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We knew that 2024 would be the year of AI right from the start, but this season of the podcast has seen incredible development and change. This final episode of Utilizing Tech Season 6 features hosts Frederic Van Haren, Allyson Klein, and Stephen Foskett discussing the current state of AI infrastructure half-way through 2024. In addition to AI Field Day, we experienced NVIDIA GTC and numerous product introductions over the last few months. It's truly an ecosystem play now, with every company showing how well they can partner to build AI infrastructure. At the same time, a few superusers of AI are responsible for the basic models, including Google, Amazon, and Microsoft, and of course OpenAI and the other dedicated generative AI firms. The key to bringing this to the enterprise market is transfer learning, which will see a few base models tuned and trained for specific use cases. This season saw a range of guests discussing storage, data platforms, connectivity, and application development, and every one is focused on delivering practical AI solutions in the enterprise. Hosts: Stephen Foskett: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sfoskett/ Allyson Klein: https://www.linkedin.com/in/allysonklein/ Frederic Van Haren: https://www.linkedin.com/in/fredericvharen/ Follow Utilizing Tech Website: https://www.UtilizingTech.com/ X/Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/UtilizingTech Tech Field Day Website: https://www.TechFieldDay.com LinkedIn: https://www.LinkedIn.com/company/Tech-Field-Day X/Twitter: https://www.Twitter.com/TechFieldDay Tags: #UtilizingAI, #UtilizingTech, #YearofAI, @UtilizingTech, @TechFieldDay, @TheFuturumGroup, @SFoskett, @FredericVHaren, @TechAllyson,
As we consider the impact of AI on modern applications, we should consider the ways that this technology will improve these products. This episode of Utilizing Tech brings Matthew Wallace, CTO of Kamiwaza AI, to discuss the adoption of AI in application development with Allyson Klein and Stephen Foskett. Large SaaS providers were the first to add AI-powered features but this technology is rapidly coming to market across the spectrum of applications. Matthew likens this to the evolution from spreadsheets to SaaS tools and cloud, which was a similar revolution. He mentions tools like ?, Cursor, Llama2, Mixtral, and more. We also discuss retrieval-automated generation (RAG), which enables LLMs to bring in external data at run time. We must also consider the source of the data, both in training and RAG, and questions of sovereignty, privacy, copyright, and safety. Looking forward, Matthew expects companies to customize their own models based on use case specific data. Looking forward, we expect new frameworks and models to be adopted rapidly to bring maturity and reliability to AI in enterprise applications throughout 2024. Hosts: Stephen Foskett, Organizer of Tech Field Day: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sfoskett/ Allyson Klein: https://www.linkedin.com/in/allysonklein/ Guest: Matthew Wallace, CTO and Cofounder of KamiwazaAI: https://www.linkedin.com/in/matthewwallaceco/ Follow Utilizing Tech Website: https://www.UtilizingTech.com/ X/Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/UtilizingTech Tech Field Day Website: https://www.TechFieldDay.com LinkedIn: https://www.LinkedIn.com/company/Tech-Field-Day X/Twitter: https://www.Twitter.com/TechFieldDay Tags: @UtilizingTech, @SFoskett, @TechAllyson, @KamiwazaAI, @TechFieldDay, #AIFD4, #AI, #UtilizingAI,
AI is accelerating application development and modernization in many ways, but developers are just ramping up their use of the technology. This episode of Utilizing Tech includes Paul Nashawaty, who focuses on application development at The Futurum Group, discussing this topic with Allyson Klein and Stephen Foskett. Use cases for AI include documentation, chatbots, data integration, programming co-pilots, and more. Regardless of how AI is used, organizations must accept that they are ultimately responsible for the products and outputs produced. Accelerating testing and thus the entire DevOps release cycle is one area where AI is making incredible growth. Another popular concept is retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) which brings existing datasets to generative AI to improve results. There is currently a lack of confidence in AI-based solutions and concern about the complexity and level of effort required to bring them to market, so vendors must help make deployment easier and better integrated. Product vendors are addressing this by delivering solutions with partners and popular platforms and frameworks. Open source tools and open data are also helping to move AI technologies forward. Developers want invisible infrastructure and platforms that just work, and the emerging AI PC segment promises more processing power on the desktop. 2024 is shaping up to be the year of AI in application development. Hosts: Stephen Foskett, Organizer of Tech Field Day: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sfoskett/ Allyson Klein: https://www.linkedin.com/in/allysonklein/ Paul Nashawaty, Practice Lead, Application Development Modernization at The Futurum Group: https://www.linkedin.com/in/paulnashawaty/ Follow Utilizing Tech Website: https://www.UtilizingTech.com/ X/Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/UtilizingTech Tech Field Day Website: https://www.TechFieldDay.com LinkedIn: https://www.LinkedIn.com/company/Tech-Field-Day X/Twitter: https://www.Twitter.com/TechFieldDay Tags: #UtilizingAI, #AppDev, #AI, @TheFuturumGroup, @GestaltIT, @TechFieldDay, @SFoskett, @TechAllyson, @PNashawaty,
We are at a turning point, as AI has matured from theoretical experimentation to practical application. In this episode of Utilizing Tech, Neeloy Bhattacharyya joins Allyson Klein and Stephen Foskett to discuss how VAST Data's customers and partners are making practical use of AI. Data is the key to successful AI-powered applications, and VAST Data supports both unstructured and structured data sets. Neeloy emphasizes the interactive nature of AI application development and the flexibility required to support this. He also discusses the need for structured data to support LLMs and the challenges of keeping these up to date and synchronized. One of the biggest issues in deploying AI applications is the complexity inherent in these systems. That's why it's heartening to see companies working together to created integrations and standardized platforms to make AI easier to deploy. Collaboration is the key to making AI practical. Hosts: Stephen Foskett, Organizer of Tech Field Day: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sfoskett/ Allyson Klein: https://www.linkedin.com/in/allysonklein/ Guest: Neeloy Bhattacharyya, Director of AI/HPC Solutions Engineering at VAST Data: https://www.linkedin.com/in/neeloybhattacharyya/ Follow Utilizing Tech Website: https://www.UtilizingTech.com/ X/Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/UtilizingTech Tech Field Day Website: https://www.TechFieldDay.com LinkedIn: https://www.LinkedIn.com/company/Tech-Field-Day X/Twitter: https://www.Twitter.com/TechFieldDay Tags: #UtilizingAI, #AI, #Data, @VAST_Data,
Most people envision AI as a cool and orderly datacenter activity, but this technology will soon be everywhere. This episode of the On-Premise IT podcast contrasts the AI-based greenhouses of Nature Fresh Farms, as presented by guest Keith Bradley at AI Field Day, with the massive GPU-bound infrastructure many people imagine. Allyson Klein, Frederic Van Haren, and Stephen Foskett attended AI Field Day and were intrigued by the ways AI can process data from cameras and other sensors in a greenhouse environment. © Gestalt IT, LLC for Gestalt IT: Real World AI Looks a Lot Different From the Movies
Most people envision AI as a cool and orderly datacenter activity, but this technology will soon be everywhere. This episode of the On-Premise IT podcast contrasts the AI-based greenhouses of Nature Fresh Farms, as presented by guest Keith Bradley at AI Field Day, with the massive GPU-bound infrastructure many people imagine. Allyson Klein, Frederic Van Haren, and Stephen Foskett attended AI Field Day and were intrigued by the ways AI can process data from cameras and other sensors in a greenhouse environment. © Gestalt IT, LLC for Gestalt IT: Real World AI Looks a Lot Different From the Movies
Hyperscale-inspired technology is everywhere in enterprise IT, from Kubernetes to S3 to OCP, but these technologies may not be applicable. This episode of On-Premise IT features Cloud Field Day 18 delegates Allyson Klein, Eric Wright, and Nathan Bennett discussing the cloud gap with Stephen Foskett. Looking at AI, we see a very different deployment model in hyperscale cloud as opposed to enterprise cloud, with this gap in technology, implementation, and talent widening. One impact of the needs of hyperscalers is an increased focus on sustainability, specifically energy consumption. We should also consider how the hyperscale use case distorts the development of technology, which is obvious in CXL, GPUs, and networking technologies. Looking at Cloud Field Day, we see that many of these companies are attempting to bridge this gap, connecting hyperscale cloud technology to the enterprise. This is what makes the event so interesting! © Gestalt IT, LLC for Gestalt IT: Mind the Gap Between Hyperscale and Enterprise IT
Hyperscale-inspired technology is everywhere in enterprise IT, from Kubernetes to S3 to OCP, but these technologies may not be applicable. This episode of On-Premise IT features Cloud Field Day 18 delegates Allyson Klein, Eric Wright, and Nathan Bennett discussing the cloud gap with Stephen Foskett. Looking at AI, we see a very different deployment model in hyperscale cloud as opposed to enterprise cloud, with this gap in technology, implementation, and talent widening. One impact of the needs of hyperscalers is an increased focus on sustainability, specifically energy consumption. We should also consider how the hyperscale use case distorts the development of technology, which is obvious in CXL, GPUs, and networking technologies. Looking at Cloud Field Day, we see that many of these companies are attempting to bridge this gap, connecting hyperscale cloud technology to the enterprise. This is what makes the event so interesting! © Gestalt IT, LLC for Gestalt IT: Mind the Gap Between Hyperscale and Enterprise IT
Edge is leading the hardware industry into a new era of innovation. In this episode of Utilizing Tech, Stephen Foskett, and co-hosts, Allyson Klein and Alistair Cooke, sit down to dissect this. In the wake of Intel's discontinuation of its NUC product line, a question that is in everyone's mind is, what's next. Intel, and many behemoths like it, have a proud legacy of knowing how to break a stalemate and preserve the churn, and even if that means stepping up and pulling the plug on an old product. It oxygenates the marketplace, welcoming new solutions and keeping the wheel of innovation moving. In the context of the emerging paradigm of edge, this change will likely propel the market towards a new breed of powerful, low-cost, pocket-size hardware that delivers breakthrough energy-efficiency and compute performance with little infrastructure. Hosts: Stephen Foskett: https://www.twitter.com/SFoskett Alastair Cooke: https://www.twitter.com/DemitasseNZ Allyson Klein: https://www.twitter.com/TechAllyson Follow Gestalt IT and Utilizing Tech Website: https://www.GestaltIT.com/ Utilizing Tech: https://www.UtilizingTech.com/ Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/GestaltIT Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/UtilizingTech LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/Gestalt-IT Tags: #UtilizingEdge, #Edge, #NUC, @UtilizingTech, @GestaltIT, @SFoskett, @TechAllyson, @DemitasseNZ,
As enterprises try to deploy infrastructure to support AI applications they generally discover that the demands of this application can disrupt their architecture plans. This episode of On-Premise IT, sponsored by Pure Storage, discusses the disruptive impact of AI on the enterprise with Justin Emerson, Allyson Klein, Keith Townsend, and Stephen Foskett. Heavy duty AI processing requires specialized hardware that more resembles High-Performance Computing (HPC) than conventional enterprise IT architecture. But as more enterprise applications leverage accelerators like GPUs and DPUs, and become more disaggregated, AI starts to make more sense. Power is one key consideration, since companies are more aware of sustainability and are impacted by limited power availability in the datacenter, and efficient external storage can be a real benefit here. This is still general-purpose infrastructure but it increasingly incorporates accelerators to improve power efficiency. One issue for general purpose infrastructure is the concern over security, and enterprise AI applications will certainly benefit from broad access to a variety of enterprise data. Enterprise use of AI will require a new data infrastructure that supports the demands of AI applications but also enables data sharing and integration with AI applications. © Gestalt IT, LLC for Gestalt IT: AI Infrastructure Disrupts Enterprise IT with Justin Emerson from Pure Storage
As enterprises try to deploy infrastructure to support AI applications they generally discover that the demands of this application can disrupt their architecture plans. This episode of On-Premise IT, sponsored by Pure Storage, discusses the disruptive impact of AI on the enterprise with Justin Emerson, Allyson Klein, Keith Townsend, and Stephen Foskett. Heavy duty AI processing requires specialized hardware that more resembles High-Performance Computing (HPC) than conventional enterprise IT architecture. But as more enterprise applications leverage accelerators like GPUs and DPUs, and become more disaggregated, AI starts to make more sense. Power is one key consideration, since companies are more aware of sustainability and are impacted by limited power availability in the datacenter, and efficient external storage can be a real benefit here. This is still general-purpose infrastructure but it increasingly incorporates accelerators to improve power efficiency. One issue for general purpose infrastructure is the concern over security, and enterprise AI applications will certainly benefit from broad access to a variety of enterprise data. Enterprise use of AI will require a new data infrastructure that supports the demands of AI applications but also enables data sharing and integration with AI applications. © Gestalt IT, LLC for Gestalt IT: AI Infrastructure Disrupts Enterprise IT with Justin Emerson from Pure Storage
As we head into VMware Explore US 2023, we are forced to consider the company's strategy once again. Wouldn't it be better if VMware focused on the hypervisor and networking rather than continually exploring new products and markets? That's the question posed by Stephen Foskett to Allyson Klein, Andy Banta, and Matt Tyrer in this episode of the On-Premise IT podcast. Focus isn't a bad strategy, especially given the slow pace of development for cloud-native applications in the enterprise. And VMware's involvement in edge computing is an enticing new market for their core technologies. But not everyone is convinced that this is the right move. © Gestalt IT, LLC for Gestalt IT: VMware Should Focus on the Hypervisor and Networking
As we head into VMware Explore US 2023, we are forced to consider the company's strategy once again. Wouldn't it be better if VMware focused on the hypervisor and networking rather than continually exploring new products and markets? That's the question posed by Stephen Foskett to Allyson Klein, Andy Banta, and Matt Tyrer in this episode of the On-Premise IT podcast. Focus isn't a bad strategy, especially given the slow pace of development for cloud-native applications in the enterprise. And VMware's involvement in edge computing is an enticing new market for their core technologies. But not everyone is convinced that this is the right move! © Gestalt IT, LLC for Gestalt IT: VMware Should Focus on the Hypervisor and Networking
Industrial control and operational technology systems face the same forces as IT applications and are rapidly being integrated into comprehensive edge infrastructure. This episode of Utilizing Edge brings Andy Foster of IOTech to discuss standardization of industrial IoT with Allyson Klein and Stephen Foskett. There are many more similarities between industrial control systems and information technology systems than many people realize. Both are impacted by standards in commodity hardware, networking and communications protocols, and cloud integration. And OT and IT are colliding at the edge, with a massive opportunity to leverage data. Hosts: Stephen Foskett: https://www.twitter.com/SFoskett Allyson Klein: https://www.twitter.com/TechAllyson Guest: Andy Foster, Product Director and Cofounder of IOTech https://www.linkedin.com/in/andrew-foster-673b268/ https://www.iotechsys.com/ Follow Gestalt IT Website: https://www.GestaltIT.com/https://www.UtilizingTech.com/ Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/GestaltIT LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/Gestalt-IT Tags: #EdgeComputing, #IoT, #UtilizingEdge, @UtilizingTech, @SFoskett, @TechAllyson, @IOTechSystems, @GestaltIT,
2B Bolder Podcast : Career Insights for the Next Generation of Women in Business & Tech
In episode #89 of the 2B Bolder Podcast, we feature Allyson Klein. Allyson is an experienced marketing executive with a notable track record of leading global marketing and communications for Fortune 500 brands and is currently the Founder and Principal of The TechArena. With a deep knowledge of the semiconductor industry, Allyson's industry-recognized leadership spans various marketing and communication disciplines. From driving thought leadership and introducing powerful brands to spearheading corporate, internal, and executive communications, she has left an indelible mark on the world of marketing. She has decades of experience engaging with industry leaders in joint go-to-market success and aligning entire industries toward a common technology future. Her corporate initiative marketing expertise spans sustainability, diversity, equity, and inclusion, talent acquisition, and financial communications. Beyond her impressive professional achievements, Allyson is an exceptional manager, mentor, and coach, supporting the growth and development of countless individuals throughout her career. With an MBA focused on International Marketing from Portland State University and a BA in Marketing and Management from the University of Oregon, Allyson's academic prowess complements her real-world expertise, making her a force to be reckoned with in the marketing landscape. In this episode, Allyson shares her point of view on how women can support one another, leverage storytelling in a technical field to have an impact, find their unique voices, define their own unique success metrics, and not only survive in their careers but thrive.Tune in to hear her share her career journey, from starting out working in the stock market to moving into sales to climbing the ranks in corporate enterprise business for big brands to leading hundreds of folks in a marketing organization to owning her own business today. She shares the lessons learned along the way, tips, insight, and advice for being bolder in your career in marketing and tech.Support the show
Datacenter IT is used to having tight control over infrastructure and applications, but this is challenging to maintain at the edge. This episode of Utilizing Edge features Pierluca Chiodelli of Dell Technology discussing the modern edge application platform with Allyson Klein and Stephen Foskett. A typical edge environment features many different platforms, devices, and connections that must be deployed, managed, and controlled remotely. When looking at the modern edge, Chiodelli recognizes the different personas and needs and constructs a plan to achieve the required outcome at this location. Modern applications need specialized hardware and connectivity that must be supported, deployed, and managed. Hosts: Stephen Foskett: https://www.twitter.com/SFoskett Allyson Klein: https://www.twitter.com/TechAllyson Guests: Pierluca Chiodelli: https://www.linkedin.com/in/pierluca-chiodelli-3b743a4/ Follow Gestalt IT Website: https://www.GestaltIT.com/ Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/GestaltIT LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/Gestalt-IT Tags: #UtilizingEdge, #EdgeComputing, #Edge
Between the so-called last mile and first mile lies the middle mile, the realm of colocation and network service providers. This episode of Utilizing Tech features Roy Chua and Allyson Klein, discussing the middle mile with Stephen Foskett. This middle area includes content delivery services like Varnish and Akamai, as well as companies like Cloudflare that are delivering content and compute there. The middle network includes providers like Equinix, Digital Realty, and Megaport, which provide connectivity to the cloud and service providers, the hyperscalers themselves, and some interesting networking startups like Packet Fabric and Graphiant. We must also consider observability, with companies like cPacket and Kentik as well as companies like Cisco and Juniper Networks. Host: Stephen Foskett: https://www.twitter.com/SFoskett Guests: Allyson Klein: https://www.twitter.com/TechAllyson Roy Chua: https://www.twitter.com/WireRoy Follow Gestalt IT Website: https://www.GestaltIT.com/ Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/GestaltIT LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/Gestalt-IT Tags: #UtilizingEdge, #EdgeComputing, #Edge
Allyson Klein moderates a panel of industry experts on how we achieve true multi-cloud automation, the challenges of automation today, and technology advancement in VMs, containers, and web assembly architectures to achieve single pane of glass oversight. Don't forget to check out ctoavc.com for more of this content and all our sessions from The CTO [...]
CXL grew out of a long history of Intel platform technology and promises to revolutionize this platform. This episode of Utilizing CXL features Allyson Klein of TechArena, who shares her vision for the future of disaggregated servers with Craig Rodgers and Stephen Foskett. The foundation for CXL was laid with coherent interconnects and fabrics in previous decades, and the concept of tiered memory draws heavily on the history of Intel and Micron 3D XPoint and Optane Persistent Memory. As was the case for virtualization, CXL has an initial value proposition and a revolutionary future. CXL opens up virtually unlimited memory, pools of processors and offload engines, and unprecedented flexibility. Ultimately CXL will allow us to deliver compute resources that are truly balanced and matched to the needs of each workload. We also discussed UCIe, which promises to enable mix and match chiplets within future processors in a way that is compatible with CXL. Hosts: Stephen Foskett: https://www.twitter.com/SFoskett Craig Rodgers: https://www.twitter.com/CraigRodgersms Guest Host: Allyson Klein: https://www.twitter.com/TechAllyson Follow Gestalt IT and Utilizing Tech Website: https://www.UtilizingTech.com/ Website: https://www.GestaltIT.com/ Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/GestaltIT LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/1789 Tags: #UtilizingCXL #DisaggregatedServers #CXLFabrics #MemoryExpansion #CXL @UtilizingTech
Even though most of the technologies and infrastructure elements are the same, the nature of edge comping is entirely different. This episode of On-Premise IT features Edge Field Day delegates Enrico Signoretti, Allyson Klein, and Alastair Cooke discussing these differences with Stephen Foskett. © Gestalt IT, LLC for Gestalt IT: Edge Is Not Just Cloud or Datacenter
Even though most of the technologies and infrastructure elements are the same, the nature of edge comping is entirely different. This episode of On-Premise IT features Edge Field Day delegates Enrico Signoretti, Allyson Klein, and Alastair Cooke discussing these differences with Stephen Foskett. © Gestalt IT, LLC for Gestalt IT: Edge Is Not Just Cloud or Datacenter
Allyson Klein is the Vice President of Global Communications at Micron. She has led global marketing and communications for Fortune 500 brands including Intel where she spent 24 years. Allyson has a deep knowledge of the semiconductor industry. She is a recognised leader across many marketing and communications disciplines from brand to digital and partner marketing. We discuss: The importance of using the right strategy How to approach professional development The relationship between marketing and innovation How an aspiring marketer can step up to CMO Mentioned in this episode: Brought to you by CMO Crowd and The Marketing Practice Find out more at cmocrowd.com
Allyson Klein is the Vice President of Global Communications at Micron. She has led global marketing and communications for Fortune 500 brands including Intel where she spent 24 years.Allyson has a deep knowledge of the semiconductor industry. She is a recognised leader across many marketing and communications disciplines from brand to digital and partner marketing.We discuss:The importance of using the right strategyHow to approach professional developmentThe relationship between marketing and innovationHow an aspiring marketer can step up to CMOMentioned in this episode:Brought to you by CMO Crowd and The Marketing PracticeFind out more at cmocrowd.com
Andy Rudoff, Senior Principal Engineer at Intel, talks with host Allyson Klein about Intel® Optane™ Persistent Memory (PMem) and the work done with software vendors to harness the power of the new technology, especially when it comes to database management and recovery. Rudoff goes into detail about how Optane PMem represents a new tier between memory and storage that allows giant databases to be hosted across fewer servers. He also discusses the Persistent Memory Development Kit (PMDK)—a growing collection of libraries and tools tuned and validated on both Linux and Windows, and the Persistent Memory Programming book—a complete guide for developers that delivers comprehensive information with detailed code examples. Both the development kit and the book can be found at: https://pmem.io/ Notices & Disclaimers Intel technologies may require enabled hardware, software or service activation. No product or component can be absolutely secure. Your costs and results may vary. © Intel Corporation. Intel, the Intel logo, and other Intel marks are trademarks of Intel Corporation or its subsidiaries. Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others.
In this Intel Chip Chat audio podcast with Allyson Klein: Andy Rudoff, Senior Principal Engineer at Intel, talks with host Allyson Klein about Intel Optane Persistent Memory (PMem) and the work done with software vendors to harness the power of the new technology, especially when it comes to database management and recovery. Rudoff goes into […] The post New Tools for Developers with Intel Optane PMem - Intel Chip Chat - Episode 709 first appeared on Connected Social Media.
In this Intel Chip Chat audio podcast with Allyson Klein: Andy Rudoff, Senior Principal Engineer at Intel, talks with host Allyson Klein about Intel Optane Persistent Memory (PMem) and the work done with software vendors to harness the power of the new technology, especially when it comes to database management and recovery. Rudoff goes into […] The post New Tools for Developers with Intel Optane PMem - Intel Chip Chat - Episode 709 first appeared on Connected Social Media.
In this Intel Chip Chat audio podcast with Allyson Klein: Andy Rudoff, Senior Principal Engineer at Intel, talks with host Allyson Klein about Intel Optane Persistent Memory (PMem) and the work done with software vendors to harness the power of the new technology, especially when it comes to database management and recovery. Rudoff goes into […] The post New Tools for Developers with Intel Optane PMem - Intel Chip Chat - Episode 709 first appeared on Connected Social Media.
In this Intel Chip Chat audio podcast with Allyson Klein: Balaji Iyer, Principal of Product Management at Intel, joins Chip Chat with host Allyson Klein to talk about his work with various Intel partners to develop proof-of-concept projects that showcase the value of Intel technology. Balaji and Allyson talk in-depth about why bfloat16 capability in […] The post Integrating AI Capabilities into Intel Xeon Processors – Intel Chip Chat - Episode 708 first appeared on Connected Social Media.
Balaji Iyer, Principal of Product Management at Intel, joins Chip Chat with host Allyson Klein to talk about his work with various Intel partners to develop proof-of-concept projects that showcase the value of Intel technology. Balaji and Allyson talk in-depth about why bfloat16 capability in Intel® Deep Learning Boost with 3rd Generation Intel Xeon Scalable marks an important evolution for AI on general purpose processors. Discussing how Intel optimized TensorFlow, BERT, PyTorch and other AI workloads, Balaji highlights how these advancements will have substantial impacts to businesses in a variety of fields. For more information, visit intel.com/ai. Notices & Disclaimers Intel technologies may require enabled hardware, software or service activation. No product or component can be absolutely secure. Your costs and results may vary. © Intel Corporation. Intel, the Intel logo, and other Intel marks are trademarks of Intel Corporation or its subsidiaries. Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others.
In this Intel Chip Chat audio podcast with Allyson Klein: Balaji Iyer, Principal of Product Management at Intel, joins Chip Chat with host Allyson Klein to talk about his work with various Intel partners to develop proof-of-concept projects that showcase the value of Intel technology. Balaji and Allyson talk in-depth about why bfloat16 capability in […] The post Integrating AI Capabilities into Intel Xeon Processors – Intel Chip Chat - Episode 708 first appeared on Connected Social Media.
In this Intel Chip Chat audio podcast with Allyson Klein: Balaji Iyer, Principal of Product Management at Intel, joins Chip Chat with host Allyson Klein to talk about his work with various Intel partners to develop proof-of-concept projects that showcase the value of Intel technology. Balaji and Allyson talk in-depth about why bfloat16 capability in […] The post Integrating AI Capabilities into Intel Xeon Processors – Intel Chip Chat - Episode 708 first appeared on Connected Social Media.
Asha Keddy, Corporate Vice President and General Manager for Next Generation and Standards at Intel, joins Chip Chat to talk about her work to help drive the definition and delivery of 5G networks. Keddy and her team "work to define what is next" in three main areas: contributing to standards and policies defined by governments and international consortia, accelerating the development of Intel technologies supporting those standards, and catalyzing future development by assessing current use of these technologies to uncover unfulfilled needs. Keddy additionally serves as Intel's 5G Executive Sponsor, serves on the boards of CTIA and 5G Americas, and is a former board member of the Wi-Fi Alliance. In this interview, Keddy and host Allyson Klein discuss the wide-ranging industry investments that will be required to fully realize 5G and future networking standards. Keddy first highlights the importance of industry standards to accelerating innovation, ensuring interoperability, and enabling scale. Keddy then provides an overview of the ongoing work within the industry to deliver 5G and realize what Keddy calls an "exceptionally ambitious" vision of a "fully connected, intelligent society." Keddy additionally speaks to Intel's extensive contributions to enabling 5G, including technologies from Intel's unmatched portfolio for 5G infrastructure that make Intel the foundation of "how networks are deployed, run, and used." Finally, Keddy reports on how recent usage trends and policy developments are influencing the worldwide roll-out of 5G and forecasts future opportunities that the industry can address atop the foundation of 5G. For more information on Intel's enablement of 5G, follow Keddy on Twitter at https://twitter.com/ashakeddy and explore https://intel.com/5G. Notices & Disclaimers Intel technologies may require enabled hardware, software or service activation. No product or component can be absolutely secure. Your costs and results may vary. © Intel Corporation. Intel, the Intel logo, and other Intel marks are trademarks of Intel Corporation or its subsidiaries. Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others.
Chip Chat host Allyson Klein welcomes Bill Giard, CTO of Digital Transformation and Scaled Solutions - Intel Data Platforms Group, for a discussion of business continuity through the surge in remote work stemming from the 2020 COVID pandemic response. This episode of Chip Chat explores the role of Intel's Virtual Desktop Infrastructure (VDI) and multicloud solutions in support of offsite work and remote workforce productivity for our enterprise customers. Giard touches on the benefits of embracing solutions that support security, accessibility and scalability for increasingly distributed workforces. Today’s episode also details the challenges of aligning increased demand for public cloud solutions with our partners' datacenter capability in support of remote access & remote productivity. The first half of 2020 showed that today's enterprise needs to be even more agile than before, and that starts with modern infrastructure. Learn more: https://www.intel.com/selectsolutions On Twitter: @TechAllyson, @BillGiard Notices & Disclaimers Intel technologies may require enabled hardware, software or service activation. No product or component can be absolutely secure. Your costs and results may vary. © Intel Corporation. Intel, the Intel logo, and other Intel marks are trademarks of Intel Corporation or its subsidiaries. Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others.
In this Intel Chip Chat audio podcast with Allyson Klein: Dr. Roland Eils, the founding director of the BIH Digital Health Center of the Berlin Institute of Health (BIH), talks with host Allyson Klein about their advanced COVID-19 cell sequencing research and how critical technology is in delivering timely results within the medical industry. During […]
In this Intel Chip Chat audio podcast with Allyson Klein: Dr. Roland Eils, the founding director of the BIH Digital Health Center of the Berlin Institute of Health (BIH), talks with host Allyson Klein about their advanced COVID-19 cell sequencing research and how critical technology is in delivering timely results within the medical industry. During […]
In this Intel Chip Chat audio podcast with Allyson Klein: Dr. Roland Eils, the founding director of the BIH Digital Health Center of the Berlin Institute of Health (BIH), talks with host Allyson Klein about their advanced COVID-19 cell sequencing research and how critical technology is in delivering timely results within the medical industry. During […]
Rajesh Gadiyar, Vice President for the Data Platforms Group and Chief Technology Officer for the Network Platforms Group at Intel, joins Chip Chat for a primer on cloud native network functions. Gadiyar helps to define and drive the next generation architectures, including key software elements, that are needed for future networks. In this interview, Gadiyar and host Allyson Klein discuss the need for cloud-native approaches in order to fully deliver new paradigms like 5G and edge computing. Gadiyar describes cloud native as "an approach to building and running applications and services that utilizes the best practices of the cloud computing delivery model" and as the natural the next phase of the industry's network transformation journey. Though significant progress has been made in virtualizing many key applications across the network infrastructure, cloud native approaches will be key to addressing customer needs such as further infrastructure disaggregation, automation and automated application lifecycle management, and composable applications. Gadiyar highlights benefits to cloud-native approaches, such as application agility and flexibility, accelerated development, and modularity that enables scale, as well as key Intel investments in hardware platforms, software platforms, and open source initiatives that are enabling the delivery of cloud native. Finally, Gadiyar shares excitement for the roll-out of 5G in the coming months and points to several key technical principles such as disaggregation, automation, scalability, resiliency and reliability, and a new software lifecycle, that can serve as guideposts to customers on their cloud native journeys. For more on Intel's enablement of cloud native approaches, please visit https://networkbuilders.intel.com and follow Gadiyar on Twitter at https://twiter.com/rgadiyar. Notices & Disclaimers Intel technologies may require enabled hardware, software or service activation. No product or component can be absolutely secure. Your costs and results may vary. © Intel Corporation. Intel, the Intel logo, and other Intel marks are trademarks of Intel Corporation or its subsidiaries. Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others.
On this episode of Chip Chat, Dr. Roland Eils, the founding director of the BIH Digital Health Center of the Berlin Institute of Health (BIH), talks with host Allyson Klein about their advanced COVID-19 cell sequencing research and how critical technology is in delivering timely results within the medical industry. During their talk, Dr. Eils explains BIH’s process in collecting COVID-19 samples from infected patients and establishing a pipeline through molecular categorization by massive genome sequencing. This large amount of data is used to help predict infected patients’ progression and recommend medical solutions. Intel’s Select Solution architecture tailored to BIH’s workload requirements has accelerated patient research and enabled quicker medical diagnostics. The two also discuss the instrumental role of the IT industry in integrating and processing large amounts of critical medical data. Finally, Dr. Eils describe the institute’s future plans to research the after-recovery effects of COVID-19 patients with international clinical data. To learn more about the Berlin Institute of Health and their project on COVID-19 cell sequencing, visit https://www.bihealth.org/en/. Notices & Disclaimers Intel technologies may require enabled hardware, software or service activation. No product or component can be absolutely secure. Your costs and results may vary. © Intel Corporation. Intel, the Intel logo, and other Intel marks are trademarks of Intel Corporation or its subsidiaries. Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others.
On this episode of Chip Chat, Lisa Spelman, VP & GM of Intel Xeon Products and Data Center Marketing, talks with host Allyson Klein about the new 3rd Gen Intel® Xeon® Scalable processor for today’s AI-infused, data-intensive digital services. Designed for deep learning, VM density, in-memory database and analytics-intensive cloud services, the 3rd Gen Intel Xeon Scalable processor is the first mainstream general-purpose CPU with built in bfloat16 instructions to make AI training more widely deployable for image classification, speech recognition, language modeling and other applications. Spelman also talks about the new Intel Stratix® 10 NX, Intel’s first AI-optimized FPGA for high-throughput, low-latency tasks such as natural language processing and financial fraud detection. She expands on advanced memory capabilities from the new Intel Optane™ persistent memory 200 series and the Intel SSD D7-P5500 and P5600, which are designed to support the intense IO requirements of AI and analytics. For the latest Intel news, visit newsroom.intel.com. To see the latest performance claims and benchmarks, visit intel.com/benchmarks. Follow Lisa Spelman on Twitter at twitter.com/lisaspelman. Notices & Disclaimers Intel technologies may require enabled hardware, software or service activation. No product or component can be absolutely secure. Your costs and results may vary. © Intel Corporation. Intel, the Intel logo, and other Intel marks are trademarks of Intel Corporation or its subsidiaries. Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others.
In this Intel Chip Chat audio podcast with Allyson Klein: On this episode of Chip Chat, Bryce Olson, Global Marketing Director of Health and Life Sciences Group, talks with host Allyson Klein about the changing world we live in due to the COVID-19 pandemic and how technology is playing a greater role in health services. […]
In this Intel Chip Chat audio podcast with Allyson Klein: On this episode of Chip Chat, Bryce Olson, Global Marketing Director of Health and Life Sciences Group, talks with host Allyson Klein about the changing world we live in due to the COVID-19 pandemic and how technology is playing a greater role in health services. […]
In this Intel Chip Chat audio podcast with Allyson Klein: On this episode of Chip Chat, Bryce Olson, Global Marketing Director of Health and Life Sciences Group, talks with host Allyson Klein about the changing world we live in due to the COVID-19 pandemic and how technology is playing a greater role in health services. […]
On this episode of Chip Chat, Bryce Olson, Global Marketing Director of Health and Life Sciences Group, talks with host Allyson Klein about the changing world we live in due to the COVID-19 pandemic and how technology is playing a greater role in health services. The two discuss Intel and Medical Informatics Corporation’s new Scale to Serve Program to help hospitals rapidly install and scale MIC’s Sickbay™ platform. The platform is designed to help hospitals rapidly expand intensive care unit (ICU) bed capacity and create more efficient care of the most critical patients while also reducing risk of COVID-19 exposure for critical care providers who are at a higher risk of exposure due to the nature of their work. Hospitals interested in access can apply for the program on the MIC website: https://sickbay.michealthcare.com/scaletoserve Learn more about the Serve to Scale program: https://newsroom.intel.com/news/intel-mic-announce-scale-serve-program-rapidly-expand-remote-icus-100-us-hospitals/ Follow Bryce on Twitter: https://twitter.com/bryceolson Notices & Disclaimers Intel technologies may require enabled hardware, software or service activation. No product or component can be absolutely secure. Your costs and results may vary. © Intel Corporation. Intel, the Intel logo, and other Intel marks are trademarks of Intel Corporation or its subsidiaries. Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others.
Ronnie Vasishta, Vice President and General Manager for the Networking and Configurable Logic Division at Intel, joins Chip Chat to discuss the critical role of programmable solutions in the delivery of network infrastructure for 5G. Vasishta joined Intel with the acquisition of eASIC in 2018 and is responsible both for running eASIC within Intel and for the wireline and wireless networking business for Intel's programmable solutions. In this interview, Vasishta and host Allyson Klein dive deep on technologies that are part of what Vasishta calls the "custom logic continuum." Vasishta talks about "structured ASICs," an intermediary between FPGAs and true ASICs with lower unit-cost and power consumption than FPGAs but faster time-to-market and lower engineering cost than true ASICs. Additionally, Vasishta highlights next-generation Intel eASIC code-named Diamond Mesa. Drawing upon generations of customer learning from both Intel and eASIC, Diamond Mesa is already seeing early adoption in 5G RAN applications by some of the same customers who helped contribute to the product's definition. Finally, Vasishta looks ahead to the future of programmable solutions and how Intel will continue to deliver to continuously evolving and changing market requirements. For more information on Diamond Mesa and other Intel programmable devices, please visit https://intel.com/easic and https://intel.com/fpga. Notices & Disclaimers Intel technologies may require enabled hardware, software or service activation. No product or component can be absolutely secure. Your costs and results may vary. © Intel Corporation. Intel, the Intel logo, and other Intel marks are trademarks of Intel Corporation or its subsidiaries. Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others.
In this Intel Chip Chat audio podcast with Allyson Klein: Intel CIO Archie Deskus talks with host Allyson Klein about how Intel was able to successfully pivot its workforce while maintaining business operations. Because Intel created a Pandemic Leadership Team (PLT) following the SARS outbreak of 2002-2003, there was some preparation for half of all […]
In this Intel Chip Chat audio podcast with Allyson Klein: Intel CIO Archie Deskus talks with host Allyson Klein about how Intel was able to successfully pivot its workforce while maintaining business operations. Because Intel created a Pandemic Leadership Team (PLT) following the SARS outbreak of 2002-2003, there was some preparation for half of all […]
In this Intel Chip Chat audio podcast with Allyson Klein: Intel CIO Archie Deskus talks with host Allyson Klein about how Intel was able to successfully pivot its workforce while maintaining business operations. Because Intel created a Pandemic Leadership Team (PLT) following the SARS outbreak of 2002-2003, there was some preparation for half of all […]
On this episode of Chip Chat, Intel CIO Archie Deskus talks with host Allyson Klein about how Intel was able to successfully pivot its workforce while maintaining business operations. Because Intel created a Pandemic Leadership Team (PLT) following the SARS outbreak of 2002-2003, there was some preparation for half of all employees work remotely, but the speed and severity of this pandemic forced the company to innovate rapidly. The two discuss why Intel needed to make numerous changes across manufacturing, supply chain, sales and marketing, human resources and finance while supporting 100,000 remote workers worldwide and go into further details about how Intel IT was able to double VPN capacity over a single weekend. Read more about how Intel transitioned to support 100,000 remote workers in Archie’s blog on the IT Peer Network: https://itpeernetwork.intel.com/how-intel-it-transitioned-to-supporting-100000-remote-workers/ Find more about Intel’s best practices for IT organizations at intel.com/it, and follow Archie on Twitter at https://twitter.com/archiedeskus. Notices & Disclaimers Intel technologies may require enabled hardware, software or service activation. No product or component can be absolutely secure. Your costs and results may vary. © Intel Corporation. Intel, the Intel logo, and other Intel marks are trademarks of Intel Corporation or its subsidiaries. Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others.
In this Intel Chip Chat audio podcast with Allyson Klein: Vikas Bhatia, Head of Product for Microsoft Azure Confidential Computing, talks with host Allyson Klein about the role of Azure and Intel SGX in protecting applications and data during use in the public cloud. Azure Confidential Computing is a broad Microsoft initiative to protect applications […]
In this Intel Chip Chat audio podcast with Allyson Klein: Vikas Bhatia, Head of Product for Microsoft Azure Confidential Computing, talks with host Allyson Klein about the role of Azure and Intel SGX in protecting applications and data during use in the public cloud. Azure Confidential Computing is a broad Microsoft initiative to protect applications […]