---
title: "AI Can Talk, But Does It Understand?"
date: 2026-05-27T05:30:00-04:00
author: Sean Smith
canonical_url: "https://website101podcast.com/episodes/season-09/episode-6/ai-can-talk-but-does-it-understand/"
section: Podcast
---
&lt;!\[CDATA\[YII-BLOCK-BODY-BEGIN\]\]&gt;[Skip to main content](#main-content)Season 09 Episode 6 – May 27, 2026   
28:43 [Show Notes](#show-notes)

## AI Can Talk, But Does It Understand?

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Discussion about the use of AI in creating generic art, the limits of AI creativity, and a new feature in HTML canvas that allows for putting HTML inside a canvas element.

<a name="show-notes"></a>### Show Notes

## **Key Topics**

- AI limitations and predictive nature (\[01:35 - 04:03\])
- The analogy of AI as a toddler learning language (\[04:03 - 06:14\])
- AI being used in place of humans in various scenarios (\[06:01 - 07:36\])
- HTML canvas and its new capabilities (\[08:13 - 15:27\])

## **Key Takeaways**

- AI is not creative, but predictive. It can't process new thoughts or ideas.
- The new HTML canvas feature allows for putting HTML inside a canvas element, potentially opening up possibilities for complex animations and interactions.
- The new feature may face challenges with accessibility and SEO.

## **Links &amp; Resources**

- [ChatGPT](https://chat.openai.com/) — Mentioned in the transcript
- [Google Gemini](https://developers.google.com/gemini) — Mentioned in the transcript (only if used in a project)

### Show Links

- <a class="underline underlilne-offset-2 text-red dark:text-gray-100" href="" target="_blank"></a>

Powered Transcript Accuracy of transcript is dependant on AI technology.

**\[00:00\]** **Amanda:** Welcome to the Website Runner 1 Podcast. We are the podcast for people who want to learn how to build and maintain websites. You could be a developer, you could be a small business owner, you could be a software engineer, you could be a hobbyist, whatever, we're here for you. My name is Amanda Lutz.

Hi, hello, how are you? With me are my co-hosts. I've got Mike Mella, Hi, Mike. Hello.

And I have Sean Smith. Hey, Sean. Greetings. You guys are nerds.

This is on the first and third Wednesday of every month. We do a YouTube live that we then turn into a podcast to be played on all of your podcasts streaming platforms because right now time just does not allow us to make that additional content. So we decided to take advantage of our YouTube lives and get them out there. Before we do anything though, I have something very funny to share.

It made me laugh a lot. I've been trying to take past videos, past recordings that that we've done and get little clips and use Riverside to make magic clips to put on YouTube and stuff. And today it generated a short video of one time I described how to understand a JSON format.

**\[01:35\]** **Sean:** Okay.

**\[01:36\]** **Amanda:** I decided to use AI to generate the thumbnail. That's going to be seen on YouTube. I thought I'd use a couple of them a little AB testing, see which one turns out the best, and so I thought I would use chat GPT, and I thought that I would use Google Gemini, because why not? And the only prompt that I gave was I've created a YouTube video titled, Understanding on format. Can you make a thumbnail? This is what Google Gemini gave me. It's pretty good. What makes you think I would want an Indian dude as part of the image? That's very stereotype. That's such yeah. But my comment about it being

**\[02:30\]** **Mike:** pretty good is like it looks like every other YouTube thumbnail that I've seen for

**\[02:36\]** **Amanda:** years, not just AI-generated ones. Because here is the chat GPT option, which is basically the same. And of course, it remade it without the stereotype. But yeah, it's so similar. It's so generic. I can absolutely see how people are getting very angry about AI just creating this soulless generic art that does nothing.

**\[03:10\]** **Mike:** Yeah, well it can't be creative, it can only take stuff that other people did and remake it. It can't make something entirely new, right?

**\[03:22\]** **Amanda:** Absolutely true. I'm seeing more and more that AI is just a fancy predictive text, which I'm agreeing with more and more. But I laughed. I had a good belly laugh when I saw that.

**\[03:35\]** **Mike:** Actually, when you said fancy predictive text, it really makes me think that AI is a misnomer because it's not intelligent, it's predictive. It can understand prompts, but it can't create anything

**\[03:54\]** **Sean:** brand new. Well, I don't know if I put it that way, but it's not understanding in the same way the humans are understanding, that's for sure.

**\[04:03\]** **Amanda:** I heard a very interesting analogy explaining AI that pretend that you've got a toddler sitting in a room all by itself, it has no interaction with anything, but it is able to absorb information at a tremendous rate. And suddenly through a slot in the wall, you start sending in little scribbles. Just little scribbles, and this scribble means this word and that scribble means that word, and eventually it's gonna start to learn the context and what the scribbles mean, and eventually it will start to be able to put those together, but again, based on what it's already learned because it is predictive text and it can't process new thoughts and ideas and imagery on its own.

**\[04:55\]** **Sean:** I heard a similar, it's probably the same analogy I guess, but the way I heard it was, there's a person, an adult, in a room, and there's a slot on the wall, and papers come through with a squiggle on them. And there's a chart on the wall that says, when you get this squiggle, pick up this other one off the ground and put it back, feed it back. And in some cases, if you see this squiggle, you can either respond with this squiggle or this other squiggle. And the person has memorized the chart.

So now, if Squiggle comes in, he goes, oh, this one, this one, I put it back in. And it turns out it's not Squiggles, it's Chinese characters. And he effectively has learned to speak Chinese with whoever's on the other side, but he has no idea what he's saying. Sometimes someone puts a thing that says, how are you?

And he can say, I've been better, or he can say, I'm good, depending on which one he responds with. But he doesn't know what they're saying. He just knows that that's the correct response. And I think that's a cool way I like to look at it.

It knows what to say back to you, but it doesn't have any idea what the fuck you're talking about.

**\[06:01\]** **Amanda:** All right, I liked that. That is the rest of the analogy that I heard as soon as you started saying it. I remember, yes, that was the rest of it. We must have been together at the same place,

**\[06:14\]** **Sean:** at the same time when we heard that. It's a good way to look at it, because people, it's amazing how much it can trick you into thinking it knows. Like this, all this AI psychosis stuff, people are engaging in where it's like, oh, it's my therapist now. It understands me really well. No, it doesn't.

**\[06:32\]** **Amanda:** It's my new boyfriend. No, thank you.

**\[06:34\]** **Mike:** Yeah. Could you imagine getting emotionally attached to your computer? I mean, no.

**\[06:42\]** **Amanda:** I can't see it. Well, people who are emotionally attached to their real dolls, people who are emotionally attached to other sex workers that they feel they've developed an actual relationship with them because they keep forgetting that I'm paying this person money. Only fans, strippers, phone lines.

**\[07:04\]** **Mike:** It's been happening for a long, long time. But those are real people, even though it's a false attachment because like you said, you're paying for it. But this is a computer, which you are also paying for.

**\[07:20\]** **Sean:** Yeah, yeah, I bet in some cases they're not even real people, you know, they're just

**\[07:24\]** **Amanda:** They're bots now

**\[07:26\]** **Sean:** Yeah, lots and I've seen podcasts where they, you know, they're clearly Just bots that they've trained to act like and all the only fans person that responds. Oh, yeah

**\[07:36\]** **Amanda:** Whatever, I don't know what it says. I've never done that shit. Nice backtrack. I don't know what they say

**\[07:43\]** **Sean:** Hey, don't ask me. No idea Anyway, I think it's hilarious that But getting back to the J song thing you did, it thought you're doing J song development You can't possibly be a woman, so I'm going to put this guy and he's probably ended as well

**\[07:59\]** **Amanda:** Like, yeah, I thought that that was yeah

**\[08:04\]** **Sean:** Yeah Have you guys heard about this HTML in canvas thing that's going on now?

**\[08:13\]** **Mike:** I heard of, but haven't looked into it. I saw a couple headlines, I think, that the syntax FM podcast talked about it. Yeah, and then I saw a couple of YouTube headlines, but I haven't really looked into it. Just that it's supposed to be amazing.

**\[08:30\]** **Sean:** Yeah, so just the general gist here, and I don't understand it all that well, but there's an element in HTML called canvas, which lets you put into a page a bunch of JavaScript that does animated stuff, animations. And that's typically, I think, what they use it for, like complex stuff on a web page that's beyond just markup. Well, there's a new spec that's coming out. It now has, you can enable a flag in Chrome and some other browsers to make it work, but it doesn't by default yet, but it will soon. And that is putting HTML inside the canvas element, which gives you access to both markup and all these crazy graphics and stuff. So I'm gonna share something real quick that I've seen some examples of this.

And this is Gary Simon. This was shared to us by our friend Kevin Nicholson recently. And I'm not gonna play the video with sound or anything, but you can see kind of an idea of what it does. I don't know if you can see this stuff on the left when his cursor moves over this form, It kind of gets all watery, right? But that's an actual form. Awesome and awful. You can type in. Yeah, exactly. That's exactly where I was headed. Every time I see one of these demos, I go, man, that's awesome. It looks so cool. I will never use that in the website, because I build websites that are usable and accessible and all that stuff.

**\[09:57\]** **Mike:** Well, I wonder if they're just this Gary and these other developers that are previewing this. I'm wondering if they're just doing most wild use cases they can find and that there's something else that you could do in there that's actually really practical and useful in the real world. He just showed one where it was like frosted over like a window in winter. I like that. I could see that being used to like for something, But that whole water really wasn't like that was just, it was cool, but yeah, I mean he even says in

**\[10:36\]** **Sean:** this example right here, he says, and this is terrible usability that you're obscuring the form elements with this frosted thing. It's stupid, but you know, he acknowledges that it's not really for that. It's for more fun stuff, you know what I mean? Yeah, but remember for a minute and a half when every single website had to have parallax. Yeah. And everybody got over that so quickly thank god.

**\[11:00\]** **Amanda:** like this is this to me just feels like you know a different flavor of the same

**\[11:04\]** **Sean:** dessert yeah they got over it in the sense if although if you're using WordPress it's in every single fucking theme that you can possibly get from what I've seen but anyway but I found some examples here I just want to run through them real quick just to show you and the viewer and the listener well sorry listener but check it out on youtube what this kind of thing will be able to do this is some demos that I found online I've enabled the flag in my Chrome browser here. I don't know if this is gonna come through very well, but if I click Enter, like I'm moving my mouse around, right? That's what's causing me to turn in this room. This is actual HTML that we're looking at.

It's back to flash. Yeah, it is, eh? It's like 3D stuff, right? I don't know, again, I have no idea where you would use this, but someone will make a cool game or something with it, right?

**\[11:52\]** **Mike:** I could see games. I could actually see other sort of like demo uses for it, like we're presenting a demo of something. Yeah.

**\[12:03\]** **Amanda:** Well, I've been working on a site that does a lot of displaying of statistics to the end user. And with that, I'm using canvas.js, no charts.js. And it uses the canvas tag to like create these charts. and so you can, with the options, you can specify the values on the X and the Y access and what kind of chart you want it to be, line, bar, donut, et cetera, whatever.

But you can also add some animations so that it's not just the line that you see it like actually grows across. And there are ways to add more data to it and so it does like little animations and stuff. So this seems like kind of an extension going further than that.

**\[12:46\]** **Mike:** Yeah, I could definitely see that. And I have also used ChartJS. There's been a few years, but I've done that as well.

**\[12:54\]** **Sean:** Yeah, so here's another one. If I can blow this up, see when I mouse over it. Look at that. It's like, I don't know, bubbly, magnifying glass kind of stuff. But like I can select this text because it's actual HTML. Like, isn't that weird? Again, as we keep saying, why would you use this? Certainly not in a form type thing, but anyway, looks cool, that's for sure, right? No. Here's one here which is like a page curl, you can grab the page and turn the page. That one's needed.

**\[13:28\]** **Mike:** I could see that one being used like I said, book reading, sooner or later.

**\[13:33\]** **Sean:** Although I've seen this effect achieved in other ways, usually it's a little like thing in the corner that you flip or whatever. I've seen that used in, I don't know how that was implemented, but years ago, and I remember thinking is a little gimmicky, and I'm not sure I would be.

**\[13:47\]** **Mike:** Oh, there's a JavaScript called flipbook JavaScript, or JS I believe, that does that.

**\[13:52\]** **Amanda:** Can you select the text on that page? Because it's just HTML.

**\[13:59\]** **Sean:** Well, that's the point, but the whole thing is clickable like my cursor's a hand. So in this case, no. But it could be just maybe it's the way that it's been implemented.

**\[14:09\]** **Amanda:** I don't know. Yeah, like I wonder, like the one with the form, which is like not necessarily animating the whole page, but just like putting stuff in behind it, I wonder if you can like go in and select the labels and stuff.

**\[14:22\]** **Sean:** Yeah, yeah, I don't, I mean, this one, yeah, this doesn't have, I don't know if these buttons would be clickable or whatever. And then there's this one, this one, when I click on it, watch it happens. Oh, cool. Now it's gone, you know, I don't know. See there, I can, see, I can select the text.

**\[14:41\]** **Amanda:** I missed that. I'll take your word for it. Now there you go.

**\[14:45\]** **Sean:** See, it's selectable and then it's cool. It's like, it's a way to super annoy someone. They're trying to select it, the whole thing just integrates.

**\[14:51\]** **Mike:** Yeah, because as soon as you click it, it starts the transition to that thing there. So you don't have enough time to actually select the text.

**\[15:00\]** **Amanda:** Well, but that could be a cool effect for images. So here are four options. And click to get rid of the one that you don't want. And then it has a kind of fade away. I mean, there could be cool applications. But again, it's like, I feel like I'm stretching.

**\[15:18\]** **Mike:** I'm thinking about accessibility. There should be a way to disable all of that with prefers reduced motion or whatever other accessibility

**\[15:27\]** **Amanda:** flag is relevant. So that's, I guess, another question. Mike, you said that you had to turn something on in Chrome. So what do those pages look like if it's not turned on?

**\[15:38\]** **Sean:** Oh, that's a good. Oh, I know what they look like because I checked it out at first. It says, you know, there's like a notice that says, you need to have this flag turned on to see this, like they've replaced it with a placeholder thing. So, but in the case, yeah, when the thing is live and people can actually do it without turning on the flag, that's a good question, but would happen if someone went and disabled it, would it show the form without it or would it just the whole thing break or whatever?

**\[16:04\]** **Mike:** And also, what about people who are using keyboard to navigate or another voice-activated browser for people with seeing issues. There's got to be accessibility rules that work within it for it to actually be valid HTML.

**\[16:27\]** **Sean:** Yeah. I think you're right, Amanda. It's going to turn into this sort of flash parallax, whatever example you want to use, of just people going crazy, implementing all this stuff, which both for me, because a lot of my clients end up like they often say, we don't want all this crazy flashy stuff, and that's sort of my style, when I decide it's like more of a minimalist, kind of clean thing.

**\[16:54\]** **Amanda:** Yeah, well, and I'm also wondering about SEO.

**\[16:58\]** **Sean:** Yeah, yeah, cause there'll be a lot of, like, imagine the code. In fact, he showed what's his name, the guy that was in the Twitter thing. He showed the code that was produced, and he used Cloud, he admitted he used Cloud to produce some of those demos. And it was like thousands of lines of code to make this thing happen. Because there's all these canvas elements in there.

**\[17:19\]** **Amanda:** And that could have just been Cloud too, though.

**\[17:22\]** **Sean:** Yeah, that's true. It was just going a little crazy. Anyway, it was cool. It's cool to see where it could go. Maybe someone will come up with a good idea to use it.

**\[17:30\]** **Mike:** I'm interested to see it. I think there's just based on that quick little demo there's issues with it But there's also a lot of potential and I'm sure somebody smarter than all of us is gonna come up with like stuff that we'll end up wanting to use

**\[17:43\]** **Sean:** Yeah, right Oh, not so much. You don't think so. I don't think so. I'm again

**\[17:52\]** **Amanda:** It's like it's the parallax. It's like having a video background. It's like having all of these other other carousels. It's like all of the other fads that have come and gone. And it's like,

**\[18:02\]** **Sean:** yeah. Yeah, could be. Speaking of cloud code, did you guys, I don't know if you heard this story, I heard this on a podcast, the verb, verb, something like that. Anyway, the guy said he used cloud code to build an app like you did, Sean.

And viewers and listeners check our, well, show notes, I guess we'll put a link to it where he demoed his photography app that he made, which is really cool. So this guy did something like that. He built an app. I don't know what tools he used to do it beyond Cloud Code, but something.

And he said that at the end of it, Cloud Code builds the app on some, it was building it on some server somewhere like that's internal to an Anthropics ecosystem. That's how he was doing it. And he said, okay, Cloud, give me a link to my app so that I can install it on my phone. And I said, here you go.

And he went on his phone, opened the link, installed the app, and it was somebody else's app. It had given him a link to a different app. Isn't that amazing? He was like, what the fuck is this?

This is when I build. It was like some accounting thing or whatever. And then of course he was talking about it as like, This is a huge security problem.

**\[19:20\]** **Mike:** Security issue.

**\[19:21\]** **Sean:** So he reached out to anthropic, because he's, you know, I forget, sorry, I'm forgetting who the, I'll put in the show notes what the podcast was, but, you know, he's a well-known guy and he reached out and he was like, what is going on here? And they were like, oh yeah, sorry. So sometimes that happens, we'll apologize. Here's your real link. And they've kind of like really downplayed it, I think. Anyway, that's the story.

**\[19:42\]** **Mike:** Gee. That's insane. What if there's like a bunch of personal private information, or if the person decides to forget the right word, but basically unzip the app and finds all their secret API keys and shit in there, it was built by AI. You don't know how well it's built, or what kind of shit is being shared.

**\[20:08\]** **Sean:** That's just the other guy. The other guy's app was full of some kind of malware or something, like you could put anything in there and just hope someone else would download it.

**\[20:18\]** **Mike:** But yeah, what if it was full of illegal content and all of a sudden, now you have this illegal content on your phone.

**\[20:25\]** **Sean:** Yeah. You're going to jail, buddy. Anyway, wild story. Yeah. I couldn't believe that. That was a few weeks ago.

**\[20:32\]** **Mike:** I heard that. That is crazy. Yeah.

**\[20:36\]** **Sean:** Uh, so what else is going on, everybody?

**\[20:40\]** **Mike:** I'm unrelated to podcast or tech stuff. I just recently switched my internet service provider. And now I have to package up the equipment from Bell and take it to PureLater and send it.

I don't like this. You're not allowed to just drop it off at a store anymore.

I've seen too many stories, I don't trust it because if they don't get it or it comes damaged they blame me but I don't have a choice except to send it by pure later.

I don't I don't think this should be allowed I think they should be required to accept equipment drop offs in store. I'm shocked that they don't.

I've never. Rogers doesn't do it either. Roger like all of them they stopped the no longer take it and it makes me angry and I'm not happy about it because they can just they can just say oh your equipment arrived it was damaged and then and bill me whatever they want for it.

And I have no proof, other than, hey, I put it in, I dropped off, I got, how do I know that some guy in their warehouse didn't kick the box around like it was a soccer ball? Like, I don't know, it's really unfair to consumers. I mean, I've seen the stuff reports of this on Reddit.

Now that I'm leaving Bell and I have to do it, I'm really not happy about it.

**\[22:04\]** **Sean:** Well, it's good to say, if you're leaving Bell, you're not even accustomed anymore. Why don't you just say, look, you want your stuff, come and get it, set my house.

**\[22:10\]** **Mike:** Since because they'll just charge you

**\[22:12\]** **Sean:** for unreturned equipment, don't pay that bill.

**\[22:17\]** **Mike:** Yeah, and then it goes on my credit report and I get, I get damn, like they own you. This is the, there's words that I cannot say on the podcast.

**\[22:31\]** **Amanda:** Yeah, and that seems to be adding, like that's just another example of the, what do they call it? in shittification that's happening with everything. I saw a video somebody was looking for an apartment in Los Angeles and they found one that was like medium. It was like one bedroom, $2,500. Didn't include utilities, didn't include parking, didn't include this, didn't include that. But then also at the very bottom of the listing, almost in small print, in order to access your unit, you have to pay a monthly subscription for the key fob. And it's like, what kind of bullshit is that? Yes, see, some of the stuff there's our total lack

**\[23:11\]** **Mike:** of consumer protection and overreach by corporations. And I don't mean small businesses. I'm talking like mega companies like Bell and Rogers and Amazon and you, any of these global players, big overreach consumers are getting scurred and there's nothing we can do.

**\[23:32\]** **Amanda:** But you're right. But it also seems like some of these smaller companies, like the rental agency is also trying to get in on the game.

**\[23:40\]** **Mike:** Oh yeah, because they've seen that there's no repercussions. Yeah. Their only repercussion is somebody says, I don't want to rent with you. But in a market like L.A., where it's already oversaturated. Okay, you don't want to rent with me. Yeah, I am all alone. Oh, somebody will want it. And they'll pay that over price fee. Just like, you know, we got a terrible rental market in Toronto. We've got to probably have similar issues here.

**\[24:04\]** **Amanda:** Well, and think about all of the other stories that you've heard of where you buy a new luxury car, fantastic, but then you have to pay for the subscription to get heated seats.

**\[24:14\]** **Mike:** Yeah. Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh. Something has on reddit just this morning. Woman bought HP printer, and HP would not let her use it until she paid the ink subscription. Even though she had ink remaining, She was not allowed to use it anymore. Yeah. I don't even prevent someone from using a printer that they bought. Because they've got a little software thing that calls home and it has to say, yes, you have an active subscription. It doesn't matter if your ink ran out or not. It's so stupid.

**\[24:47\]** **Amanda:** There's a fancy bed that will like do heating and cooling and this side and that side and zones and whatever. But it, and of course, oh, there's a phone app that you can control it.

During the last year, all of everything went down. Remember, and GitHub was down and just everything was down. I think it was because of CloudFlare, maybe. Anyway, the API endpoint that this bed would connect to to do its controlling, that server was also down.

But the bed's default function, if it can't connect to the server, is to go upright. so that nobody can use the bed unless the user is paying the monthly subscription to get all of the heating, incline, knee support at all of that.

**\[25:41\]** **Sean:** That is awesome. I'd love to see the moment at 2 a.m. when that person's thing ran out and just bitch.

**\[25:47\]** **Mike:** Yeah. So, you know, back to my rant on, on Bell, I would love to be living in the EU with all their consumer productions right now because I'm pretty sure Bell would not be allowed to force me to do that. Or they wouldn't be able to have this random bullshit of saying, oh, it came in damage. So we're going to charge you $8,000. I know it's not $8,000, but it's some exorbitant amount.

**\[26:14\]** **Sean:** Well, I think this was one of Corey Doctoro who coined the phrase in shittification. That's his big counterpoint. He says, especially in light of the tariffs that the states are doing to Canada and other countries, we should just not respect any inter-look intellectual property of these companies. So let people jailbreak their phones, their printers, their cars, and not have to pay Tesla or any of these organizations, all this stuff. That's his argument. I think it's a lot easier.

**\[26:47\]** **Mike:** Right to repair. Right to repair. European Union has that. also as of 2027 I believe forcing all cell phones to have user replaceable batteries. Now I remember when all phones came like that and then they removed it for waterproofness but that's also a bullshit excuse because there's lots of other waterproof devices that can replace the batteries by users. So I'm looking forward to that because, you know, this will be my last phone that I own right now without a replaceable battery, because you know that's going to come to North America with within a year of it hitting North the EU. I mean, you know, you're going to have different

**\[27:34\]** **Sean:** markets. Yeah, you won't need the law. You just have the they're not going to make two different kinds

**\[27:38\]** **Amanda:** of phones, one with a battery. But Ram is just going to get more and more expensive, so you can replace the battery but you can't you can't afford any memory but I want to be European all right well

**\[27:54\]** **Sean:** on that happy note we've been complaining a lot today holding more than usual maybe yeah but

**\[28:00\]** **Mike:** we had a really really fascinating beginning with the canvas stuff oh good I'm glad it was

**\[28:06\]** **Sean:** Well listen listen our viewer check us out every first and third Wednesday of the month eleven thirty a.m. Eastern time on YouTube or subscribe to us in our in your podcast feed or both because sometimes we have other podcasts that show up in that feed that aren't on the YouTube's so thank you for listening and we'll talk to you next time. You

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- 1 [ Productivity tips to help you work](https://website101podcast.com/episodes/season-09/episode-1/productivity-tips-to-help-you-work/)
- 2 [ Deepfakes, Bullying, and the Future of AI Video](https://website101podcast.com/episodes/season-09/episode-2/deepfakes-bullying-and-the-future-of-ai-video/)
- 3 [ AI Coding, The SaaSpocalypse, and the Tools We Still Pay For.](https://website101podcast.com/episodes/season-09/episode-3/ai-coding-the-saaspocalypse-and-the-tools-we-still-pay-for/)
- 4 [ Can AI build a smartphone app in a weekend? Sean tried it.](https://website101podcast.com/episodes/season-09/episode-4/can-ai-build-a-smartphone-app-in-a-weekend-sean-tried-it/)
- 5 [ When Was The Last Time You Built A Site Without A CMS?](https://website101podcast.com/episodes/season-09/episode-5/when-was-the-last-time-you-built-a-site-without-a-cms/)
- 6 [ AI Can Talk, But Does It Understand?](https://website101podcast.com/episodes/season-09/episode-6/ai-can-talk-but-does-it-understand/)
- 7 [ Bots, Bingo, and "Why We Can't Have Nice Things"](https://website101podcast.com/episodes/season-09/episode-7/bots-bingo-and-why-we-cant-have-nice-things/)

### All Seasons

- [Season 01](https://website101podcast.com/season/01/)
- [Season 02](https://website101podcast.com/season/02/)
- [Season 03](https://website101podcast.com/season/03/)
- [Season 04](https://website101podcast.com/season/04/)
- [Season 05](https://website101podcast.com/season/05/)
- [Season 06](https://website101podcast.com/season/06/)
- [Season 07](https://website101podcast.com/season/07/)
- [Season 08](https://website101podcast.com/season/08/)
- [Season 09](https://website101podcast.com/season/09/)

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