Two Minute Papers
YouTubeYouTube series distilling new AI and graphics research into short, enthusiastic summaries.
Two Minute Papers, hosted by Károly Zsolnai-Fehér, has become a popular on-ramp to academic preprints for people who do not have time to read dozens of pages each week. Episodes highlight striking demos—image synthesis, neural rendering, video generation, robotics—and explain the core idea with just enough context to know why the result matters.
The format favors breadth and accessibility over exhaustive technical detail, which makes it useful as a radar for emerging trends. Viewers often treat it as a curated “what happened this week” pulse before deciding which papers to study in depth.
It is worth subscribing if you want emotional momentum as well as information: the channel’s excitement about genuine progress helps separate moments of real capability shift from incremental benchmarking noise. Pair it with deeper reading on papers you actually plan to implement.