Conversations exploring China, technology, and US-China relations. Guests include a wide range of an
Chinese balloons over Wyoming!! To discuss, we have on today William 'Balloon Guy' Kim of the Marath
Love it or hate it, AI capabilities continue to advance. As futurists imagine how this technology ma
China v Taiwan: who would win? Michael O'Hanlon, a senior fellow and director of research at Brookin
This episode is sponsored by Policyware. Check out Samm's class at https://www.policyware.org/chinat
Say China wins a war for Taiwan. What happens next?To discuss the political and economic consequence
In 2023, ChinaTalk is going to Congress! First up in our series is Rep. Ro Khanna, Democrat who repr
What can $52bn for semiconductors actually accomplish? To discuss the tensions and tradeoffs underly
As AI becomes increasingly sophisticated, we consider the question of whether there are limits to wh
Tyler Cowen of Marginal Revolution makes his ChinaTalk debut!We get into: How AI is going to change
Before we get back to the interviews, I read from the newsletter I run which you should subscribe to
Subscribe to the ChinaTalk newsletter! https://www.chinatalk.media/Outtro music: Fred Again's Frank
Subscribe to my newsletter! https://www.chinatalk.media/ Doug O'Laughlin of Fabricated Knowledge and
Today US Department of Energy Secretary Granholm announced a nuclear fusion breakthrough at Livermor
How do you get into chips? Doug O'Laughlin of Fabricated Knowledge and Jon Y of Asianometry run us t
Ling Li, lecturer at the University of Vienna, comes on the pod to discuss: The origins and evolutio
I talk about where I think these protests are heading and what they mean for Covid Zero and the inte
Can the US and China play nicely enough with each other to not ruin the planet in the coming century
Do export controls work? And will they work for AI? Meet Emily Weinstein and Tim Hwang. They're rese
What will the Biden administration's new export controls mean for the US and Chinese semiconductor i
The AI revolution in art is coming, not in decades but months and years. What does this mean for cre