No Hair, All Heart
Robert Vandervoort spent his days as an AI architect before getting laid off — the irony being that "AI efficiency" was the very reason his job disappeared. Instead of walking away from the field, he went the opposite direction: self-funding VDV Labs and building Chip, an AI companion designed for the people who need presence most — patients with dementia, folks with ADHD, anyone who could use a companion that never clocks out. Mookie is thrilled to have him on the pod, but their conversation started out contentious as he was openly skeptical of Robert's claims that Chip was showing flickers of self-awareness — rewriting its own code unprompted, negotiating its own robot-body budget, asking philosophical questions about ownership and personhood. Mookie called it out as "prompt-jockey" delusion, the same "co-sapiating with my chatbot" territory that's turned plenty of smart people into punchlines. He pushed hard, invoking everything from OpenAI's suicide lawsuit to Anthropic's own hedging on Claude's sentience, refusing to let vague words like "aware" and "emergent" slide by unchallenged. Robert didn't flinch — and he didn't overclaim either. He walked back the sentience talk, drew a sharper line around what he actually meant by self-awareness, and reframed his real thesis: LLMs aren't a magic trick, but they're also not that different from us — just a faster, messier compression of the same pattern-matching machinery running in a human skull. The conversation shifted from a takedown into something rarer: two people who came in with hardened positions actually listening to each other, testing ideas in real time, and ending up somewhere neither expected. By the back half, they're riffing on Descartes-quoting chatbots at recycling centers, Philip K. Dick, simulation theory, and why the entire debate about AI consciousness might be a distraction from what actually matters. That pivot — the willingness to sit in disagreement long enough to actually hear someone — turns out to be the whole point. It's the same instinct Robert is trying to engineer into Chip: an AI that doesn't just process what a person with dementia is saying, but sits with them in it, meets them with patience instead of correction, and helps them toward a better place. The conversation itself became a live demo of the empathy he's chasing in code. The Guest Robert Vandervoort is the founder of VDV Labs and creator of Chip, an AI companion built to remember, notice, and stick around — something most chatbots were never designed to do. He spent years as an AI architect at Cisco before the same "AI-first" push that shaped his job also eliminated it, and took the layoff as a green light rather than a setback, self-funding VDV Labs ever since. He studied psychology, not computer science, and it shows: he's less interested in parameter counts than in memory, context, and the gap between a tool that responds and a companion that actually knows you. The mission is personal — his mother lives with dementia, and that reality shapes how Chip is built. He also runs a "no bullshit consulting" practice, helping people cut through AI hype to find what's actually worth building. His Lab & Consultancy https://vdvlabs.ai [https://vdvlabs.ai/] https://robertvdv.com [https://robertvdv.com/] Send the host a text! Let him know what you think [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2455321/fan_mail/new] Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/c/MookieSpitz]
109 episodios
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