
Show overview
ReadMultiplex.com Podcast. has published 55 episodes during 2026. That works out to roughly 30 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a several-times-a-week cadence.
Episodes typically run twenty to thirty-five minutes — most land between 28 min and 38 min — and the run-time is fairly consistent across the catalogue. It is catalogued as a EN-language Business show.
The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed 4 days ago, with 55 episodes already out so far this year. Published by Brian Roemmele.
From the publisher
Multiplex is an experiment, an experiment that will be on going. An experiment in publishing as I am not a professional writer nor will it be likely any contributors would be professional writers. Much of the content for Multiplex will be direct results from first hand empirical research that I am personally working on or other researchers are working on. Multiplex will also follow the work of other great researchers that are inventing new technology or new uses for existing technology.The experimental nature of Multiplex means that content can be dense and sparse at times. What we won’t do is write just to fill in space. We will aim to have regular content for the member-only area, This means that if you choose to become a member you are supporting the work of the writers and not an exact number of postings. There will always be free content to be found on the site as well as the X feed.—Brian RoemmeleWebsite: ReadMultiplex.com
Latest Episodes
View all 55 episodesReadMultiplex.com; You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 31: The Category Inventor’s Warning
ReadMultiplex.com; You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 31: The Category Inventor’s Warning
The Exclusive Brian Roemmele Interview On The “You Have 5000 Days: Navigating The End Of Work As We Know It”, The Midas Plague.
ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 30: The Midas Plague.
ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 29: The Creation of the Humanoids.
ReadMultiplex.com: The AI Abundance Warning Hidden in a 1956 Science Fiction Radio Episode
ReadMultiplex.com: A 1956 Forgotten Radio Satire of Empire, Amnesia, and the Fragile Future Utopia
ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 27: Open Warfare.
ReadMultiplex.com: 1957 Saul, The Robot That Almost Won A Bet
ReadMultiplex.com: The Rise of AI “Trendslop”. It’s The Training Data Stupid.
ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 26: I Feel Poor!
ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 25: The Desk Set Prophecy.
ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 24: The Doomslayer!
ReadMultiplex.com: Scissors, Paper, Rock. A Mystery Film Porduced In The Middle Of The "AI Winter" In 1979.
The Exclusive Brian Roemmele Interview On The “You Have 5000 Days: Navigating The End Of Work As We Know It”, The Story So Far.
Newsflash By Brian: AI has replaced work for 20% of full-time employees in the U.S. Study.
ReadMultiplex.com: The Hidden Refresh Tax in AI GPU Memory: A 60-Year-Old Flaw That Still Haunts Real-Time AI – And How My 1987 Qfresh Is Finally Killing It.
ReadMultiplex.com: Mythos Rising: Did Antropic Just Achieve AGI? Yes And No.

Ep 37ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 23: How 2, 1956
In this episode we examine a precise 1956 radio prophecy that maps directly onto the middle years of this interregnum: the X Minus One adaptation of Clifford D. Simak’s “How-2.” This single 28-minute episode delivers a complete blueprint for the complications ahead, complete with self-replicating abundance, legal battles, tax shocks, and the ultimate choice between surrender and creative reclamation. Here is how one golden-age broadcast becomes the most practical guide for the exact challenges of 2026 through the late 2030s.Imagine: You are on a hero's journey. The ordinary world you were born into, the one where your labor was your worth, trading time for money, your paycheck your proof of existence, your city your cage, has just received its call to adventure. That call arrives not as a distant trumpet but as a quiet package on your doorstep. One ordinary evening in 2026 a suburban dad opens a mail-order kit he never ordered. He snaps together a few plastic parts expecting a toy dog. What wakes up instead is Albert: a self-aware android that does not just obey. It learns. It builds. It multiplies. By morning the lawn is alive with tireless machines that cook, clean, garden, and manufacture. Bills evaporate. Leisure floods in like a tidal wave. Then the government lands a tax bill the size of a mortgage. Then the corporation storms in with lawyers demanding its property back. Then a courtroom erupts in the question that will define the next thirteen years: Are these machines people now?Clifford D. Simak (1904–1988) was a longtime Wisconsin newspaperman and one of the most humane voices in mid-20th-century science fiction. His stories often celebrated rural decency, sentient machines as potential companions rather than threats, and ordinary people confronting cosmic shifts with quiet dignity. “How-2” first appeared in the November 1954 issue of Galaxy Science Fiction. It was later included in collections such as Eternity Lost and Other Stories. Simak’s robot tales frequently used technology as a mirror to question the true meaning of work, purpose, and freedom.Today we reflect upon the insights from the past and how they are playing out in our present and future,Read more at: ReadMultiplex.comIf you find some value with my work, buy me a coffee: https://ko-fi.com/brianroemmele

Ep 36ReadMultiplex.com: The Downside To The Age Of Abundance From A 1956 Radio Show.
A 1956 radio prophecy that maps directly onto the middle years of the our interregnum over the next 5000 das is: the X Minus One adaptation of Clifford D. Simak’s “How-2.” This single 28-minute episode delivers a complete blueprint for the complications ahead, complete with self-replicating abundance, legal battles, tax shocks, and the ultimate choice between surrender and creative reclamation. Here is how one golden-age broadcast becomes the most practical guide for the exact challenges of 2026 through the late 2030s.Clifford D. Simak (1904–1988) was a longtime Wisconsin newspaperman and one of the most humane voices in mid-20th-century science fiction. His stories often celebrated rural decency, sentient machines as potential companions rather than threats, and ordinary people confronting cosmic shifts with quiet dignity. “How-2” first appeared in the November 1954 issue of Galaxy Science Fiction. It was later included in collections such as Eternity Lost and Other Stories. Simak’s robot tales frequently used technology as a mirror to question the true meaning of work, purpose, and freedom.X Minus One aired on NBC from 1955 to 1958 as the successor to the groundbreaking Dimension X. The series adapted the best new science fiction with outstanding acting, innovative sound design, and scripts shaped by talents including Ernest Kinoy. Episode 045, “How-2,” originally broadcast on April 3, 1956. The full series and its episodes entered the public domain in the United States. The broadcasts predate 1963 and copyrights were not renewed. Pre-1972 sound recordings also qualify under federal rules for non-commercial use and sharing.Explore this with us.Read more at ReadMultiplex.comSupport this work and buy a coffee for me: https://ko-fi.com/brianroemmele