
In the last episode, People would be described by Nikhil Kamath WTF as “Open CEO Sam Altman GPT-5 as” fluency and depth of intelligence … We didn’t have any previous model “, he added that he was” painful “for him to switch to older versions.
The conversation bridged technology, education, business and personal considerations. Altman revealed that India is currently the second largest Openai market and can soon become the largest.
“India is now our second largest market in the world; it can become our largest,” said a forty -year -old technology leader. “If there is one big company in the world that seems to be excited right now, it’s with AI right now, it’s India. The excitement, hugs AI … energy is incredible.”
The discussion also became personal when Kamath (38) asked about the importance of the family, religion and the future of social institutions. Altman, who has a son with his partner Oliver Mulherin, said that paternity was more meaningful than he could imagine.
“The family has always been an incredibly important thing for me, and I didn’t even know how much I underestimated, what it would be like,” he said. “It seemed to me to be the most important and meaningful and fulfilling thing I could imagine- and so far it has exceeded all expectations.”
This episode, which was released on YouTube, has already generated buzzing, while the audience praised Kamath for ensuring another high -ranking guest and conducting conversation to technological breakthroughs and personal knowledge.
The user wrote: “Impressive in-depth clear vision of the GPT-5 breakdown, real world and human applications that control the future of the AI. The balanced mix of technological insight, social impact and personal philosophy maintained me.”
Another user noted: “The fact that Nikhil asks questions as an interview with his guests instead of feeling like an interview is what makes his podcast stand out from the rest of a very big span.”
“This podcast has Nikhil’s signature way to do a podcast everywhere. He owns this method now. It was so original and the questions were deep, philosophical and contemplative. It leaves one thinking for a long time,” the third user wrote.
(Tagstotranslate) Nikhil Kamath