The episode opens with Andrew describing a workflow automation he built in n8n to collect story ideas and email him a pre-show list, then moves into a discussion of a research team creating the world's smallest shooting video game with nanoscale technology. The hosts react to the demonstration, compare it to miniature hockey or "inner space," and Andrew reflects on how nanotech has proved much harder than early optimism suggested. From there, the conversation broadens into AI-assisted science, automation workflows, and the practical use of tools like make.com and n8n for email-driven systems. Later segments cover model quality and reasoning systems, reactions to Grok voice mode, a Starship launch bet, and the picks segment, which includes Reset, Severance, Mickey Mouse shorts by Paul Rudish, Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man, and X-Men '97. The episode closes with a discussion of art, Blade Runner studies, and broader worries about AI reshaping human work and status competition. Key topics Nanoscale manipulation with electron microscopy: The hosts discuss a "world's smallest shooting video game" built with nanoscale technology, including focused electron beams and force fields between nanoparticles. Nanotech hype versus real-world difficulty: Andrew contrasts earlier expectations of rapid nanotech breakthroughs with the reality that building stable nanoscale systems is much harder than hoped. AI-assisted science and materials discovery: They talk about using AI and machine lea