Transmissions from Elysium with Stephen Salaka cover art

Transmissions from Elysium with Stephen Salaka

Transmissions from Elysium with Stephen Salaka

By: Stephen Salaka
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Sci-fi author, tech leader, and IO psychologist Stephen Salaka explores the questions that keep people up at night. Philosophy, consciousness, politics, the occult, cosmic horror, technology, and the spaces where they all collide. Some episodes are conversations. Some are stories. All of them start from the same place: honest curiosity about things we might never fully understand.Stephen Salaka
Episodes
  • 004: Invasion of the Interface Snatchers
    Apr 12 2026

    I was standing in my kitchen at 9 at night trying to add a four digit number to my security system so my son could let himself in after he comes back from school. That was the entire task. Four digits, one kid, one door. I opened myADT on the browser the way I had a hundred times before, and the dashboard was gone. Where the users panel used to live, a little chat bubble bobbed on the screen with a friendly face on it, asking how it could help me today.


    Twenty minutes later I was still there. Still standing. Still negotiating with a text box. The bot kept offering me walls of near-identical verbal options (add a PIN, add a PIN for a new user, set up a new user and create a PIN, add a temporary PIN, modify an existing PIN) and none of them were the thing I was trying to do. I was playing the reincarnation of ZORK for the privilege of locking my own front door.


    So I called the 1-800 number. A woman named Samantha picked up, pulled up my account on her screen, and added the PIN in about fifteen seconds. Because Samantha, it turns out, is still using the old interface. The ugly one. The one with the buttons and the users panel and the thing you could actually SEE. They just took it away from me!


    In this episode I want to talk about what happened in that kitchen, because I don't think it was a UX problem. I think it was a preview of everything. Companies are ripping out their interfaces and replacing them with chatbots, and they're calling it "easier," and it is not easier. It is slower, dumber, and more exhausting, and there is a specific reason why, which is going to lead us through memory palaces (the ancient mnemonic trick Roman senators used to memorize speeches), Barry Schwartz's paradox of choice, a side trip through Star Trek's tactical stations, and a visit to my own first novel where I gave an AI infinite computing power and it was STILL just a really good hammer.


    This is the bridge episode. You have heard me talk about The Abdication, and you have heard me dismantle the mythology of AGI. This one sits between them. Because while we were all busy scanning the sky for the robot uprising, something quieter happened behind us. The menus started disappearing. Not all at once. One button at a time. Replaced by a chat bubble wearing a friendly little face.


    The good interface is not gone. It is hiding. Samantha can see it. We can't. The signal is broadcasting, and the buttons are still there, and they just don't want us to touch them anymore.

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    34 mins
  • Transmissions From Elysium — Episode 003: Dead Gods and Empty Skies
    Apr 6 2026

    They say AGI will be the last invention humanity ever makes. That the moment we flip the switch, something wakes up inside the machine, something smarter than us, faster than us, and utterly indifferent to whether we survive. Grey goo. Robot armies. Engineered plagues. The paperclip apocalypse. A god born in silicon that rewrites itself into something we can't comprehend, can't contain, and can't stop.


    It makes for a great story. Sells books. Fills theaters. Gets two million views on YouTube.


    But what if it's all mythology?


    Sci-fi author, tech leader, and AI realist Stephen Salaka has been having this argument at dinner tables, on flights, and in boardrooms with C-level executives across every industry: and the answer is always the same. Every doomsday scenario, no matter how sophisticated, falls apart the moment you ask one simple engineering question: "Okay, but how?"


    In this episode, Stephen dismantles the mythology of AGI piece by piece. From nanobots that violate thermodynamics, to robot uprisings that can't solve their own supply chain, to intelligence explosions that can't outrun the silicon they're trapped in.

    Along the way, he takes on Eliezer Yudkowsky's bestselling doom manifesto, Tristan Harris's NAFTA 2.0 panic, and the entire cottage industry of fear that's turned artificial general intelligence into the boogeyman of our generation. All the while companies like Palantir do genuinely terrifying things with plain old software.


    But the episode doesn't end where you think it does.
    Because Stephen already wrote this future. Twice. In his novel Elysium Fallen, AGI arrives, and it's underwhelming. Five years of progress, then the ceiling of physics itself. The death of science.

    And in Elysium Rising he gave humanity everything, infinite energy, portal technology, matter replicators, and sent them to the farthest reaches of the universe.


    What they found out there is the real horror. And it has nothing to do with AI.


    The signal is broadcasting. The question is whether anyone's listening.

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    34 mins
  • Transmissions From Elysium — Episode 002: The Abdication
    Apr 2 2026

    Everyone panicked when AI came for the artists. Then the novelty wore off, and we all moved on. But what happens when AI doesn't come for your job, it comes for your thinking?


    Sci-fi author and tech leader Stephen Salaka on the moment he realized we're not being replaced. We're abdicating.

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    10 mins
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