This is mindblowing, to be honest, even if it makes perfect sense that it should be possible to do, the result is quite impressive.
It's basically a headline reader with some fluff, but it does a great job at that and there are whole teams of real humans providing such podcasts today, so that's saying something.
It can get weird or even a little broken though. See timestamp 09:50 of the Feb 23 2022 episode:
Laura: So, we're gonna talk about an article called Generic Dynamic Array in 60 lines of C that can be found on gist.github.com.
Zod: Alright, shall we read the article?
Laura (voice 2, almost a different voice): Sure, let me share it here.
Laura (voice 1): "Laura reads the article." <this is verbatim in the podcast>
Laura (voice 1): OK, so that was the article. What do you think about it?
Zod: I think it's interesting that you can define a generic dynamic array in such a small amount of code...
It's basically a headline reader with some fluff, but it does a great job at that and there are whole teams of real humans providing such podcasts today, so that's saying something.
It can get weird or even a little broken though. See timestamp 09:50 of the Feb 23 2022 episode:
Laura: So, we're gonna talk about an article called Generic Dynamic Array in 60 lines of C that can be found on gist.github.com.
Zod: Alright, shall we read the article?
Laura (voice 2, almost a different voice): Sure, let me share it here.
Laura (voice 1): "Laura reads the article." <this is verbatim in the podcast>
Laura (voice 1): OK, so that was the article. What do you think about it?
Zod: I think it's interesting that you can define a generic dynamic array in such a small amount of code...