Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?
This is amazing. Right after today's Daily Tech Update, I'm going to play for you a great clip from my nationally syndicated radio show. It's called, I know, The Kim Commander Show. Funny how that works. And hey, if you're not subscribed to it wherever you get your podcasts, what are you doing? You're missing out. You need this intel to live in today's world.
The Winter Olympics are underway in Italy, and the tech is wild. I'm Kim Comando for NetSuite. AI is here, and companies using it are ahead. If your revenues exceed seven figures, get their free guide, Demystifying AI, at netsuite.com slash kim. Let's start with drones. First-person view drones that race alongside the athletes. It's incredible. One will take you down a luge track in real time.
you'll feel like you're in the sled going 90 miles an hour, minus the frostbite. Then there's AI-powered replays. Multiple cameras feed into AI that freezes an athlete mid-jump, spins a 260-degree view around them, and shows jump height, airtime, and landing speed, all in seconds. It's like the Matrix, but with skiers.
And those AI replays, they're being turned into VR videos that you can watch on YouTube.
Chapter 2: What groundbreaking technologies are showcased at the Winter Olympics?
So, yep, you can strap on a headset and stand right next to a ski jumper mid-flight from your couch in your PJs. I'm giving away $7,000 this month. You can enter to win now at winfromkim.com. And now, as promised, a clip from my weekend show, The Kim Commando Show. It's pretty much the best radio show in the world, but I may be just a little biased. Sit back and enjoy.
Alphabet Wing just announced they're adding 150 more Walmart stores to drone delivery. and they're going to reach 40 million Americans with Walmart. People are ordering eggs, avocados, ground beef, and those chips Takis. The best customers use the drone service three times a week. That's a lot of eggs and ground beef and avocados.
But you do more online delivery than any human on the planet. I do. It's ridiculous. Have you ever had an option to have a drone?
Chapter 3: How are drones enhancing the Olympic experience for viewers?
No. From anywhere you've delivered to? I would have said yes. Oh, of course. So would I. I think it's so cool. I'd love to see that. No. We'd save on gas. I don't like the fact that it's going to eliminate some jobs, but I think the delivery drivers are overworked as it is.
No, there's a whole scam going on. There's a whole scam going on. Explain. Here's what I've noticed.
Chapter 4: What role does AI play in sports replays during the Olympics?
Like, Instacart. Let's just use the word Julia. Okay. Julia is going to be doing my shopping. Okay? And then... For some reason, when I'm talking to Julia on the app, we're going back and forth like, you know, I want the organic. I don't like non-organic. And I want, you know, hormone-free milk or whatever it may be.
And then when Julia is supposed to show up with the groceries, I have Edward standing there. Meaning like the person who you think you're talking to that app, it may not be that person who's actually doing the shopping.
They sell their accounts. They sell them. I was going to say that, or they got banned before. And so they use their cousin or their sisters or their somebody's account.
Chapter 5: How can VR technology bring fans closer to Olympic athletes?
There's a huge problem right now with people ordering things, them taking a picture of it, that it was delivered, and the person's just stealing it.
Oh, yeah, they do that all the time. All the time. But I like the one who actually photoshopped the chicken. It was like a chicken drum or something like that. And it was all cooked, but then he used AI to make it that it was raw. And then he took a picture of the raw one and then submitted it to DoorDash to say, like, hey, you know, my food wasn't even cooked.
And DoorDash is like, oh yeah, refund. Of course. It's all automated. Okay. Then he actually watermarked the AI image, the raw chicken. Like somebody's going to use that again. No, you can't.
Okay. Don't try and scam my scam. This is my scam.
All right, next time mom or dad calls because the screen turned blue again, you can skip the painful play-by-play over the phone. What you want to use is Google's Chrome Remote Desktop. So first you install it on both computers, and it's beautiful. It works on Windows, Mac, and of course Chromebooks, obviously. You log in using your Google account, and then you can totally see their screen.
You can move their mouse. You can click things, install updates, open files, all from your own device. Now, here's the deal.
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Chapter 6: What are the implications of drone delivery services in everyday life?
You need to set it up in advance so you're ready when mom and dad or somebody calls when they're in a panic, okay? So again, it's called Google's Chrome Remote Desktop, and just go ahead and search it, and you are gonna love me forever, because I am going to save your sanity with that tip. Hey, if you love staying tech ahead, then you're going to love, love, love.
I'm talking about my free newsletter called The Current. Join almost a million folks who get it every single day. It's quick, smart, and only takes five minutes a day. Yes. Sign up right now at GetKim.com. That's GetKim.com.