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In 1947, something crashed near Roswell, New Mexico. Months later, the transistor was born. What followed was a technological explosion that rewired the world, computers, fiber optics, networks, and now, artificial intelligence.
In this episode of Non-Human Intel, we investigate whether this rapid leap in innovation was truly human, or subtly influenced by the study of recovered non-human technology. From crash retrievals and whisper networks to deep learning and autonomous systems, this is the case for a hidden lineage behind the tools that now run our civilization.
Support the show
Send us a text
In 1947, something crashed near Roswell, New Mexico. Months later, the transistor was born. What followed was a technological explosion that rewired the world, computers, fiber optics, networks, and now, artificial intelligence.
In this episode of Non-Human Intel, we investigate whether this rapid leap in innovation was truly human, or subtly influenced by the study of recovered non-human technology. From crash retrievals and whisper networks to deep learning and autonomous systems, this is the case for a hidden lineage behind the tools that now run our civilization.
Support the show