Ayesha Roscoe
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And for Jim Kane, our deputy managing editor.
And for Jim Kane, our deputy managing editor.
And for Jim Kane, our deputy managing editor.
Okay, okay, okay. We got a little bit of Scooby doing that. Enough of that, okay? Tomorrow on the Sunday Story, chatbots that sound and look more human with faces, names, and personalities. Some in the tech world say it's a way for companies to boost engagement, but what's good for their bottom line might not be what's good for you.
Okay, okay, okay. We got a little bit of Scooby doing that. Enough of that, okay? Tomorrow on the Sunday Story, chatbots that sound and look more human with faces, names, and personalities. Some in the tech world say it's a way for companies to boost engagement, but what's good for their bottom line might not be what's good for you.
Okay, okay, okay. We got a little bit of Scooby doing that. Enough of that, okay? Tomorrow on the Sunday Story, chatbots that sound and look more human with faces, names, and personalities. Some in the tech world say it's a way for companies to boost engagement, but what's good for their bottom line might not be what's good for you.
Exactly. And you'll get lots of sound effects that AI cannot do. They cannot do what we do.
Exactly. And you'll get lots of sound effects that AI cannot do. They cannot do what we do.
Exactly. And you'll get lots of sound effects that AI cannot do. They cannot do what we do.
They probably have better things to do.
They probably have better things to do.
They probably have better things to do.
Setting the stage for more inflation and a trade war.
Setting the stage for more inflation and a trade war.
Setting the stage for more inflation and a trade war.
And I'm Ayesha Roscoe, and this is Up First from NPR News.
And I'm Ayesha Roscoe, and this is Up First from NPR News.
And I'm Ayesha Roscoe, and this is Up First from NPR News.
We'll have more on that, including analysis from NPR's Ron Elving.
We'll have more on that, including analysis from NPR's Ron Elving.