The Stack Overflow Podcast   /     How to beat Doom in just 600 years

Summary

Ben and Ryan check in about complex images (an maybe even interactive games) encoded in living cells, the latest trends in prompt engineering, and the benefits of gaming to your education.

Subtitle
Ben and Ryan check in about complex images (an maybe even interactive games) encoded in living cells, the latest trends in prompt engineering, and the benefits of gaming to your education.
Duration
00:15:16
Publishing date
2024-02-02 05:20
Link
https://stackoverflow.blog/podcast/
Contributors
  Ben Popper, Ryan Donovan
author  
Enclosures
https://chrt.fm/track/G8F1AF/injector.simplecastaudio.com/6fa1d34c-502b-4abf-bd82-483804006e0b/episodes/024fe975-502e-46a9-9bdc-b0bca6a09e01/audio/128/default.mp3?aid=rss_feed&awCollectionId=6fa1d34c-502b-4abf-bd82-483804006e0b&awEpisodeId=024fe975-502e
audio/mpeg

Shownotes

A theory explores how to play DOOM inside a human cell. Fair warning, you'll need about 600 years to complete the game.

Looking for a good prompt builder to help you get the most out of your LLM? Try this one or explore this huge collection of prompts.

Startup Twin Labs wants to build a product that automates repetitive tasks by letting AI take over your cursor.

Harvard Medical School researchers published a study showing that the CRISPR system can encode information in living cells “as complex as a digitized image of a human hand.” Read more.

Three cheers for Max Lybbert, who earned a Lifeboat badge by answering Python faster than C++? How does this happen?.