Episode Transcript
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Today in Science from Wired. The
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Next Wave podcast hosted by AI
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experts Matt Wolf and Nathan Lands
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is the essential guide for business
0:12
owners navigating the complexities of artificial
0:14
intelligence. Matt and Nathan explore real-world
0:16
applications of AI across various industries
0:18
and make it accessible and actionable
0:20
for entrepreneurs in business. As
0:23
a long-time listener, I recommend Greg
0:25
Eisenberg's step-by-step blueprint to building a
0:27
successful AI business. There are
0:29
more episodes available where you'll learn practical
0:32
strategies for integrating AI into your business
0:34
operations to drive growth and innovation. Just
0:36
search The Next Wave in your favorite
0:38
podcast app. That's The Next Wave.
0:41
Another day is here, and you're ready for
0:43
it. What to wear? Check. Breakfast, lunch, and
0:45
dinner? Check. Planning for what's next and how
0:48
to save for it? That's where Bank of
0:50
America can help. For your financial to-dos, Bank
0:52
of America has experts ready to help get
0:54
you closer to your goals. Get started at
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one of our local financial centers or
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24-7 in our mobile banking app. Find a location
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near you at bankofamerica.com/talk to us. What would you
1:03
like the power to do? Mobile banking requires downloading
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the app and is only available for select devices.
1:08
Message and data rates may apply. Bank of America
1:10
and a member FDIC. It's
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hard to miss the headliners at Kew Gardens. The
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Botanical Collection in London is home to
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towering redwoods and giant Amazonian water lilies
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capable of holding up a small child.
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Each spring, its huge greenhouses pop with
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the technicolor displays of multiple orchid species,
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but for the really good stuff at Kew, you have to look
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below the ground. Talk to underneath
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a laboratory at the garden's eastern edge is
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a fungiarium, the largest collection of
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fungi anywhere in the world. Nestled
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inside a series of green cardboard boxes
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are some 1.3 million specimens
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of fruiting bodies, the parts of the
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fungi that appear above ground and release
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spores. This is basically
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a library of fungi, says Lee Davies,
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curator of the Kew Fungarium. What
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this allows us to do is to come up
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with a reference of fungal biodiversity, what fungi are
1:58
out there in the world.
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