e517 — Where Every AI Knows Your Name

neon sign for a Boston restaurant
Photo by Hasnain Sikora on Unsplash

Published 9 June 2025

e517 with Michael, Michael and Andy – stories about Atarino microcomputing, AI through movie and television metaphor, AR running, screens and zombies, Skyrim Grandma, and a whole lot more.

Michael, Michael and Andy start off with another teeny tiny computer after last week’s Pico Mac Nano.  This coin-sized “Atarino” computer is the size of a postage stamp! 

Next, the co-hosts take a look at a Wall Street Journal article on the current state of AI through movie and television metaphor.  Then, they consider an IGN article predicting AI prompting providing the capability of creating a game like Breath of the Wild with a small development team.

The Sightful Spacetop AR display prompts an interesting discussion about how cramped spaces like airline coach seats could actually be made productive.  A Runner’s World article continues the AR crossover, using examples such as Can You See Me Now and Zombies, Run! 

The team turns the crank to wrap up this episode with i-Zombie, Skyrim Grandma and the excitement of the new Playdate games.

What do you think the next micro computer might be?  Have your bots 🤖 drop our bots 🤖 a line at @gamesatwork_biz (our home for now) and let us know! 

These show notes were lovingly hand crafted by a real human, and not by a bot.  All rights reserved.  That’s our story and we’re sticking to it.

Selected Links

Microcomputing Hardware

Ars Technica article: Polish engineer creates postage stamp-sized 1980s Atari computer

Retrododo article: Polish Engineer Creates Atari Computer The Size Of A Coin

Wikipedia entry: Atari 8-bit computers

AI

Wall Street Journal article: The AI Experience Is Going From ‘50 First Dates’ to ‘Cheers’

IMDb entry: 50 First Dates

IMDb entry: Cheers

Wikipedia entry: grok

Dextero article: AI company files for bankruptcy after being exposed as 700 Indian engineers

IGN article: AI Prompts Will Soon Let a 10-Person Team Build a Game Like Breath of the Wild Where the AI Is Doing All the Dialogue and You Just Write Character Synopsis, Tim Sweeney Predicts

Games at Work e515: Seeing Through Walls for AI NPCs

AR

PC World article: Sightful Spacetop review: Impressive AR display… until the bugs show up

Sightfult

Runner’s World (Apple News Link) article: Adventures in the Running Metaverse

Blast Theory post: Can You See Me Now?

Zombies, Run!

Games

Novelty Automation

Tim Hunkin post: i-Zombie

Tim Hunkin post: Making i-Zombie

GameSpot post: Skyrim Grandma Ends Streaming Retirement To Play Oblivion Remastered

Playdate post: Season Two, OUT NOW.

e516 — Model Behavior

a miniature Mac Classic toy
Photo by insung yoon on Unsplash

Published 2 June 2025

e516 with Michael and Michael – AI prompts, browsers, model collapse & automation along with a teeny tiny pico Mac nano, and a whole lot more.

While Andy is away, Michael and Michael start off with an article from Ars Technica that explains the system prompts for Anthropic’s Claude 4 models.  This leads into a discussion on prompt engineering, and how solutions like Ollama allow users to download LLMs and create their own prompts.  After a quick sidebar on AI browsers like Opera, the team takes a look at Sky, an AI automation app.  This app shows a great deal of promise as a desktop AI assistant, and will be very interesting to try out once it is generally available.  Then, the team turns to a story on AI model collapse.  And next up is a blog post about consenting to updated terms and conditions.

Round things off for this episode, Michael and Michael enjoy a teeny tiny Mac classic – the Pico Mac Nano – a new take on 3D monitors and a local North Carolina story about Pokemon card game competitions.

What would you want to run on a Pico Mac Nano?  Sky’s the limit!  Have your bots 🤖 drop our bots 🤖 a line at @gamesatwork_biz (our home for now) and let us know! 

These show notes were lovingly hand crafted by a real human, and not by a bot.  All rights reserved.  That’s our story and we’re sticking to it.

Selected Links

AI

Ars Technica article: Hidden AI instructions reveal how Anthropic controls Claude 4

Wikipedia article: Prompt Engineering

OLlama

Games at Work e429: Promptly Engineering

The Verge article: Opera’s new AI browser promises to write code while you sleep

Opera AI Browser

MacStories article: From the Creators of Shortcuts, Sky Extends AI Integration and Automation to Your Entire Mac

Sky.app 

Phrase of the moment: "model collapse" theregister.com/2025/05/27/opi

— Mike Elgan (@MikeElgan) 2025-05-29T14:44:13.236Z

The Register article: Some signs of AI model collapse begin to reveal themselves

"Technology should only ever do exactly what we have explicitly given it our consent to do"

This blog post 👉🏻 anildash.com//2025/05/27/2025- by @anildash is just superb! 👏🏻 👏🏻 👏🏻

And the last sentence, a massively poignant call-to-action that won't leave people indifferent, specially, those who can't understand

— Luis Suarez (@elsua) 2025-05-27T20:26:57.215Z

Anil Dash blog post: The Internet of Consent

Hardware

TechRadar article: Someone just built the world’s smallest working Mac – and at this price, I desperately want one

Pablo Picasso

Wired Article: 3D Is Back. This Time, You Can Ditch the Glasses

Pokemon

The Assembly article: More Than a Card Game

e515 — Seeing Through Walls

concrete and brick wall with circular hole, with grass and a tree visible though it
Photo by Mihály Köles on Unsplash

Published 26 May 2025

e515 with Andy, Michael and Michael – the Fortnite Darth Vader NPC, IO, both from Google and Open AI, AI hardware, an intriguing Vision Pro use case, infrared contact lenses, Car Play Ultra, Microsoft’s GamePass set of retro classic games (Pitfall said to be coming!), and a Warhammer typing game.

Andy, Michael and Michael start off with stories about Darth Vader in Fortnite.  One article deals with how players have gotten the Darth Vader NPC AI (non-player character) to say questionable things and another on the rights Fortnite secured to do so.

The team then turned to a summary of the top 15 announcements from Google’s I/O 2025.  The cohosts were impressed by the fact that Google created a NotebookLM from the content of the conference.  Less impressive was how interacting with the NotebookLM did not create the personalized results expected.  Moving along to a different IO; the OpenAI acquisition of Jony Ive’s company, the cohosts note that reimagining what it means to use a computer (AI or otherwise) is an enormous undertaking. 

Rethinking how spatial computing could be used, Michael R walked Andy and Michael through a  use case to see through walls, floors and ceilings in an intuitive and easy way.  Another example of superhuman visual powers are contact lenses that provide the wearer with infrared vision.  According to the article, these lenses work even better when the wearer closes their eyelids to help block out more of the (previously) visual spectrum to allow for the infrared to be more easily discerned.

Rounding out this episode, the cohosts take a slightly deeper look at Car Play Ultra beyond the Aston Martin experience described last week, enjoy the Microsoft Game Pass offering for retro classic games, as well as the Warhammer typing experience.  Perhaps some of these user experience and interaction mechanisms from such games will surface in the IO AI computing device. 

What do you think is the next computing paradigm – both in hardware and software?  How will the user experience become so transparent, that all that is left is creativity, augmented in the flow of the creative process? Have your bots 🤖 drop our bots 🤖 a line at @gamesatwork_biz (our home for now) and let us know! 

These show notes were lovingly hand crafted by a real human, and not by a bot.  All rights reserved.  That’s our story and we’re sticking to it.

Selected Links

That’s Mr. Vader to you

Wired article: Fortnite Players Are Already Making AI Darth Vader Swear

Kotaku article: Fortnite In Legal Trouble After Adding AI Darth Vader

AI

The Verge article: The 15 biggest announcements at Google I/O 2025

Google I/O: About I/O

Google created a NotebookLM notebook with everything they announced at Google I/O. So instead of slogging through thousands of hours of video and other content, you can just ask NotebookLM questions, listen to a podcast, or get a FAQ, etc. notebooklm.google.com/notebook

— Mike Elgan (@MikeElgan) 2025-05-21T03:29:11.088Z

Wall Street Journal article: What Sam Altman Told OpenAI About the Secret Device He’s Making With Jony Ive

OpenAI post: Sam and Jony introduce io

Cafe Zoetrope – where the io introduction video was made

HP IQ

Games at Work e371: Legacy Games & New UX (for early discussion on Humane in 2022)

Super Vision UX

Reddit post: How I use my Apple Vision Pro to retrofit Unifi Access Points in finished homes

The Guardian article: Seeing infrared: scientists create contact lenses that grant ‘super-vision’

Classic Games

The Verge article: Microsoft adds over 50 ‘Retro Classics’ to Game Pass

The Verge article: Warhammer’s free new game makes typing grimdark

e514 — Leroooooy Jenkins!

World of WarCraft Burning Crusade in foreground with a cute cat in the background
Photo by WTFast on Unsplash

Published 19 May 2025

e514 with Michael R and Andy – generative ads & LEGO, Aston Martin x Apple CarPlay Ultra, new Vision Pro UX, an Internet Roadtrip, Leroy Jenkins and so much more.

While Michael M is away, Michael R and Andy start off with some generative AI topics: advertisements and LEGO.  Per the Ars Technica article, Netflix has announced it has created GenAI advertising that it will show during streaming video in 2026.  And some exciting news in the GenAI space for LEGO – a model that generates stable (not diffuse!) LEGO structures from text prompts.

Next up: several Apple stories, starting with Aston Martin working with Apple’s CarPlay Ultra, which combines data and visualizations from the car as well as from the iPhone. Then, some articles on Apple’s Vision Pro, since the launch, and new capabilities allowing scrolling in a new way.

Then, Michael R and Andy share a cornucopia of fun.  A website with the first few of 10,000 drum machines.  A fixer of broken QR codes.  A web-based team driving game called Internet Roadtrip, reminiscent of Twitch Plays Pokemon, and a little like Desert Bus too.  And especially a reflection on the 20th anniversary of Leroy Jenkins.  Do check out the article in the show notes  below, and see also the embedded story from 20 years ago.

What’s your favorite Leroy Jenkins story?  Have your bots 🤖 drop our bots 🤖 a line at @gamesatwork_biz (our home for now) and let us know! 

These show notes were lovingly hand crafted by a real human, and not by a bot.  All rights reserved.  That’s our story and we’re sticking to it.

Selected Links

AI

Netflix will show generative AI ads midway through streams in 2026
Netflix is trying to grow ad revenue quickly.
arstechnica.com/gadgets/2025/0

— Ars Technica (@arstechnica) 2025-05-14T20:49:34.591Z

Ars Technica article: Netflix will show generative AI ads midway through streams in 2026

PC Mag article: LegoGPT Eliminates AI Weirdness, Creates Brick Designs You Can Actually Build

arXiv paper: Generating Physically Stable and Buildable LEGO Designs from Text

Huggingface: LegoGPT Demo

Apple

Wall Street Journal article: They Paid $3,500 for Apple’s Vision Pro. A Year Later, It Still Hurts.

Bloomberg article: Apple Readies Feature That Lets Vision Pro Users Scroll With Their Eyes

The Verge article: Apple will let the Vision Pro ‘see’ for you

Fun Stuff

10k Drum Machines

HumanQR

Adafruit blog post: Need to get away? Take an Internet Roadtrip!

Neal.Fun Internet Road Trip

Games at Work e77: (Hive)Mind Blowing for multiplayer Pokemon

NPR All Tech Considered article: Here’s What Happens When Thousands Play Pokemon Together

Desert Bus Express 2025

PC Gamer article: WoW’s Leeroy Jenkins, one of the internet’s oldest memes, turns 20 years old—and after looking back on what we wrote in 2005, I feel like we’ve failed Leeroys everywhere

Rock Paper Shotgun article: Doom: The Dark Ages review