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@lexfridman

  • Conversation with Historian Lars Brownworth About Vikings
    Conversation with Historian Lars Brownworth About Vikings

    Here's the links for my conversation with historian Lars Brownworth all about the Vikings. YouTube: https://
    youtube.com/watch?v=iKx3gA
    ODybU
    … Spotify: https://
    open.spotify.com/show/2MAi0BvDc
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    … Podcast: https://
    lexfridman.com/podcast

    → View original post on X — @lexfridman,

  • Vikings Age: Epic Conversation with Historian Lars Brownworth

    Here's my conversation with historian Lars Brownworth all about the Vikings, from the start of the Vikings Age to the conquest of Europe and beyond. This was an epic & mind-blowing conversation. It's here on X in full and is up everywhere else (see comment). Timestamps:
    0:00 –

    → View original post on X — @lexfridman,

  • Knowledge Base System with Interactive Tools for Podcast Research

    Same, I have a similar setup. A mix of Obsidian, Cursor (for md), and vibe-coded web terminals as front-end. Since I do a podcast, the number/diversity of research interests is very large. But the knowledge-base approach has been working great. For answers, I often have it generate dynamic html (with js) that allows me to sort/filter data and to tinker with visualizations interactively. Another useful thing is I have the system generate a temporary focused mini-knowledge-base for a particular topic that I then load into an LLM for voice-mode interaction on a long 7-10 mile run. So it becomes an interactive podcast while I run, where I ask it questions and listen to the answers to learn more. Anyway, heading out for a run now, thanks for the write-up 👊

    → View original post on X — @lexfridman, 2026-04-02 23:06 UTC

  • Lex Fridman Conversation with Jensen Huang NVIDIA CEO
    Lex Fridman Conversation with Jensen Huang NVIDIA CEO

    Here's the links for my conversation with Jensen Huang, CEO of NVIDIA: YouTube: piped.video/watch?v=vif8NQcj… Spotify: open.spotify.com/show/2MAi0B… Podcast: lexfridman.com/podcast

    → View original post on X — @lexfridman, 2026-03-23 16:50 UTC

  • Jensen Huang Interview: NVIDIA, AI, Leadership and Consciousness

    Here's my conversation with Jensen Huang, CEO of NVIDIA, the most valuable & one of the most influential companies in the history of human civilization. It is the engine powering the AI revolution. This was a fascinating & inspiring conversation, in parts super-technical on engineering of every part of the AI stack, memory, power, supply chain (TSMC, ASML, etc), in parts about leadership & psychology, and in parts personal & philosophical about life, consciousness, mortality, and human nature. It's here on X in full and is up everywhere else (see comment). Timestamps: 0:00 – Introduction 0:33 – Extreme co-design and rack-scale engineering 3:18 – How Jensen runs NVIDIA 22:40 – AI scaling laws 37:40 – Biggest blockers to AI scaling laws 39:23 – Supply chain 41:18 – Memory 47:24 – Power 52:43 – Elon and Colossus 56:11 – Jensen's approach to engineering and leadership 1:01:37 – China 1:09:50 – TSMC and Taiwan 1:15:04 – NVIDIA's moat 1:20:41 – AI data centers in space 1:24:30 – Will NVIDIA be worth $10 trillion? 1:34:39 – Leadership under pressure 1:48:25 – games 1:55:16 – AGI timeline 1:57:29 – Future of programming 2:11:01 – Consciousness 2:17:22 – Mortality

    → View original post on X — @lexfridman, 2026-03-23 16:49 UTC

  • Lex Fridman Podcasts with Jensen Huang, NVIDIA CEO
    Lex Fridman Podcasts with Jensen Huang, NVIDIA CEO

    It was an honor to hang out with Jensen Huang, CEO of @nvidia, and do a long-form podcast with him. Really fun & fascinating technical deep-dive conversation on & off the mic. One of the most brilliant & thoughtful human beings I've ever met. NVIDIA is the most valuable company in the world by market cap and is the engine powering the AI revolution. Podcast probably out tomorrow (Monday) unless I get stuck in too many interesting conversations while running around in SF 😉 PS: I haven't checked my messages in days. Sorry for slow replies 🙏 Trying to stay deeply focused at in overwhelmingly intense time & barely hanging on. Love you all ❤️

    → View original post on X — @lexfridman, 2026-03-22 21:39 UTC

  • Jeff Kaplan Interview: WoW, Overwatch, and The Legend of California

    Here's my conversation with Jeff Kaplan, a legendary Blizzard game designer of World of Warcraft and Overwatch, which are two of the biggest, most influential games ever made. Jeff is one of the most genuine & awesome human beings I've ever met: kind, thoughtful, hilarious, and still & forever a gamer through and through. This was a truly fun & inspiring conversation. We talk about it all: the lows, the highs, the memes, the details of the game design process, and the new game he's been secretely working on: The Legend of California. I got a chance to play the game with Jeff, and it's incredibly beautiful (and fun). You can wishlist it on Steam now. I can't wait to play it with all of you! Conversation is here on X in full and is up everywhere else (see comment). Timestamps: 0:00 – Episode highlight 1:27 – Introduction 4:07 – Early games: Pac-Man, Zork, Doom, Quake 18:33 – Writing career – 170 rejection letters 34:06 – EverQuest obsession 47:04 – Getting hired at Blizzard 1:02:32 – Lowest point in Jeff's life 1:08:37 – One of Us 1:12:54 – Early Blizzard culture 1:32:36 – Building World of Warcraft 1:50:20 – How WoW changed video games 2:07:42 – Single-player vs Multi-player 2:28:35 – How Blizzard made great video games 2:54:25 – Online toxicity 3:01:59 – Why Titan failed 3:19:09 – Overwatch in six weeks 3:46:07 – Best Overwatch heroes 3:54:37 – The challenge of matchmaking 3:58:01 – Rust 4:08:22 – Why Jeff left Blizzard 4:30:35 – Diablo IV 4:32:03 – Getting back to making video games 4:40:59 – The Legend of California 4:54:44 – Greatest video game of all time 5:02:51 – AI and future of video games

    → View original post on X — @lexfridman, 2026-03-11 21:44 UTC

  • Peter Steinberger conversation now available in German with AI dubbing

    My conversation with Peter Steinberger (@steipete) is now translated & dubbed into German. Huge thank you to ElevenLabs (@elevenlabs) and @matiii for making it happen. It's available here and on YouTube where you can switch audio tracks by clicking the gear icon > Audio Tracks > select German. I have a lot of hope for this application of AI to break down barriers that language creates, and no one does it better than @elevenlabs. The whole ElevenLabs team has been really fun & inspiring to work with.

    → View original post on X — @lexfridman, 2026-03-04 00:08 UTC

  • Lex Fridman Conversation with Rick Beato on Music

    Here's my conversation with Rick Beato (@rickbeato), a musician, music educator, producer, songwriter, and host of a YouTube channel that celebrates great musicians & musical ideas, and helps millions of people fall in love with great music all over again. It's here on X in full and is up everywhere else (see comment). Timestamps: 0:00 – Introduction 0:44 – Guitar solos 4:43 – Gypsy jazz and Django Reinhardt 6:14 – Bebop jazz 10:27 – Perfect pitch vs relative pitch 15:04 – Learning to play guitar 38:34 – Miles Davis 44:01 – Bass guitar 45:08 – Greatest guitar solos of all time 1:14:23 – 27 Club 1:19:04 – Elton John 1:22:18 – Metallica 1:26:48 – Tom Waits 1:32:39 – Greatest rock stars 1:36:02 – Beethoven 1:42:37 – Bach 1:45:27 – AI in music 1:59:18 – Sabrina Carpenter 2:02:49 – YouTube copyright strikes 2:08:26 – Spotify 2:19:18 – Guitars 2:23:40 – Advice

    → View original post on X — @lexfridman, 2026-03-01 06:07 UTC

  • AI Agent Security: The Critical Bottleneck for Adoption

    The power of AI agents comes from: 1. intelligence of the underlying model 2. how much access you give it to all your data 3. how much freedom & power you give it to act on your behalf I think for 2 & 3, security is the biggest problem. And very soon, if not already, security will become THE bottleneck for effectiveness and usefulness of AI agents as a whole (1-3), since intelligence is still rapidly scaling and is no-longer an obvious bottleneck for many use-cases. The more data & control you give to the AI agent: (A) the more it can help you AND (B) the more it can hurt you. A lot of tech-savvy folks are in yolo mode right now and optimizing for the former (A – usefulness) over the the latter (B – pain of cyber attacks, leaked data, etc). I think solving the AI agent security problem is the big blocker for broad adoption. And of course, this is a specific near-term instance of the broader AI safety problem. All that said, this is a super exciting time to be alive for developers. I constantly have agent loops running on programming & non-programming tasks. I'm actively using Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, and very carefully experimenting with OpenClaw. The only down-side is lack of sleep, and an anxious feeling that everyone feels of always being behind of latest state-of-the-art. But other than that, I'm walking around with a big smile on my face, loving life 🔥❤️ PS: By the way, if your intuition about any of the above is different, please lay out your thoughts on it. And if there are cool projects/approaches I should check out, let me know. I'm in full explore/experiment mode.

    → View original post on X — @lexfridman, 2026-02-17 01:40 UTC