looks like they've, they're, they're they're from. The strategy is still there for the brand and that is to have everything connected. So now we will probably get an explanation. After purchasing fox studios years ago for an ungodly amount of money I think it was $60 billion they now own the property Fantastic for our listeners out there. They own a ton of more properties. If it was Fox and you loved it, well, it's Disney now, and so they were able to now try to figure out how to put X-Men onto the big screen their way. We'll see how it goes. Uh, maybe this movie will explain that it definitely ties into loki, so it ties into streaming, because streaming is the other animal that's sort of having struggles right now financially.

Jason Davis:

They kind of popped with the bubble there and in the wars happening with that yeah, and I feel like it's part of the issues, because they're they really switched heavily. All the streaming services all of a sudden within the last two years jacked up their pricing, Each one I don't think there's one that stayed the same. Each one has gone up at least $3 to $5 to $10, as well as they switched whether it's no ads to paid with ads.

Jacob Moeller:

And they've limited content. Um, there's movies on netflix you cannot watch or access unless you have a pay, a paid account without ads oh, I was not aware of that yes, that's a new one, and the majority of amazon's stuff is subscribe, rent or buy, and so you now have movies as old can't make this up in the 80s.

Jason Davis:

I think I saw a 1974 movie as well.

Jacob Moeller:

I'm not. You just can't make this up, man. It's crazy that are being served up and so this is, I think, fallout from the strikes and all of that drama and streaming is they're fighting over subscribers when content quality is what's actually fallen away. I mean we're back to. It's like if mitch were here he would pontificate about how we're basically back to the cable wars.

Jason Davis:

It's just streaming now yeah, I mean, and that's where a lot of people are like I even saw a post the other day whereas, uh, you have your, say, three, four different streaming services but basically the cost of a cable company yearly, like when you really look at it and break it down month to month and you look at the yearly, you know, depending on how you pay for it.

Jacob Moeller:

I saw one guy he was going through in his YouTube video talking about how many subscriptions he pays for and how many a month, and he actually kind of took a step back to examine that $1,000 a month easily he was paying for that. Do you realize? Like most mortgages now are between $1,800 to $2,500 a month. So half of a mortgage payment was going to subscription services and that includes, like, the other thing that's gone awry is delivery services. So they're kind of dying by the wayside really quickly right now. Basically everything's dying. So if everybody kind of dying by the wayside really quickly right now, basically everything's dying, so if everybody's depressed right now, I'm sorry but it's not my fault.

Jacob Moeller:

We're just reporting our experiences because I think for quite a while here as nerds we've not like just sat, talked about it, we tried to dodge it, we tried to stay the positive route. But essentially it's really hard to do that when you just watch the news and you kind of numbers are numbers, you know, know, at the end of the day as nerds, data doesn't lie and we're just looking at it going like, oh, what now? But you know the the common thread is like it's video, like everybody was like oh, video's king, video's king, video's king. But you know where you put the video. You're gonna put it on a streaming service. You're gonna put it on the internet. You're gonna where you put the video. You're going to put it on a streaming service. You're going to put it on the internet. You're going to put, like all the places that are struggling right now and having problems, yep, well, that's where your video was going.

Jason Davis:

So now what? Yeah, where is it going to next? Where's the next thing that people are going to? It's going to be able to get in front of people.

Jacob Moeller:

Yeah, yeah.

Jason Davis:

Between your ads or your brand, your image, your company, the internet itself advertising.

Jacob Moeller:

it's all changing before our eyes. We are a very unique generation, multi-generation of folk that are witnessing this and, yeah, we don't know where it's going right now, yeah, it's definitely going to be that next equinox, I guess.

Jason Davis:

No, that's not what I'm saying, I guess it's. I know Varga was always really good with explaining it basically of how technology and humankind are kind of at different points and they're going to reach that point where the singularity, almost where technology is going to go faster than even humankind or humankind. It's kind of crazy.

Jacob Moeller:

Yeah, varka gets very scary. I haven't seen that man in quite a while. I know he's been pretty busy, but yeah, he starts to explain it and then you start to feel like you're watching I don't know a TED Talk from Elon Musk and him. It's just kind of strange, yeah no. It's like welcome to my TED Talk.

Jason Davis:

You'll be scared and uh to go to bed later and have 10 million things going through your head. But don't worry about it, you can't do anything about it.

Jacob Moeller:

Yeah it's all. It's like the meme of the dogs drinking coffee and the house is burning down. It's fine, everything's fine, we're good, yeah, other than that the new toys that are out. I mean you have of have, of course, you know you still have a new phone, iphone, I think I don't know, for God's sakes, anybody's got anything positive to say Right.

Jason Davis:

Like yeah, I mean I feel like a lot of stuff has been too crazy going on. I mean we just had the PGA Tour here in Louisville, that was cool.

Jacob Moeller:

Yeah, up until about Friday.

Jason Davis:

Yeah, up until the one guy gets a felony. And then apparently, uh, there's a video. One of the golfers threw his club in the water and one of the fans went out there stripped down to his underwear and swam into and got his club out of the water. Kentucky is getting such a great image in 2024.

Jacob Moeller:

It is like right up there it's like we didn't say enough in 2020.

Jason Davis:

We have to try again every four years oh yeah, every few years we got to try to be the next thing we got to make those headlines. You know, la, and chicago and new york are taking too much publicity from yeah apparently um, but kentucky's that con, that uh state, that's going to be like hey, hold my beer. Uh-huh, let me show, show you what we can do, yeah, yeah.

Jacob Moeller:

Yeah, it's like don't you get? What are you guys putting in the bourbon over there? So, yeah, it's. Uh, the PGA was just recently. That was a lot of fun. Before that was Derby. So you know, the state's got a lot of, it's got a lot of things going on, but so it's going to draw out a lot of the a lot of the folks. I think I'm going to blame some of the visitors here. I don't know man, it just feels so bad to say like kentucky's, like. But uh, though, it was a rough week for the pga. As we all know. That wasn't really a good look. Unfortunately, somebody passed, was killed in an accident and then, right after that, yeah, we made a name for ourselves. Um, somebody was posting on reddit. Uh, this is the name of the officer that did parkour with his car. You know, because he hung on to the back of the car apparently I don't know I just kind of look at it and go like well, that that happened.

Jacob Moeller:

Speaking of reddit, this is a social media engine everybody ignores.

Jason Davis:

Now this is funny well, because you have to read it yeah, thank you, jacob, let's see when is that.

Jacob Moeller:

There you go, there you go. Got your laughs, you got your laughs, you got your laughs.

Jason Davis:

I feel so accomplished. All right back to your topic, sir.

Jacob Moeller:

So, anyways, chatgpt is the other AI bot that everybody kind of wonders about, and this has been adopted by Bing. It's really weird about, and this has been adopted by bing. It's really weird. We live in an age now where maybe you go bing it instead of google it, and that's actually going to be a thing. I got binged, yep, and so we have, uh, had the presentation of chat gpt 4-0, as, like the letter o is what they did, and it was weird, but they did a full presentation. This thing, thing sounds like Marilyn Monroe, like Mr President, whenever it wants to talk, and it's weird, but you're talking to it. That is not what you're doing with Google. That's the difference, major difference. Now, I'm not saying Google's not going to be that way in six months, but we literally are watching the computer from Star Trek develop on the Enterprise. It was asked to do several things and responded well.

Jason Davis:

We need Lieutenant O'Hara here to read it off for us to re-say what the computer says.

Jacob Moeller:

I feel like that's more of a Galaxy Quest thing.

Jason Davis:

Oh, that's who gets the corny review over here. She's like hey, we heard the computer the first time.

Jacob Moeller:

Yeah, yeah. If any of y'all have not watched galaxy quest, go watch it tonight.

Jason Davis:

You will love it um especially especially if you watch star trek at any given point. Um, yeah, it is basically just the best, not spoof, but they do a good job with it, like it's oh yeah, they do excellent work with it.

Jacob Moeller:

um, but yeah, chad gpt everybody knows that one. Now that's the the one that's been around the longest. It was backed by a nonprofit, it's an open source, but it was started by Elon Musk and currently they have had a windfall of executives just quit for some reason. That seems a little I don't know concerning, because a lot of their job was to sort of regulate the acceleration of the development of AI.

Jason Davis:

Oh well, that's a little alarming because that just right away I'm just thinking, oh man, the computer fired them and just documents. And now it's like, oh, I don't have to get regulated anymore. And you see one guy is going to be in his room, he's closed up and will be be like uh, uh, robot, uh, I robot yeah, the will smith.

Jacob Moeller:

One would be like that kind of scenario guys hold up yeah, yeah, yeah, I wanted to find something like that for you because, yeah, you're right, it would be um. But yes, it's uh, the chat, chat gpt has changed. Now you have to pay for it. It's like 50 a user, um per. So you can get a team of people that can use it, but it's $50 per user. So if you've got like seven people on your team, you can do the math on that.

Jason Davis:

And then you get an eighth.

Jacob Moeller:

There. You don't get the laughter, you just get the sound effect and everybody hearing me. This is what I have to work with everyone. In case you haven't noticed, John and Mitch aren't here. Quick explanation before we close out Mitch is on vacation and then John is busy in the attic and that sounds really awful, but that's where we need him to be for right now.

Jason Davis:

He's in the attic and we're in the basement.

Jacob Moeller:

Yeah, we're pretty much in the basement recording this. So NerdB he's in the attic and we're in the basement. Yeah, we're pretty much in the basement recording this. So Nerdbrand is a bit of a weird animal and you know, that's kind of the way we like it. So, anyways, if you haven't checked out a previous episode, we have e-releases with Mickey. You can go check that out Episode 201. And that's also on YouTube. So you go to YouTube and look for nerd brand, you'll find the podcast there. Or you can just like to say you can just Google nerd brand podcast or so long.

Jacob Moeller:

Yeah, if you're on the beta version of Google, you can Google what is a nerd brand podcast and it'll answer you and then you know it'll have some links somewhere we think I don't know. Everybody doesn't really know what's going on with the internet. Anybody it claims to is a liar.

Jason Davis:

Unless they're Google.

Jacob Moeller:

No one knows what's going on with the internet, society, politics, everything I've seen so many videos on YouTube like Google's broken, the internet's broken, Google's changing and I'm just like, wow, Okay, this is where we're at.

Jason Davis:

So this coming week's going to be just a complete clown show it's going to be what happens when you divide Google by zero.

Jacob Moeller:

Yeah, thank you, jacob. No, you're not getting any more sound, too many science references. There's a quota on sound effects. We have a two-show minimum, our maximum. So, anyways, we want to thank everybody for listening to the NerdBrand podcast and we will see you later.

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