Discussion keeps the world turning.
This is round table.
You're listening to roundtable with myself, he young.
I'm joined by Steve Hatherly and Dinghung in the studio.
Coming up in the movie the Devil wears Prada, we all cringed when Anne Hathaway's character had to drop everything to get her boss, Miranda, played by Muriel Streep, lunch, even though it had nothing to do with her job.
In real life, should employees be expected to handle personal errands for their boss?
The answer should be clear.
This isnt part of the job.
In fact, a boss in China just got fired for crossing that line.
Where do you stand on this?
And AI companions are becoming more human like, offering emotional support via thoughtful words and sometimes even a phone call.
But what happens when they quote unquote, cheat on you?
Are AI relationships evolving in ways we didn't see coming?
Want to be part of Roundtable's heart to heart segment?
Share your thoughts, questions or hot takes on the news tech life by sending us a voice memo@roundtablepodcast.com?
dot.
You might hear yourself on our live show.
Our podcast listeners can find us at Roundtable China on Apple Podcast.
Now time to turn the page and discuss something equally captivating.
The paper reports that a female teacher known online as Guo, working for a well known education company in Shanghai, was asked by her boss, Liu, to bring breakfast every day and expected her to pay for it.