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Welcome back to the Alt Goes Mainstream podcast.Today's episode takes us inside the mind of a tech titan who is at the forefront of shaping the market structure evolution in private markets.John Stecher is the Chief Technology Officer at Blackstone. He's responsible for all aspects of technology across the firm and advises the firm's investment teams as well as acts as a resource to portfolio companies on technology-related matters. John and the team at Blackstone have invested in iCapital, Canoe, 73 Strings, LemonEdge, amongst others.It's also his background in other areas of technology and consumer financial services that stands out – and provides insights and lessons learned for how to build technology within private markets. Prior to joining Blackstone, John was a Managing Director, the Chief Technology Officer, and the Chief Innovation Officer at Barclays. He was also a member of the Barclays Technology Management Committee. Prior to joining Barclays in 2017, he worked at Goldman Sachs, where he held a variety of senior management and engineering roles across the firm's capital markets and technology divisions, and most recently built their Marcus-branded consumer finance division. He also worked at IBM, where he was appointed an IBM Master Inventor, where he delivered / created over 45 patents across several diverse problem spaces.John and I had a fascinating conversation about how technology is core to both the business Blackstone is building and the businesses they invest into. We discussed:How Blackstone leverages technology internally and externally to create value.Why alts are still sold, not bought.Why he sees the biggest evolution happening in the finance and accounting space within private markets — and what innovations are being built there.Why the front office of private markets will still require human intervention despite technology advancements.Why the alts space needs systematization.How product structure innovation (i.e. evergreen funds, etc.) is driving technology innovation.How private markets are becoming more consumer oriented.Thanks John for coming on the Alt Goes Mainstream podcast to share your wisdom and experience of building core technology for capital markets and private markets.
Episode 1: The Evolution of Lean Thinking in the Age of AI Have you ever wondered what planet-shifting generative AI tools mean to the lean mindset? Episode 1 of The Process Palooza Podcast offers a special preview of the March 26 Process PaloozAI Webinar all about this very topic! Special guests include UC San Diego CIO Vince Kellen, Business Improvement Consultant Stephen Yorkstone, and Neil Sahota, who is not only an IBM Master Inventor, but serves the United Nations as the official AI Advisor! This is a not-to-be missed show, filling your brain with the best thinkers in process improvement! Show notes: • Process Palooza website: https://processpalooza.ucsd.edu • Register for Process PaloozAI webinar: https://bit.ly/49YwMsB • Follow Process Palooza on LinkedIn: https://bit.ly/3TBqbyU • "Own the A.I. Revolution" by Neil Sahota & Michael Ashley: https://bit.ly/3Tflrhg • "Humanising Higher Education" by Camila Devis-Rozental & Susanne Clarke: https://bit.ly/49QXKmn • Song snippet of "'Tain't What You Do (It's The Way That You Do It)" by Fats Waller: https://bit.ly/3ViIGtw
Neil Sahota, lead AI Advisor to the United Nations, IBM Master Inventor and futurist, joins us to discuss AI and what to lookout for in 2024.
How artificial intelligence has the ability to predict and mitigate the effects of wildfires in British Columbia and across Canada. (Aug 25th) GUEST: Neil Sahota, Lead Artificial Intelligence Advisor to the United Nations, an IBM Master Inventor and author of the best-seller Own the AI Revolution and sought-after speaker.
Ryan Foland speaks with Neil Sahota, an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations (UN) Artificial Intelligence (AI) Advisor, author of the best-seller Own the AI Revolution, and sought-after speaker. In this episode of our podcast series, Ryan and Neil talk about how artificial intelligence can assist in discovering improved methods for enhancing your interpersonal connections and refining your abilities in public speaking. Tune in for an interview full of ideas and tips on harnessing the power of AI to modernize, adapt, and foster creativity as we set forth on our path into the digital era.
The AI For All Podcast is your all-in-one podcast for all things AI. Hosted by Ryan Chacon and Neil Sahota, the podcast brings together a wide range of perspectives on artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning, data science, and robotics. Hear from AI companies about their latest advancements, learn from experts in the field including researchers, academics, and industry leaders, and encounter unique perspectives from artists, philosophers, and entrepreneurs. Ryan Chacon has spent over a decade designing, building, and growing technology startups. He is also the host of the popular IoT For All Podcast. Neil Sahota is the AI Advisor to the United Nations, an IBM Master Inventor, and author of the best-selling book "Own the AI Revolution." He is a sought after public speaker and co-founded the UN's AI for Good initiative. From the creators of IoT For All, AI For All is dedicated to providing the highest-quality content, resources, and news centered on the AI industry. The goal of AI For All is to make AI accessible to everyone by providing a broad educational platform where individuals, companies, and experts can share their knowledge and experience. Follow or subscribe to the podcast to stay ahead of AI! Join Our Newsletter: https://ai-forall.com Follow Us: https://linktr.ee/aiforallofficial
On this episode of the IoT For All Podcast, Frederic Werner and Neil Sahota from AI for Good join Ryan Chacon to discuss the global impact of AI. They talk about the AI hype cycle, the state of AI, defining good AI use cases, balancing different perspectives on AI, scaling AI for global impact, current AI trends and use cases, AI and IoT, challenges in AI, AI developments and the future of AI, fear of AI, and the 2023 AI for Good Global Summit. Frederic Werner is a seasoned Association Management professional with a passion for telecommunications specializing in strategic communications, community building, and international relations. He is the Head of Strategic Engagement for ITU's standardization bureau and was instrumental in the creation of the landmark AI for Good Global Summit. Frederic is deeply involved with innovation, digital transformation, financial inclusion, 5G, and AI via numerous ICT industry projects and events he has developed. Neil Sahota is an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations Artificial Intelligence Advisor, author of the best-seller "Own the AI Revolution" and sought-after speaker. With 20+ years of business experience, Neil works to inspire clients and business partners to foster innovation and develop next generation products/solutions powered by AI. AI for Good is an organization that identifies practical applications of AI to advance the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and scale AI solutions for global impact. It's the leading action-oriented, global, and inclusive United Nations platform on AI. AI for Good is organized by ITU in partnership with 40 UN Sister Agencies and co-convened with Switzerland. Interested in AI? We're launching AI For All!Subscribe to the AI For All newsletter: https://ai-forall.comFollow AI For All on social: https://linktr.ee/aiforallofficial Discover more about AI and IoT at https://www.iotforall.comMore about AI for Good: https://aiforgood.itu.intConnect with Frederic: https://www.linkedin.com/in/fredericwerner/Connect with Neil: https://www.linkedin.com/in/neilsahota/ Key Questions and Topics from this Episode: (00:00) Welcome to the IoT For All Podcast (01:12) Introduction to Frederic Werner, Neil Sahota, and AI for Good (04:47) AI hype cycle and state of AI (07:46) What are good AI use cases? (10:20) Balancing different perspectives on AI (12:25) Scaling AI for global impact (16:02) Current AI trends and use cases (17:36) AI and IoT (19:39) Challenges in AI (24:58) AI developments and future of AI (28:45) Fear of AI (32:29) AI for Good Global Summit 2023 SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHANNEL: https://bit.ly/2NlcEwm Join Our Newsletter: https://www.iotforall.com/iot-newsletterFollow Us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/iotforallCheck out the IoT For All Media Network: https://www.iotforall.com/podcast-overview
Today, Will is joined by Neil Sahota, an IBM Master Inventor and United Nations A.I. Advisor, and Reid Blackman, Ph.D., Founder and CEO of Virtue and author of "Ethical Machines," to discuss the potential benefits and dangers of A.I. They highlight the opportunities for increased efficiency and productivity but also emphasize the need for caution and ethical considerations. The conversation explores the need for regulations and guidelines to ensure the responsible development and deployment of artificial intelligence. With A.I. continuing to advance and become more integrated into daily life, the guests stress the importance of a balanced approach that takes advantage of A.I.'s potential while also being mindful of its risks. They explain just how A.I. will specifically affect the lives of every person. Tell Will what you thought about this podcast by emailing WillCainPodcast@fox.com Follow Will on Twitter: @WillCain Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The rapid development of artificial intelligence has prompted an open letter calling for a six-month pause to allow safety protocols to be established and adopted. We discuss the technology's potential and pitfalls, with Nick Frosst, co-founder of the AI company Cohere; Sinead Bovell, founder of the tech education company WAYE, who sits on the United Nations ITU Generation Connect Visionaries Board; and Neil Sahota, an IBM Master Inventor and the UN artificial intelligence advisor.
Neil Sahota is an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations Artificial Intelligence Advisor, author of the best-seller "Own the AI Revolution" and sought-after speaker. With 20+ years of business experience, Neil works to inspire clients and business partners to foster innovation and develop next generation products/solutions powered by AI. Neil's work experience spans multiple industries including legal services, healthcare, life sciences, retail, travel and transportation, energy and utilities, automotive, telecommunications, media/communication, and government. Moreover, he is one of the few people selected for IBM's Corporate Service Corps leadership program that pairs leaders with NGOs to perform community-driven economic development projects. For his assignment, Neil lived and worked in Ningbo, China where he partnered with Chinese corporate CEOs to create a leadership development program.The United Nations is an international organization founded in 1945. Currently made up of 193 member states, the UN and its work are guided by the purposes and principles contained in its founding charter. The UN has evolved over the years to keep pace with a rapidly changing world. But one thing has stayed the same: it remains the one place on Earth where all the world's nations can gather together, discuss common problems, and find shared solutions that benefit all of humanity. AI for Good is a year-round digital platform of the United Nations where AI innovators and problem owners learn, discuss, and connect to identify practical AI solutions to advance the UN SDGs.AI for Good aims to bring forward artificial intelligence research topics that contribute towards solving global problems, in particular through the Sustainable Development Goals. AI for Good came out of the AI for Good Global Summit 2020 which had been moved online in 2020 due to the COVID-19 Pandemic. Since moving online, AI for Good developed into three main programme streams: Learn, Build, and Connect. AI for Good also helps organize ITU's Global Standards Symposium.
This week's episode features the Black woman believed to have the most issued patents in the entire world. Dr. Ruthie D. Lyle is an “emerging technology junkie” and has made her mark by being the first African American woman to earn a doctorate in Electrical Engineering from New York University's Tandon School of Engineering to being one of the first African Americans to hold the title of IBM Master Inventor. Listen as this multi-talented, multi-passionate leader shares what drew her to patent work and how we need to all focus on engaging youth in AI.
00:46 NEWSWhy Facebook is ticking us off, Windows is finally running on Mac chips, and two very subtle & devious email hacks you probably don't know - but should!15:00 FEATURE INTERVIEWAre we deluding ourselves thinking there will be things that can't be replicated by artificial intelligence? Chatting with us about the possibilities of generative AI is Neil Sahota, an IBM Master Inventor & United Nations Artificial Intelligence Advisor. His book Own the AI Revolution is available in hardback, e-book and audiobook at his website neilsahota.com
#ibm #quantumcomputing #quantummechanics #toctw #podcast Dr. Venkat Subramaniam is an experienced Leader in Artificial Intelligence and an IBM distinguished Quantum Computing ambassador, IBM Master Inventor with a demonstrated history of innovation and product creation. A strong researcher who has developed new products and published in top venues and been recognized as a master inventor. His focus has been on AI Reasoning and Quantum AI/ML & his vision is to set up Quantum Computing as a leading area of research in India. Dr. Venkat joined IBM Research India in 1998 where he currently leads a team of world-class researchers developing Neuro Symbolic AI and Quantum AI technologies. IBM Quantum leads the world in quantum computing. This nascent technology is widely expected to solve valuable problems that today's most powerful classical supercomputers cannot solve and never will. https://in.linkedin.com/in/lvsubramaniam https://mobile.twitter.com/folktechnology https://www.ibm.com/quantum
This latest Stories in AI episode features my good friend, Whurley, Founder and CEO of Strangeworks, Founder/GP at Ecliptic Capital. It was amazing to talk to Whurley and discuss the future of quantum computing and the forces driving change in the sector. Please be sure to like and subscribe for more content, and I hope you really enjoy this episode! Whurley's Bio: William Hurley "whurley" is founder and CEO of Strangeworks, a quantum computing startup based in Austin, Texas. Whurley's career has spanned over 25 years, founding startups such as Honest Dollar and Chaotic Moon Studios, as well as working in technical leadership roles for Apple, IBM, and Goldman Sachs. Prior to founding Strangeworks,Whurley was managing director at Goldman Sachs which he came to through the acquisition of Honest Dollar; a fintech startup that offers a retirement savings platform that simplifies and brings transparency to the investment products available for a range of consumers. Whurley is dedicated to fostering collaboration and establishing unified metrics and standards across the quantum computing community. He partnered with StackOverflow to create the world's largest community of quantum computing developers, and currently serves as the Chair of the Quantum Standards Working Group at the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). He is leading the development of the first quantum commuting standards, PAR7130 “Standard for Quantum Computing Definitions” and PAR 7131 “Standard for Quantum Computing Performance Metrics for Performance Benchmarking”. Whurley is committed to making quantum computing more accessible and improving quantum literacy. His latest book, "Quantum Computing For Babies," offers simple explanations of quantum computing for the youngest audiences and is one of the best selling books on quantum computing. His upcoming book, Endless Impossibilities, continues his mission of improving quantum computing literacy and helps readers understand the potential of quantum computing. Whurley is a regular contributor to TechCrunch and regularly speaks around the world on the potential power and impact of quantum computing and what quantum needs to succeed. He has received numerous awards and recognitions including being named a 2018 Eisenhower Fellow, the 2012 International Genius Grant recipient, and an IBM Master Inventor. Whurley is an advocate and works on a range of issues he cares about, including diversity and equality. Whurley is a founding partner of UN Women; ‘EQUALS': The Global Partnership for Gender Equality in the Digital Age bringing together partners across sectors to bridge the gender gap in technology by championing equality of access, skills development, and career opportunities. Find Whurley at: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/whurley/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/whurley A note about our sponsor: Experian is the world's leading global information services company. We empower our clients to manage their data with confidence and build trusted relationships with consumers, using advanced analytics, decisioning technology, and fraud prevention tools. We help businesses to make smarter decisions and thrive, lend more responsibly, and prevent fraud and financial crime. As the world's leading repository of consumer credit data, Experian is transforming data into solutions that facilitate transactions, ensure financial safety and improve the financial lives of millions of consumers around the world.
Today's guest is Neil Sahota (suh-HO-tuh), an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations A.I. Advisor, Chief Innovation Officer, and globally-recognized speaker and author. Neil is a founding member of the UN's AI for Good Initiative, and he's here to talk about how we “disrupt the box.” Through his work with Global Fortune 500 companies as a change maker, he created a disruptive thinking framework called TUCBO™ to show people this is how you can think differently. Find out more about Neil at neilsahota.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Service Business Mastery - Business Tips and Strategies for the Service Industry
Today's guest is Neil Sahota, an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations A.I. Advisor, professor at UC Irvine, and globally-recognized speaker and author. Neil is a founding member of the UN's Artificial Intelligence for Social Good Committee, and he's here to talk about the ways we can harness the power of AI and use it for social good. Neil is also the author of Own the A.I. Revolution, providing a future-forward look at A.I., focusing on how businesses can use it to commercialize while doing good in the world. We'll discuss things like the challenges posed by A.I. and how we can overcome them, as well as which skill sets are going to be most important in the near future. [00:01 - 03:03] Opening Segment Introducing Neil to the show Brief background and career Neil's book, “Own the A.I. Revolution” [03:03 - 12:04] Utilizing Artificial Intelligence How can we use A.I. in business? Automating tasks Using A.I. in an office setting The jobs that A.I. has created especially in the field of arts Focusing on jobs that are more in line with people's emotional intelligence and human nature [12:05 - 12:49] Closing Segment See the links below to connect with Neil Final words Quotes: “You need fewer people working in manufacturing supplies.” - Neil Sahota “The ability to create experiences just became a huge differentiator now, especially for companies.” - Neil Sahota Connect with Neil through LinkedIn, Twitter, or visit www.NeilSahota.com.
The conversation this week is with Neil Sahota. Neil is an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations AI advisor, Chief Innovation Officer, and globally recognized speaker and author of the award-winning Best Business Book of 2019. Own the AI Revolution. Neil is a founding member of the UN's AI For Good initiative, and is actively helping them build out their ecosystem of strategic partnerships. Additionally, through his work with the Global Fortune 500 companies as a change maker, he created a disruptive thinking framework to show people how you can think differently.If you are interested in learning about how AI is being applied across multiple industries, be sure to join us at a future AppliedAI Monthly meetup and help support us so we can make future Emerging Technologies North non-profit events!Emerging Technologies NorthAppliedAI MeetupResources and Topics Mentioned in this EpisodeOwn the AI Revolution by Neil SahotaIBM ResearchIBM WatsonWatson and the Jeopardy! ChallengePalantirRainforest ConnectionHybrid intelligent systemAI for GoodEnjoy!Your host,Justin Grammens
How can a Sales Professional leverage Artificial Intelligence?Artificial Intelligence offers many opportunities that can bring changes in almost every sector. There are a lot of data and AI-powered algorithms that salespeople can leverage to drive sales and understand their customers better. In this episode, Chris interviews, Neil Sahota an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations (UN) Artificial Intelligence (AI) Advisor, author of the best-seller Own the AI Revolution, and sought-after speaker. He helps us unpack the following topics;
United Nations Artificial Intelligence Advisor Neil Sahota on How AI is Changing the Planet Neil Sahota is a United Nations AI Advisor, IBM Master Inventor, co-author of the book Own the A.I. Revolution., and co-host of Changing the Story Podcast. Over his 20+ year career, Neil worked with enterprises on the business strategy to create next-generation products/solutions/markets and to create the culture, and ecosystem needed to achieve success. Connect with Neil https://www.neilsahota.com/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/neilsahota/ Twitter: @neil_sahota Instagram: @neil_sahota YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCM9N97dyw7EwnCrXn3uac-w United Nations Podcast: https://www.ctscast.com/artistic-intelligence/ Connect with Izolda Book a Discovery Call Answering a Question? We'd love to hear from you! Leave Us A Voicemail (and yours might get picked to be in an episode) This episode is brought to you by Brain.fm. I love and use brain.fm! It combines music and neuroscience to help me focus, meditate, and even sleep! Because you listen to this show, you can get a free trial and 20% off with this exclusive coupon code: innovativemindset .* URL: https://brain.fm/innovativemindset You'll love this episode if you want to spark your inner genius. And don't forget there's a bonus mini-episode here if you join the coffee by the water club. Liking the Show? You can now show your support with Innovative Mindset Merch! Get LIT! Grab the lightbulb logo on a bottle, hat, phone case, button, and more. Support the Podcast. Or join my brand new Coffee By The Water Club and get a bunch of extra goodies like bonus podcast episodes, art no one else sees, and music no one else hears! Social Media LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/izoldat/ Website: IzoldaT.com Author Website: https://izoldatauthor.com/ Facebook author page: https://www.facebook.com/IzoldaST Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/izoldat/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@izoldat Twitter: https://twitter.com/Izoldat Listen on These Channels Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | Google Podcasts | Podbean | MyTuner | iHeart Radio | TuneIn | Deezer | Overcast | PodChaser | Listen Notes | Player FM | Podcast Addict | Podcast Republic | I'm thrilled that you're tuning in to the Innovative Mindset. Get in touch if you have questions or comments. *Affiliate link. If you purchase it through the above links and take the 20% off, I'll get a small commission.
How can a Sales Professional leverage Artificial Intelligence?Artificial Intelligence offers many opportunities that can bring changes in almost every sector. There are a lot of data and AI-powered algorithms that salespeople can leverage to drive sales and understand their customers better. In this episode, Chris interviews, Neil Sahota an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations (UN) Artificial Intelligence (AI) Advisor, author of the best-seller Own the AI Revolution, and sought-after speaker. Neil helps us unpack the following topics;
On this episode of Come Rain or Shine, Neil Sahota, IBM Master Inventor and United Nations AI Advisor, joins the show to discuss the evolution and future of artificial intelligence. A renowned artificial intelligence expert, Neil knows a thing or two about technology, computers, and their disruption on human existence. While most have a general idea of what AI can do, the short-term implications, he notes, are immense from business to home life to how we interact relationally. As for business leaders, Neil suggests now is the time to embrace trends and to view AI as an opportunity to rise above the noise and competitors. Even for those hesitant to employ the science, far better to research, brainstorm possibilities, and go from there as opposed to the contrary. For more information about Neil's resources and projects, check out his website below or should him a message through his social media accounts. Resources: Website: www.neilsahota.com LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/neilsahota/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/neil_sahota/?hl=en Twitter: https://twitter.com/neil_sahota Connect with Dan: www.dancockerell.com Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/dancockerell/ LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/dancockerell/ Facebook - www.facebook.com/dancockerellspeaker Quotes: “I think a lot of people think it's all about money…but there] is the justice, the accountability that goes with it, the support behind, the psychology…[and] changing people's attitudes and the way they see the world.”
Today's episode features Neil Sahota, an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations A.I. Advisor, Chief Innovation Officer, and globally-recognized speaker and author. Neil is a founding member of the UN's AI for Good Initiative, and I invited him to speak on how to “disrupt the box.” Through his work with Global Fortune 500 companies as a change maker, he created a disruptive thinking framework to show people how to think differently. It was great speaking with Neil on his extensive background at IBM, and listening to his advice for entrepreneurs as an investor as well. His vast experience in the AI space was palpable throughout our conversation, yet he made the various topics very accessible and had some thought-provoking ideas on where he sees the future direction of AI heading. Listen in to learn more. Links of interest: Neil Sahota's website: https://www.neilsahota.com/Neil's book, “Own the AI Revolution”
Neil Sahota is an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations A.I. Advisor, Chief Innovation Officer in University of California at Irvine, and globally-recognized speaker and author. Through his work with Global Fortune 500 companies as a change maker, he created a disruptive thinking framework called TUCBO; he joins us to explain the framework, as well as why organisations need to disrupt themselves before someone else disrupts them.Image Credit: shutterstock | Lightspring
Neil Sahota is an AI Advisor to the UN, co-founder of the UN's AI for Good initiative, IBM Master Inventor, and author of Own the AI Revolution. In today's episode, Neil shares some of the valuable lessons he learned during his first experience working in the AI world, which involved training the Watson computer system. We then dive into a number of different topics, ranging from Neil's thoughts on synthetic data and to the language learning capacity of AI versus a human child, to an overview of the AI for Good initiative and what Neil believes our a “cyborg future” could entail! Key Points From This Episode:A few of the thousands of data points that humans use to make rapid judgments.Neil's introduction into the world of AI.How data collection changed AI, using the Watson computer system as an example. Lessons that Neil learned through training Watson.The relative importance of confidence levels with regard to training AI in different fields.Why reaching a 99.9% confidence level is not realistic.Examples of cases where synthetic data is and isn't helpful.A major difference between the language learning trajectory of AI versus a human child.Areas that Neil believes AI is best suited for.Focus of the United Nations' AI for Good initiative.The UN's approach to bringing AI technologies to remote parts of the world.Benefits of being exposed to technology at a young age.The cyborg future: what Neil believes this is going to look like.Why Neil is excited about AI augmentation for human creativity. Tweetables:“We, as human beings, have to make really rapid judgement calls, especially in sports, but there's still thousands of data points in play and the best of us can only see seven to 12 in real time.” — @neil_sahota [0:01:21]“Synthetic data can be a good bridge if we're in a very closed ecosystem.” — @neil_sahota [0:11:47]“For an AI system, if it gets exposed to about 100 billion words it becomes proficient and fluent in a language. If you think about a human child, it only needs about 30 billion words. So, it's not the volume that matters, there's certain words or phrases that trigger the cognitive learning for language. The problem is that we just don't understand what that is.” — @neil_sahota [0:14:22]“Things that are more hard science, or things that have the least amount of variability, are the best things for AI systems.” — @neil_sahota [0:16:26]“Local problems have global solutions.” — @neil_sahota [0:20:06]Links Mentioned in Today's Episode:Neil SahotaNeil Sahota on LinkedInOwn the A.I. RevolutionAI for Good
Neil Sahota is a business guru, IBM Master Inventor and Artificial Intelligence expert who helps companies and world leaders identify and implement emerging technologies. He also authored the book, "Own the A.I. Revolution: Unlock Your Artificial Intelligence Strategy to Disrupt Your Competition." Learn more at https://neilsahota.com Nate Haber is an entrepreneur, attorney and life strategist who offers mentorship coaching to men, with an emphasis on interpersonal relationships, emotional intelligence, separation & divorce, self-improvement, and personal issues affecting working fathers trying to find peace and stability in their lives. To learn more, contact nate@natehaber.com.
Rama Akkiraju, an IBM Fellow, IBM Academy Member, IBM Master Inventor, and Director of IBM's Watson Division, is a pioneer in applying AI to solve real world problems. She sits down with Cindy Moehring to discuss Akkiraju's mission of “enabling natural, personal and compassionate conversations between computers and humans.” Learn more about the Business Integrity Leadership Initiative by visiting our website at https://walton.uark.edu/business-integrity/ (https://walton.uark.edu/business-integrity/) Links from episode: Fueling Possibilities: Welcome to the Positivity Pump - Chevrolet: https://youtu.be/Lgnq6xzkpk8 (https://youtu.be/Lgnq6xzkpk8) Couriers: Build Skills with Online Courses from Top Institutions: https://www.coursera.org (https://www.coursera.org) arXiv: Free Distribution Service for Scholarly Articles: https://arxiv.org (https://arxiv.org)
AI's impact on people, organizations, and countries is now so far-reaching there soon won't be any aspect of our lives left untouched by it. To even begin understanding how wide-ranging the effect of artificial intelligence is currently, we undertake a wide-ranging discussion with Neil Sahota, AI advisor to the United Nations. Neil takes us on a grand tour of some really exciting ways AI's capabilities are being used around the world today. He also introduces us to a thinking framework he developed that can guide us on how to harness AI's capabilities to create disruptive advances. Along the way we'll learn what the biggest challenge is for organizations deploying artificial intelligence, the unheralded metric which best captures the impact of AI on business & IT operations, & what the biggest area of growth will be for artificial intelligence over the next 3 years.
Neil Sahota (suh-HO-tuh) is an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations A.I. Advisor, Chief Innovation Officer, and globally-recognized speaker and author. Neil is a founding member of the UN's AI for Good Initiative, and he's here to talk about how we “disrupt the box.” He actively pursues social good and volunteers with nonprofits. Neil cofounded the UN's AI for Good Initiative and is actively helping them building out their ecosystem of strategic partnerships. He is currently helping the Zero Abuse Project prevent child sexual abuse as well as Planet Home to engage youth culture in sustainability initiatives. GET IN TOUCH WITH NEIL Website: https://www.neilsahota.com/Forbes: https://www.forbes.com/sites/neilsahota/United Nations Podcast: https://www.ctscast.com/artistic-intelligence/Neil on TwitterNeil on InstagramNeil on LinkedinNeil on Youtube Subscribe on your favorite podcast app Connect with Jeff The post #197: AI Masterclass with Neil Sahota appeared first on Shareable.
Welcome to Episode 195 of Building My Legacy.IBM Master Inventor Neil Sahota has been called “Game Changer” because of his “think different” approach. In this podcast Neil shares with us the three ways to think disruptively out of the box: repurpose something, cultivate a different perspective and challenge assumptions. In addition, as Neil explains, to get real value, you have to “put the pieces together, and that's why you have to create a collaborative environment.” Neil cofounded the United Nations AI for Good Initiative and today, as an AI advisor, he continues to help the UN build out its ecosystem of strategic partnerships — a real challenge with an organization of 47 agencies that historically have not worked together. So if you want to know:How to identify disruptive opportunities and get people to think outside the boxAbout the importance for companies to share knowledge more quickly and easilyWhy businesses need to take away the fear of failureHow you can only be open to possibilities when you admit you need help About Neil SahotaNeil Sahota is an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations AI Advisor and Chief Innovation Officer at UC Irvine. Through his work with Global Fortune 500 companies as a change maker, he created his disruptive thinking framework TUBCOTM to show people how to think differently. His book, Own the A.I. Revolution, is a business book for non-technical business leaders that shows how to use the capabilities of AI to disrupt the box. More information about Neil and his book is available at his website, neilsahota.com About Lois Sonstegard, PhDWorking with business leaders for more than 30 years, Lois has learned that successful leaders have a passion to leave a meaningful legacy. Leaders often ask: When does one begin to think about legacy? Is there a “best” approach? Is there a process or steps one should follow?Lois is dedicated not only to developing leaders but to helping them build a meaningful legacy. Learn more about how Lois can help your organization with Leadership Consulting and Executive Coaching:https://build2morrow.com/Thanks for Tuning In!Thanks so much for being with us this week. Have some feedback you'd like to share? Please leave a note in the comments section below!If you enjoyed this episode, please share it with your friends by using the social media buttons you see at the bottom of the post.Don't forget to subscribe to the show on iTunes to get automatic episode updates.And, finally, please take a minute to leave us an honest review and rating on iTunes. They really help us out when it comes to the ranking of the show, and I make it a point to read every single one of the reviews we get.Please leave a review right now. Thanks for listening!Building My Legacyhttps://businessinnovatorsradio.com/building-my-legacy/Source: https://businessinnovatorsradio.com/episode-195-neil-sahota-on-disrupting-the-box-by-creating-a-collaborative-environment-building-my-legacy-w-lois-sonstegard-phd
Welcome to Episode 195 of Building My Legacy.IBM Master Inventor Neil Sahota has been called “Game Changer” because of his “think different” approach. In this podcast Neil shares with us the three ways to think disruptively out of the box: repurpose something, cultivate a different perspective and challenge assumptions. In addition, as Neil explains, to get real value, you have to “put the pieces together, and that's why you have to create a collaborative environment.” Neil cofounded the United Nations AI for Good Initiative and today, as an AI advisor, he continues to help the UN build out its ecosystem of strategic partnerships — a real challenge with an organization of 47 agencies that historically have not worked together. So if you want to know:How to identify disruptive opportunities and get people to think outside the boxAbout the importance for companies to share knowledge more quickly and easilyWhy businesses need to take away the fear of failureHow you can only be open to possibilities when you admit you need help About Neil SahotaNeil Sahota is an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations AI Advisor and Chief Innovation Officer at UC Irvine. Through his work with Global Fortune 500 companies as a change maker, he created his disruptive thinking framework TUBCOTM to show people how to think differently. His book, Own the A.I. Revolution, is a business book for non-technical business leaders that shows how to use the capabilities of AI to disrupt the box. More information about Neil and his book is available at his website, neilsahota.com About Lois Sonstegard, PhDWorking with business leaders for more than 30 years, Lois has learned that successful leaders have a passion to leave a meaningful legacy. Leaders often ask: When does one begin to think about legacy? Is there a “best” approach? Is there a process or steps one should follow?Lois is dedicated not only to developing leaders but to helping them build a meaningful legacy. Learn more about how Lois can help your organization with Leadership Consulting and Executive Coaching:https://build2morrow.com/Thanks for Tuning In!Thanks so much for being with us this week. Have some feedback you'd like to share? Please leave a note in the comments section below!If you enjoyed this episode, please share it with your friends by using the social media buttons you see at the bottom of the post.Don't forget to subscribe to the show on iTunes to get automatic episode updates.And, finally, please take a minute to leave us an honest review and rating on iTunes. They really help us out when it comes to the ranking of the show, and I make it a point to read every single one of the reviews we get.Please leave a review right now. Thanks for listening!Building My Legacyhttps://businessinnovatorsradio.com/building-my-legacy/Source: https://businessinnovatorsradio.com/episode-195-neil-sahota-on-disrupting-the-box-by-creating-a-collaborative-environment-building-my-legacy-w-lois-sonstegard-phd
Usually, when we talk about AI in this profession, the conversation is all about automation, the things that artificial intelligence takes off our plate so we can create more value for our clients, face to face. But today, we look at AI's potential for impact on big global issues like poverty, hunger, climate change, sustainability, and inequity. Of course, we bring the conversation back to what role accounting and finance might play in all of that. Joining that conversation is Neil Sahota. Neil is an IBM Master Inventor, an AI advisor to the United Nations, chief innovation officer at UC Irvine, and a best-selling author, among many other things. He's also a founding member of the UN's “AI For Good” initiative, a global community that's centered on identifying practical applications of artificial intelligence to advance the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals and scale those solutions for global impact. To learn more, and for the complete show notes, visit https://blionline.org/blog (blionline.org/blog). Resources: https://sdgs.un.org/ (sdgs.un.org) https://aiforgood.itu.int/ (aiforgood.itu.int) LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/neilsahota (linkedin.com/in/neilsahota) Future-Proof is a production of http://crate.media (Crate Media)
Technology is changing the way we do things. From self-driving cars to personalized marketing strategies, artificial intelligence (AI) plays an important role in today's business and economy. In spite of the challenges of keeping up with this emerging technology, knowing the roadblocks is the first step to unlocking its full potential. In today's edition of the Knucklehead Podcast, our guest, Neil Sahota talks about artificial intelligence (AI) as a business driver. He will discuss the roadblocks to utilizing smart technologies, how AI is not being used to its full potential, and what to know to maximize AI's capabilities. Simple Steps to Getting the Most of AI Get the right mindset.Bring a little foundational understanding. Neil Sahota is an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations (UN) Artificial Intelligence (AI) subject matter expert, and Professor at UC Irvine. With 20+ years of business experience, Neil works to inspire clients and business partners to foster innovation and develop next-generation products/solutions powered by AI. He is one of the few people selected for IBM's Corporate Service Corps leadership program that pairs leaders with NGOs to perform community-driven economic development projects. Neil also partners with entrepreneurs to define their products, establish their target markets, and structure their companies. Enjoy! In this Episode4:51 - Some of Neil's mistakes while doing business 7:37 - The challenges associated with using smart technologies 10:10 - An example of how AI is being used ineffectively 12:36 - How to make the most of AI 18:24 - Why entrepreneurs are more innovative than established companies Favorite Quotes"If you're a hundred percent successful, is that a good or bad thing? It's bad because it tells you you're not taking enough risk, right? Nothing wrong with failure, learning, and pivoting. What's wrong with "successful"? You're not taking enough risk. Don't be afraid of doing that." - Neil Sahota "Don't expect to be a hundred percent successful all the time. That's asking too much of yourself." - Neil Sahota "There are a lot of smart technologies, but they don't understand the pain points of the business." - Neil Sahota "The biggest stumbling block most businesses have is they don't know how to think innovatively about the technology. They don't know the toolset and how it could be really applied to do something differently. Companies that are really succeeding are the ones that are really disrupting the way things are actually being done. And that's not something most people can fathom." - Neil Sahota "Building up ecosystems and working with all these companies around the world, it's the entrepreneurs, it's the small startups that actually are thinking more innovatively. They are far more open to possibilities than the more established companies are." - Neil Sahota Engage with Neil SahotaTwitterLinkedInWebsite: AI for Good Book: Own the AI revolution for non-technical business leaders Knucklehead Podcast is brought to you byManscaped- Use the Promo Code: KNUCKLEHEAD for 20% Off Grab your COVID 19 survivor T-shirt HERE Reach out to Justin Szerletich to get in touch with Knucklehead Media GroupLinkedInTwitter Connect with Knucklehead Media GroupWebsiteFacebookTwitter • Knucklehead Media Group is your “push button” for podcasts. We help companies and organizations tell their story using podcasts and best practices for content distribution. Home to some of the top podcasts across multiple categories, captivating coursework on gaining traction with your show, and consulting to those companies BOLD enough to get some wins. We believe your mistakes set the foundation for your success, those stories help customers beat a pathway to your doorstep, and the myths from bringing business online shouldn't hold you back from getting yours. Click here for more episodes of the Knucklehead Podcast
HIGHLIGHTS 02:34 Always being at the tip of innovation and learning how to be innovative07:33 A.I. and psychographics: Automating admin and ushering disruption 14:01 Training companies to become disruptive requires a mindset shift23:31 Rethinking business model, product and service to serve customer needs30:57 The 10th person rule: Diversity of thought in the workplace drives innovation37:12 Projects that help nonprofits and the need for more Fortune 500 to innovate40:23 Connect and work with NeilQUOTES05:01 Neil: "You never take the chance to explore, and I think that's a challenge a lot of people have is you're not really born as a great innovator and you can actually learn to be a great innovator. You learn to be a great creative thinker."06:45 Neil: "To be innovative, we actually have to step back and say, is there a different way of doing this? Can I actually go out of the forest and say, is there are a whole different approach to actually do this?"17:00 Neil: "Most people, we hate change. So someone throws out an idea, our first reaction is to figure out why it won't work. You know, well, you can't do this, or you've never done that. You want to unlock innovation, you have to shift that."20:57 Jonathan : "The process could begin with getting close to your customers and really finding out their psychological desires or needs or wants and trying to serve up something that aligns with that psychological or psychographic and bring them in through that."39:54 Neil: "If you're not trying to Uber yourself, you're going to get Kodak-ed. And if you're not trying to figure out a way to disrupt your own business, someone will disrupt you."To learn more about Neil, you can check out the links below.LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/neilsahota/Twitter - https://twitter.com/neil_sahota/Website - https://www.neilsahota.com/If you enjoyed today's episode, please subscribe, review and share with a friend who would benefit from the message. If you're interested in picking up a copy of Jonathan Goldhill's book, Disruptive Successor, go to the website at www.DisruptiveSuccessor.com.
This episode of The Jake Dunlap Show features Neil Sahota, a professional speaker, lecturer at the University of California, and Chief Innovation Officer at the UC Irvine School of Law, and Master Inventor.An openness to learning, troubleshooting problems, and continuously growing are just some of the values that Neil's story offers. This is evident in the incredible wealth of experience he has gained studying and working in a diverse array of fields and industries. For Neil, money is not the not goal. He has always explored the opportunities around him and did not close doors simply because they seemed too different from his current track. Quite the opposite, he always sought the path of most resistance because it offered a challenge to learn important lessons in his diverse field of interests.Many of Neil's successes started out as accidents. But true to his nature, he would take moments like this, turn them around, use them as opportunities for incredible growth. This would thrust him into the world of AI where he would gain immense success and earn the title of Master Inventor, a fitting name for a man who is always looking forward.The value of giving back is also a core part of Neil's identity. This was ingrained in him since he was a child and translates directly to his volunteer work as a mentor to several organizations. His passion for working in the United Nations is also tied directly to creating an impact that matters in education and healthcare.Listen to the full podcast on Neil's journey of turning accidents into opportunities, finding fundamental satisfaction in work, and volunteering for community development.QUOTES:29:46 "I've learned that the experience and skills you can gain are actually probably more important (than money). And sometimes that means even taking a step backwards... to actually get that under your belt."30:03 "I was never about the title. I wasn't quite about the paycheck... I managed to escape school without much debt and I don't live an opulent lifestyle. So I was very much able to focus on the rewards of a job rather than just the paycheck itself."37:19 "Honestly, I think it's because in my life I've always kind of sought the path of most resistance because I felt that's actually a great way to learn and add value."37:55 "I wasn't content with the status quo. I'm not saying things are bad, but you can always improve things. And so I was always kind of looking for that value add change."39:49 "If you keep looking for differences, you're not going to have a good experience. And unfortunately a lot of people, they didn't have a good experience."53:22 "You always try to help your community or your neighborhood, right? You don't help them to help yourself, you help them so they can help other people."More about NeilNeil is an incredibly brilliant man who wears several hats, most notably as an innovator and mentor whose goals include changing the educational and healthcare landscape for the better. He helps the United Nations create AI for the Global Good ecosystem, speaks publicly to help others overcome fears of public speaking and writing, works with Fortune 500 companies create products for nascent markets and industries.Neil also spends a lot of his time today helping organizations disrupt themselves before others disrupt them. Neil is an IBM Master Inventor and patented more than 18 technologies. He is a seasoned author who creates content on diverse topics that impact the world, including AI, innovation, law, climate change, diversity, and inclusion, just to name a few. He has won dozens of awards including the President's Volunteer Service Award and the Outstanding Achievement in Artificial Intelligence, which speak to his expertise and altruistic nature at the same time.Find out more about Neil and connect with him in the following links:LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/neilsahota/Learn more about Jake Dunlap and Skaled by visiting the links below:Jake Dunlap:Personal Site - http://jakedunlap.com/LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/jakedunlap/Twitter - https://twitter.com/JakeTDunlapInstagram - http://instagram.com/jake_dunlap_Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/JakeTDunlap/Skaled:Website - https://skaled.com/LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/company/skaledYouTube - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCsw_03rSlbGQkeLGMGiDf4Q
About Angie Angie Jones is a Java Champion and Senior Director who specializes in test automation strategies and techniques. She shares her wealth of knowledge by speaking and teaching at software conferences all over the world, writing tutorials and technical articles on angiejones.tech, and leading the online learning platform, Test Automation University.As a Master Inventor, Angie is known for her innovative and out-of-the-box thinking style which has resulted in more than 25 patented inventions in the US and China. In her spare time, Angie volunteers with Black Girls Code to teach coding workshops to young girls in an effort to attract more women and minorities to tech.Links: Applitools: https://applitools.com Black Girls Code: https://www.blackgirlscode.com Test Automation University: https://testautomationu.applitools.com Personal website: https://angiejones.tech Twitter: https://twitter.com/techgirl1908 TranscriptAnnouncer: Hello, and welcome to Screaming in the Cloud with your host, Chief Cloud Economist at The Duckbill Group, Corey Quinn. This weekly show features conversations with people doing interesting work in the world of cloud, thoughtful commentary on the state of the technical world, and ridiculous titles for which Corey refuses to apologize. This is Screaming in the Cloud.Corey: This episode is sponsored in part by CircleCI. CircleCI is the leading platform for software innovation at scale. With intelligent automation and delivery tools, more than 25,000 engineering organizations worldwide—including most of the ones that you've heard of—are using CircleCI to radically reduce the time from idea to execution to—if you were Google—deprecating the entire product. Check out CircleCI and stop trying to build these things yourself from scratch, when people are solving this problem better than you are internally. I promise. To learn more, visit circleci.com.Corey: This episode is sponsored in part by Thinkst. This is going to take a minute to explain, so bear with me. I linked against an early version of their tool, canarytokens.org in the very early days of my newsletter, and what it does is relatively simple and straightforward. It winds up embedding credentials, files, that sort of thing in various parts of your environment, wherever you want to; it gives you fake AWS API credentials, for example. And the only thing that these things do is alert you whenever someone attempts to use those things. It's an awesome approach. I've used something similar for years. Check them out. But wait, there's more. They also have an enterprise option that you should be very much aware of canary.tools. You can take a look at this, but what it does is it provides an enterprise approach to drive these things throughout your entire environment. You can get a physical device that hangs out on your network and impersonates whatever you want to. When it gets Nmap scanned, or someone attempts to log into it, or access files on it, you get instant alerts. It's awesome. If you don't do something like this, you're likely to find out that you've gotten breached, the hard way. Take a look at this. It's one of those few things that I look at and say, “Wow, that is an amazing idea. I love it.” That's canarytokens.org and canary.tools. The first one is free. The second one is enterprise-y. Take a look. I'm a big fan of this. More from them in the coming weeks.Corey: Welcome to Screaming in the Cloud. I'm Corey Quinn. If there's one thing that I have never gotten the hang of, its testing. Normally, I just whack the deploy button, throw it out into the general ecosystem, and my monitoring system is usually called ‘customers.' And if I don't want to hear from them, I just stopped answering calls from the support desk. Apparently, that is no longer state of the art because it's been about 15 years. Here to talk about testing from a more responsible direction is Angie Jones, a senior director and developer at Applitools. Thanks for joining me.Angie: Hey, Corey. [laugh]. I am cracking up at your confession there and I appreciate it because you're not unique in that story. I find that a lot of engineers [laugh] follow that same trend.Corey: There are things we talk about and there are the things that we really do instead. We see it all over the place. We talk about infrastructure as code, but everyone clicks around for a few things in the Cloud Console, for example. And so on, and so forth. We all know we should in theory be doing things, but expediency tends to win the day.And for better or worse, talking about testing, in many cases, makes some of us feel better about not actually doing testing. And one of these days, it's one of those, “I really should learn how TDD would work in an approach like this.” But my primary language has always been, well, always been a crappy version of whatever I'm using, but for the last few years, it's been Python. There are whole testing frameworks around all of these things, but I feel like it requires me to actually have good programming practices to begin with which, let's be very clear here, I most assuredly doubt.Angie: [laugh]. That's a fair assessment, but I would also argue, in cases like those, you need testing even more, right? You need something to cover your butt. So, what are you doing? You're just, kind of, living on the edge here?Corey: Sort of. In my case, it's always been that I'll bring in an actual developer who knows what they're doing to—Angie: Ah.Corey: —turn some of my early scripts into actual tools. And the first question is, “Okay, can you explain what this is doing for me?” “Great. So, we're going to throw it away and completely replace it with—so what are the inputs, what are the outputs, and do you want me to preserve the bugs or not?” At which point, it's great.It's more or less like I'm inviting someone to come in and just savage my code, which is apparently also a best practice. But for better or worse, I've never really thought of myself as an engineer, so it's one of those areas where it's it doesn't cut to the core of my identity in any particular way. I do know it would be nice that, oh yeah, when I wind up doing an iterative deployment of a Lambda function or something, if it takes five minutes to get updated, and then I forgot to put a comma in or something ridiculous like that. Yeah. Would have been nice to have something—you know, a pre-commit hook—that caught something like that.Angie: Yeah, yeah. It's interesting. You said, “Well, maybe one of these days, I'll learn.” And that's the issue I find. No matter what route you took to learn how to become—whatever you are, software engineer, whatever—testing likely wasn't part of that curriculum.So, we focus—when teaching—very heavily on teaching you how to code and how to build something, but very little, if any, on how to ensure you built the right thing and that it stands the test of time.Corey: My approach has always been well, time to write some code, and it started off as just, as a grumpy systems administrator, it was always shell scripts, which, okay, great. Instead of doing this thing on 15 machines, run upon a for loop and just iterate through them. And in time, you start inheriting other people's crappy tooling, and well, I could rewrite the entire thing and a week-and-a-half, or I could figure out just enough Perl to change that one line in there, and that's how they get you. You sort of stumbled your way into it in that direction. Naive questions I always like to ask around testing that never really get answers for because I don't think to ask these when other people are in the room and it's not two o'clock in the morning and the power is gone out.You have a basic linter test of, do you have basic syntax errors in the code? Will it run? Seems to be a sort of baseline, easy acceptance test. But then you get into higher-level testing of unit tests, integration tests, and a bunch of others I'm sure I'm glossing over because—to be direct—I tend to conflate all these in my head. What is the hierarchy of testing if there is such a thing?Angie: Yeah, so Mike Cohn actually created a model that is very heavily used within the industry, and it's called the ‘Test Automation Pyramid.' And what this model suggests is that you have your unit tests; you have some kind of, like, integration-type tests in the middle, and then you have these end-to-end tests on top. So, think of a pyramid divided into three sections. But that's not divided equally; the largest part of that pyramid, which is the base, is the unit test. So, this suggests that the bulk of your test suite should comprise of unit tests.The idea here is that these are very small, they're very targeted, meaning they're easier to write, they take less time to run, and if you have an error, it kind of pinpoints exactly what's wrong in the system. So, these are great. The next level would be your integration. So, now how do two units integrate together? So, you can test this layer multiple different ways: it might be with APIs, it might be the business logic itself, you know, calling into functions or something like that.And this one is smaller than the unit test but not as large as the final part, which is the end-to-end test. And that one is your smallest piece, and it doesn't even have to be end-to-end. It could be UI, actually. That's how it's labeled by Mike Cohn in his book: UI tests. So, the UI tests, these are going to be your most fragile tests, these are going to take the most time to write as well as the most time to execute.If something goes wrong, you have to dig down to figure out what exactly broke to make this happen. So, this should be the smallest chunk of your overall testing strategy.Corey: People far smarter than I have said that in many cases—along with access—testing, and monitoring—or observability, which is apparently a term for hipster monitoring—are lying on the same axis. Where in the olden days of systems administration, you can ping the machine and it responds just fine, but the only thing that's left on that crashed machine is just enough of the network stack to return a ping, so everything except the thing that tells you it's fine is in fact broken. So, as you wind up building more and more sophisticated applications, the idea being that the testing and the ‘is everything all right' monitoring ping tends to, more or less, coalesce into the same thing. Is that accurate from your view of the world? Is that something that is an oversimplification of something much more nuanced? Or did I completely misunderstand what they were saying, which is perfectly possible?Angie: You kind of lost me somewhere in the middle. So, I'm just going to nod and say yes. [laugh].Corey: [laugh]. No, no, it—the hard part that I've always found is… I lie to myself, when I'm writing code: “Oh, I don't need to write a unit test for this,” because I'd gotten it working, I tested it with something that I know is good, it returns what I expect; I tested with something bad and well, some undefined behavior happens—because that's a normal thing to happen with code—and great, I don't need to have a test for that because I've already got it working. Problem solved.Angie: Right. Right.Corey: It's a great lie.Angie: Yeah.Corey: And then I make a change later on that, in fact, does break it. It's the, “But I'm writing this code once and why would I ever go back to this code and write it again? It's just a quick-and-dirty patch that only needs to exist for a couple of weeks.” Yeah, the todo: remove this later, and that code segment winds up being load-bearing decades into the future. I'm like, “Yeah, one of these days, someone's going to go back and clean up all of my code for me.” Like, the code fairies are going to come in the middle of the night with the elves, and tidy everything up. I would love to hire those mythical creatures, but can't find them.Angie: This mythical sprint, where it's, “Oh, let's only clean up this entire sprint.” You know, everybody's kind of holding out and waiting for that. But no, you hit the nail on the head with the reason why you need to automate your tests, essentially. So, I find a lot of newer folks to the space, they really don't understand, why on earth would I spend time writing code to represent this test? Just like you said, “I implemented the feature. I tried it out, it worked.” [laugh]. “And hey, I even tried a non-happy path. And when it broke, I had a nice little error message to tell the user what to do.”And they feel really good about that, so they can't understand, “Why would I invest the time—which I don't have—to write some tests?” The reason for that it's just as you said: this is for regression. Unless that's the end of this application and you're not going to touch it ever again for any reason, then you need to write some tests [laugh] because you're going to constantly change the application, whether that be refactoring, whether that be adding new features to it, it's going to change in some way and you cannot be sure that the tests of yesterday still work today because whenever you make the change, you're just going to poke around manually at that little area not realizing there could be some integration things that you totally screwed up here and you miss that until it goes out into prod.Corey: The worst developer I've ever met—hands down—was me, six months before I'm looking at whatever it is that I've written. And given that I do a lot of my stuff in a vacuum and I'm the only person to ever touch these repositories, I could run Git blame, but I already know exactly what it's going to tell me—Angie: “It's me.” [laugh].Corey: —so we're just going to skip that part. Like it's a test. And, “Yeah, we're just going to try and fix that and never speak about it again.” But I can't count the number of times I have looked at code that I've written—and I do mean written; not blindly copy-and-pasted out of Stack Overflow, but actually wrote, and at the time, I understood exactly what it did—and then I look at it, and it is, “What on earth was I thinking? What—what—it technically doesn't even return anything; it can't be doing anything. I can just remove that piece entirely.” And the whole thing breaks.I've out-clevered myself in many respects. And I love the idea, the vision, that testing would catch these things as I'm making those changes, but then I never do it. It's getting started down that path and developing a more nuanced, and dare I say it, formal understanding of the art and science of software development. Always feels like the sort of thing I'll get to one of these days, but never actually got around to. Nowadays, my testing strategy is to just actually deploy things into someone else's account and hope for the best.And, “Oh, good. Well, everyone has a test account; ideally, it's not their own production account.” And then we start to expand on beyond that. You have come to this from a very different direction in a number of different ways. You are—among other things—a Java Champion, which makes it sound like you fought the final boss at the end of the developer internet. And they sound really hard. What is a Java Champion?Angie: Yeah. So, a Java Champion is essentially an influencer in the Java ecosystem. You can't just call yourself this; like you say, you got to fight the guy at the end, you know? But seriously, in order to become one, a current Java Champion has to nominate you, and all of the other Java Champions has to review your package, basically looking at your work. What have you contributed to the developer community, in terms of Java?So, I've done a number of courses that I've taught; I've taught at the university level, as well; I am always talking about testing and using Java to show how to do that, as well as talks and all of this stuff. So apparently, I had enough [laugh] for folks to vote me in. So, it is an organization that's kind of ordained by Oracle, the Gods of Java. So, it's a great accomplishment for me. I'm extremely happy about it. And just so happens to be the first black woman to become a Java Champion. So, the news made a big deal about that. [laugh].Corey: Congratulations. Anytime you wind up getting that level of recognition in any given ecosystem, it's something to stop and take note of. But that's compounded by just the sheer scale and scope of the Java community as a whole. Every big tech company I know has inordinate amounts of Java scattered throughout their infrastructure, a lot of their core services are written in Java, which makes me feel increasingly strange for not really knowing anything about it, other than that, it's big and that there are—this entire ecosystem of IDs, and frameworks, and ways to approach these things that it feels like those of us playing around in crappy bash-scripting-land have the exact opposite experience of, “Oh, I'm just going to fire up an empty page and fill it with a bunch of weird commands and run it, and it fails, and run it again, and it fails. And it finally succeeds when I fixed all the syntax errors, and that's great.” It feels like there is a much more structured approach to writing Java compared to other languages, be they scripts or full-on languages.Angie: Yeah. That's been a gift and a curse of the language. So, as newer frameworks have come out, or even as JavaScript has made its way to the front of the line, people start looking at Java, it's kind of bloated, and all of these rules and structures were in place, but that feels like boilerplate stuff and cumbersome in today's development space. So, fortunately, the powers that be have been doing a lot of changes in Java. We went for quite a while where releases were about, mmm, every three years or so.And now they've committed to releases every six months. So, [laugh] most people are on Java 8 still, but we're actually at, like, Java 16, now. So, now it's kind of hard to keep up but that makes it fun as well. There's all of these newer features and new capabilities, and now you can even do functional programming in Java, so it's pretty nice.Corey: Question I have is, does testing lend itself more easily to Java versus other language? And I promise I'm not trying to start a language war here. I just know that, “Well, how do I effectively test my Python code?” Leads to a whole bunch of? “Well, it depends.”It's like asking an attorney any question on the planet; same story. Like, “Well, it really depends on a whole bunch of things.” Is it a clearer, more structured path in Java, or is it still the same murky there are 15 different ways to do it and whichever one you pick, there's a whole cacophony of folks telling you you've done it wrong?Angie: Yeah, that's a very interesting question. I haven't dug into that deep, but Java is by far the most popular programming language for UI test automation. And I wonder why that is because you don't use Java for building front end. You use Java scripts. I don't know how this ca—I—well, I do know how it came to be.Like, back in the day, when we first started doing test automation, JavaScript was a joke, right? People would laugh at you if you said that you were going to use JavaScript. It's, you know, “I'm going to learn JavaScript and try to enter the workforce.” So, you know, that was a big no-no, and kind of a joke back then. So, Java was what a lot of your developers were using even if they were only using it for the backend, maybe.You didn't really have a [unintelligible 00:16:32] language on the client-side, back then. You had your PHP on the back end, you just did some HTML and some CSS on the front end. So, there wasn't a whole lot of scripting going on back then. So, Java was the language that people chose to use. And so there's a whole community out there for Java and testing.Like, the libraries are very mature, there's open-source products and things like this. So, this is by far the most popular language that people use, no matter what their application is built in.This episode is sponsored by our friends at Oracle Cloud. Counting the pennies, but still dreaming of deploying apps instead of "Hello, World" demos? 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Visit https://snark.cloud/oci-free that's https://snark.cloud/oci-free.Corey: If I were looking to get a job in enterprise these days, it feels like Java is the direction to go in, with the counterpoint that, let's say that I go the path that I went through: I don't have a college degree; I don't have a high school diploma. If I were to start out trying to be a software engineering today, or advising someone to do the same, it feels like the lingua franca of everything today seems to be JavaScript in many different respects. It does front end; it does back end; people love to complain about it, so you know it's valid. To be clear, I find myself befuddled every time I pick it up. I'm not coming at this from a JavaScript fanboy perspective in any respect.The asynchronous execution flow always messes with my head and leaves me with more questions than answers. Is that assessment though—of starting languages—accurate? Are there cases where Java is absolutely the right answer, as far as what to learn first?Angie: Yeah. So, I first started with C++, and then I learned Java. Well, what I find is, Java because it's so strict—it's a statically typed language, and there's lots of rules, and you really need to understand paradigms and stuff like that with this language—it's harder to learn, but once you learn it, it's much easier to pick up other languages, even if they're dynamically typed, you know? So, that's been my experience with this. As far as jobs, so the last time I looked at this, someone did some research and wrote it up—this was 2019—and they looked at the job openings available at the time, and they divided it by language. And Java was at, like, 65,000 jobs open, Python was a close second was 62,000, and JavaScript was third place with 39,000.So, quite a big difference. But if you looked at tech Twitter, you'd think, like, JavaScript is all there is. Most of my followers and folks that I follow are JavaScript folks, front-end folks. So, it is a language I think you definitely need to learn; it's becoming more and more prevalent. If you're going to do any sort of web app, [laugh] you definitely want to know it.So, I'm definitely not saying, “Oh, just learn Java and that's it.” I think there's definitely a need for adding JavaScript to your repertoire. But Java, there does seem to be more jobs, especially the big enterprise-type jobs, in Java.Corey: The reason I ask so much about some of the early-stage stuff is that in your spare time—which it sounds like you have so much of these days—you volunteer with Black Girls Code to help teach coding workshops to young girls in an effort to attract more women and minorities to tech. Which is phenomenal. Few years ago, I was a volunteer instructor for Year Up before people really realized, “Oh, maybe having an instructor who teaches by counterexample isn't necessarily the best approach of teaching folks who are new to the space.”But the curriculum I was given for teaching people how Linux worked and how to build a web servers and the rest, started off with a three-day module on how to use VI, an arcane text editor that no one understands, and the only reason we use it is because we don't know how to quit it.Angie: [laugh].Corey: And that's great and all, but I'm looking at this and my immediate impression was, “We're scrapping that, replacing it with nano,” which is basically what you see is what you get, and something that everyone can understand and appreciate without three days of training. And it felt an awful lot like we're teaching people VI almost as a form of gatekeeping. I'm curious; when you presumably go down the path of teaching people who are brand-new to the space? How do you wind up presenting testing as something that they should start with? Because it feels like a thing you have to know first before you can start building anything at scale, but it resonates, on some level, with feeling like it's, ah, you must be able to learn this religion first; then you'll be able to go and proceed further. How do you square that circle?Angie: Yeah. So, I had the privilege of being an adjunct professor at a college, and I taught Java programming to freshmen. This was really interesting because there's so much to teach, and this is true of all the courses. So, when I say that they don't include it in the curriculum, that's not really that much of a slight on them. Like, it's just so much you have to cover.So I, me, the testing guru, I still couldn't find space to devote an entire sitting, a chapter, or whatever on testing. So, I kind of wove it into my teaching style. So, I would just teach the concept, let's say I'm teaching loops today, and I'll have a little exercise that you do in class. So, we do things together, and then I say, okay, now you try it by yourself. Here's a problem; call me over when you're done.And as they would call me over when they're done, I would break it; I would break their code, right? I'd do some input that they weren't expecting and all of a sudden is broken. And they started expecting me to do this, you know? “She's going to come and she's going to break my stuff.” So, they start thinking themselves, “Let me test it before I give it to my user,” who is Professor Angie, or whatever.So, that's how I taught them that. Same with homework assignments. So, they would submit it, I would treat it like a code review, go through line by line, I didn't have any automated systems to test their homework assignments. I did it like a code review, gave them feedback on how to improve their style, but also I would try to break it and give them, “Here's all the areas that you didn't think of.” So, that was my way of teaching them that quality matters in how to think about beyond the requirement.The requirement is going to say, “Someone needs to be able to log in.” It's not going to give you all of the things that should happen, you know if there's a wrong password, so these are things, as an engineer, you need to think beyond that one line requirement that you've got and realize that this is part of it as well.Corey: So, it's almost a matter of giving people context beyond just the writing of the code, which frankly, seems to be something that's been missing for many aspects of engineering culture for a while, the understanding the people involved, understanding that it is not just you, or your department, or even your company in some cases.Angie: Exactly. And I tried to stress that very heavily in each lecture: who is your end-user? And your end-user cannot see your code, they cannot see your comments in the code that's telling them, “Make sure you input it this way,” or whatever. None of that is seen so you have to be very explicit in your messages, and your intent, and behavior with the end-user.Corey: One last area I wanted to cover with you, when I was doing some research on you before the show, is that you are an IBM Master Inventor, which I had no idea what that was. Is that a term of art? Let me Google it. And it turns out that you have, according to LinkedIn at least, 27 patents in your name. And it's, “Oh.”Yeah, it's one of those areas where you look at something like, what gives someone the hubris to call themselves—or the grounds to call themselves that? And, “Oh, yeah. Oh, they're super accomplished, and they have a demonstrated track record of inventing things that are substantial and meaningful. I guess that would do it.” I'd never heard the term until now. What is that? And how are you that prolific, for lack of a better term?Angie: Yeah, so I used to work at IBM and they're really big on innovation. And I haven't kept track in a while, but for many, many years, they were the number one producer of patents [laugh] of this year or whatever. So, it was kind of in the culture to innovate. Now, I will say, like, a very small percentage of people—employees—there would take it as far as I did to actually go and patent something—[laugh]—Corey: Oh, it's the ‘don't offer if you're not serious,' model.Angie: Yeah. [laugh]. But I mean, it was there; it was a program there where, hey, you got an idea for a software patent? Write it up, we'll have our lawyers, our IP lawyers review it, and then they'll take your little one-page doc and turn it into a twenty-five-page legal document that we submit to the USPTO—United States Patent Trademark Office—who then reviews it and decides if this is novel enough and grants it, or dismisses it. And, “Hey, we'll pay you for these patents. We'll pay for the whole process.” And so I thought, “Heck, why not?”And I kind of got hooked. [laugh]. So, it just so happens that I got a lot of good ideas. And I would collaborate with people from other areas of the business, and it was an excellent way for me to learn about new technologies. If something new was coming out, I would jump on that to explore, play with it, and think about, are there any problems that this technology is not aimed to solve, but if I tweak it in some way, or if I integrate it with some other concept or some other technology, do I get something unique and novel here?And it got to the point where I just started walking through life and as I'm hit with problems—like, I'll give you an example. I'm in the grocery store, right, and this inevitably happens to everyone, what, you choose the wrong line in the grocery store. “This one looks like it's moving, I'm going to go here.” And then the whole time, you're looking to your right, and that line is moving. And you're, like, stuck.Corey: Every single time.Angie: Every time. So, it got—[laugh]—Corey: Toll booths are the same way.Angie: —it got to the point where I started recognizing when I'm frustrated, and say, “This is a problem. How can I use tech to solve this?” And so I, in that problem, I came up with this solution of how I could be able to tell which one of these is the right line to get into. And that consisted of lots of things like scanning the things in everyone's cart. On your cart, you have these smart carts that know what's inside of them, polling the customers' spending or their behavior; so are they going to come up here and send the clerk back to go get cigarettes, or alcohol, or are they going to pull out 50 coupons? Are they going to write a check, which takes longer?So, kind of factoring in all of these habitual behaviors and what's in your cart right now, and determining an overall processing time. And that way, if you display that over each queue, which one would be the fastest to get into. So, things like that is what I started doing and patenting.Corey: Well, my favorite part of that story is that it is clearly a deeply technical insight into this, but you've told the story in a way that someone who is not themselves deeply technical can wrap their heads around. And I just—making sure you're aware of exactly how rare and valuable that particular skill set is. So, often there are people who are so in love with a technology that they cannot explain to another living soul who is not equally in love with that technology. That alone is one of the biggest reasons I wanted to have you on this show was your repeated, demonstrated ability to explain complex things simply in a way that—I know this is anathema for the tech industry—that is not condescending. I come away feeling I understand what you were talking about, now.Angie: Thank you so much. That is one of the skills I pride myself on. When I give talks, I want everyone in that room to understand it, even if they're not technical. And lots of times I've had comments from anyone from, like, the janitor to the folks who are working A/V who, they don't work with computers or anything at all and they've come to me after these talks like, “Okay, I heard a lot of talks in here. Everybody is over my head. I understood everything you said. Thank you.” And yet it's still beneficial to those who are deeply technical as well. Thank you so much for that.Corey: No, it's a very valuable thing and it's what I look for the most. In fact, my last question for you is tying around that exact thing. You have convinced me. I want to learn more about test automation, and learn how this works and with an eye toward possibly one day applying it to some of my crappy nonsense that I'm writing. Other than going on Google and typing in a variety of search terms that will lead me to, probably, a Stack Overflow thread that has been closed as off-topic, but still left up to pollute Google search results, where should I go?Angie: Yeah. So, I've actually started an entire university devoted to testing, and it's called Test Automation Universityand I got my employer, Applitools, to sponsor this, so all of the courses are free.And they are taught by myself as well as other leading experts in the test automation space. So, you know that it's trusted; I vet all of the instructors, I'm very [laugh] involved in going through their material and making sure that it's correct and accurate so the courses are of top quality. We have about a little over 85,000 students at Test Automation University, so you definitely need to become one if you want to learn more about testing. And we cover all of the languages, so Java, JavaScript, Python, Ruby, we have all of the frameworks, we have things around mobile testing, UI testing, unit testing, API testing. So, whatever it is that you need, we got you covered.Corey: You also go further than that; you don't just break it down by language, you break it down by use case. If I—Angie: Yeah.Corey: —look at Python, for example, you've got a Web UI path, you've got an—Angie: Exactly.Corey: API path, you've got a mobile path. It aligns not just with the language but with the use case, in many respects.Angie: Mm-hm.Corey: I'm really glad I asked that question, and we will, of course, include a link to that in the [show notes 00:31:10]. Thank you so much for taking the time to speak with me. If people want to learn more, other than going to Test Automation University, where can they find you?Angie: Mm-hm. So, my website is angiejones.tech—T-E-C-H—and I blog about test automation strategies and techniques there, so lots of good info there. I also keep my calendar of events there, so if you wanted to hear me speak or one of my talks, you can find that information there. And I live on Twitter, so definitely give me a follow. It's @techgirl1908.Corey: And we will, of course, include links to all of that. Thank you so much for being so generous with your time and insight. I really appreciate it.Angie: Yeah, thank you so much for having me. This was fun.Corey: Angie Jones, Java Champion and senior director at Applitools. I'm Cloud Economist Corey Quinn and this is Screaming in the Cloud. If you've enjoyed this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice, whereas if you hated this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice along with a long, ranting, incoherent comment that fails to save because someone on that platform failed to write a test.Corey: If your AWS bill keeps rising and your blood pressure is doing the same, then you need The Duckbill Group. We help companies fix their AWS bill by making it smaller and less horrifying. The Duckbill Group works for you, not AWS. We tailor recommendations to your business and we get to the point. Visit duckbillgroup.com to get started.Announcer: This has been a HumblePod production. Stay humble.
Laurie Barkman talks with Neil Sahota. Neil helped create the artificial intelligence ecosystem that famously won Jeopardy called Watson. He's an IBM Master Inventor and artificial intelligence subject matter expert with the United Nations. Neil's written a book called Own the AI Revolution. We talked about ways to learn about AI so we don't fear the changes it can bring. AI is doing a lot of good around the world and there are practical business applications. Is AI out of reach for small to mid-sized companies? Listen in to hear Neil's thoughts on that question, and what it could mean for your company. Listen in to learn more about: Whether AI is ideal for smaller and mid-sized companies The capabilities and limitations of AI Adapting AI for different use cases Why Ai is actually good for the job market How AI is driving the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) Show Links: www.neilsahota.com Neil Sahota on LinkedIn Own the AI Revolution on Amazon Subscribe to the show! Sign up for our Insights newsletter https://www.smalldotbig.com/ Request an appointment with Laurie Barkman to discuss innovation, growth or transition in your business: https://www.smalldotbig.com/contact
Guest: Neil SahotaIntroduction:When we think about artificial intelligence, or A.I., what comes to mind for many folks are robots or even IBM’s Watson, which went head to head with some of Jeopardy’s greatest contestants on television among other things.. But what might not come to mind is how this branch of science and technology is being used to study weather and climate, and how these affect the global population. Our guest today is Neil Sahota, an IBM Master Inventor and United Nations Artificial Intelligence subject matter expert and we’re going to talk about how A.I. is being used to help study and better our planet.
Neil Sahota is a futurist and leading expert on Artificial Intelligence (AI) and other next generation technologies. He is also an IBM Master Inventor, former leader of the IBM Watson Group and professor at the University of California at Irvine. He is the author of Own the AI Revolution (McGraw Hill) and works with the United Nations which uses AI to solve issues like poverty, homelessness and more. Neil shares with Lou his thoughts on AI and our next big leap forward on Thrive LOUD. ** CONNECT TO LOU DIAMOND & THRIVE LOUD
Today’s guest is Neil Sahota, an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations A.I. Advisor, professor at UC Irvine, and globally-recognized speaker and author. Neil is a founding member of the UN’s Artificial Intelligence for Social Good Committee, and he’s here to talk about how we can harness the power of AI and use it for social good. Neil is also the author of “Own the A.I.Revolution”, providing a future-forward look at A.I., focusing on how businesses can use it to commercialize while doing good in the world. We’ll discuss things like the challenges posed by A.I. and how we can overcome them, as well as which skill-sets are going to be most important in the near future. In our interview, I was amazed by how A.I. can help our businesses, lives, and water infrastructure worldwide. Data allows us to make better decisions. We make better decisions when we have better data. When we don’t have data, we’re not making decisions; we’re making guesses. So how good are your guesses? Timestamps: Upcoming events for water treaters (see links below) [1:50] Introducing Neil Sahota, Artificial Intelligence Expert [8:13] How is A.I. being used to improve our water infrastructure around the country? [14:15] What does a water treater need to know about A.I., and how can they start using it? [16:18] How can A.I. improve our capacity and collection of water in agriculture? [19:36] Why Neil wrote the “Own the A.I. Revolution” and how it can help your business [22:33] Positioning A.I. for social good and working with The United Nations A.I. for Good Initiative [24:33] How do you help people to develop a world-class culture? [28:32] What can’t A.I. do? [31:15] Lightning round questions [34:00] Outro [38:11] James’ Challenge: Test boiler sulfite, both immediately on a sample, and again an hour later on the same open sample. [41:02] Quotes: “Artificial Intelligence is a machine that can mimic human thinking to do low-level type tasks that require some cognition.” - Neil Sahota “Maximize the use of the water we have.” - Neil Sahota “A.I. unlocks a toolset that we’ve never had before, now we can do way more than that.” - Neil Sahota “We can use A.I. to influence consumer behavior on their water usage habits."- Neil Sahota “Data is the fuel for A.I.” - Neil Sahota “We have to bring people together who want to make solutions.” - Neil Sahota “Small things add up.” - Neil Sahota “I believe in the power of storytelling so people can hear the actions and outcomes.” - Neil Sahota If I can inspire people, soon we are saving a million gallons of water a day.” - Neil Sahota “Do something and share that story.” - Neil Sahota “Saving money and saving the planet. It’s a double win!” - Neil Sahota “Changing the culture takes time and a lot of effort, but it is well worth it.” - Neil Sahota Data allows us to make better decisions. We make better decisions when we have better data. When we don’t have data, we’re not making decisions; we’re making guesses. So how good are your guesses?”- Trace Blackmore “We need other people to help us get better.” - Trace Blackmore “You never know how far the ripples will reach.” - Trace Blackmore “Until next week, try something new, try to learn something new, and do something new; and be the reason that somebody cracks a smile.” - Trace Blackmore Links Mentioned: Neil Sahota’s website Neil’s LinkedIn The United Nations A.I. for Good Initiative Episode 168 with Jared Gabel Scaling Up Business Webinar Series Rising Tide Mastermind Events: Texas 2021 Virtual Convention March 29-April 1 The Hang online networking event April 8 at 6 pm EST Books Mentioned: Neil’s book “Own the A.I. Revolution”
Over the past few years, there's been a growing discussion around artificial intelligence (A.I.) and the potential risks that come with it. Just reading comments from Stephen Hawking, Bill Gates, and other high profile technology leaders about the potential dangers of AI would certainly seem to be reason to give pause on the continued development of this new technology. And yet, early developments in this realm would seem to demonstrate some genuine game-changers that can actually improve both the way we work and live our lives. So given both the public unease and the positive gains from these early advancements, how should leaders be viewing this technological field and what might its impact be on the way they lead? That's part of the focus of my conversation with A.I. expert Neil Sahota in this episode of my podcast "Leadership Biz Cafe". Neil serves as the United Nations Artificial Intelligence subject matter expert. He's an IBM Master Inventor, and the Chief Innovation Officer at the Irvine School of Law at the University of California. Neil is also the author of the book “Own The AI Revolution, Unlock Your Artificial Intelligence Strategy To Disrupt Your Competition”. Although a big sci-fi fan, I'm not too familiar with A.I., so I really appreciated this conversation with Neil over which we touched on the following topics: What's behind our ambivalence and fear about A.I. and the role it might play in our workplaces and society at large. How do you program computers to learn so we can ensure we're getting the outcomes we need, as opposed to some of the high-profile PR disasters we've seen with some A.I. initiatives. How A.I. can disrupt the way we work for the better and how can leaders prepare for this transformation. The early steps leaders can take to bring A.I. into their workplace to benefit both their employees and their organization. Whether A.I. is on your radar or not, what we learned in 2020 is that disruption is going to come whether you're ready for it or not. And after talking with Neil, it's become clear that A.I. will indeed be that next big wave of disruption that will soon hit your organization's shores. Noteworthy links: Buy Neil's book “Own The A.I. Revolution” on Amazon.* Learn more about Neil's work in the A.I. field - neilsahota.com. *Affiliate link used to support this podcast.
Over the past few years, there’s been a growing discussion around artificial intelligence (A.I.) and the potential risks that come with it. Just reading comments from Stephen Hawking, Elon Musk, and Bill Gates about the potential dangers of AI would certainly seem to be reason to give pause on the continued development of this new technology. And yet, early developments in this realm would seem to demonstrate some genuine game-changers that can actually improve both the way we work and live our lives. So given both the public unease and the positive gains from these early advancements, how should leaders be viewing this technological field and what might its impact be on the way they lead? That’s part of the focus of my conversation with A.I. expert Neil Sahota in this episode of my podcast "Leadership Biz Cafe". Neil serves as the United Nations Artificial Intelligence subject matter expert. He's an IBM Master Inventor, and the Chief Innovation Officer at the Irvine School of Law at the University of California. Neil is also the author of the book “Own The AI Revolution, Unlock Your Artificial Intelligence Strategy To Disrupt Your Competition”. Although a big sci-fi fan, I’m not too familiar with A.I., so I really appreciated this conversation with Neil over which we touched on the following topics: What’s behind our ambivalence and fear about A.I. and the role it might play in our workplaces and society at large.How do you program computers to learn so we can ensure we’re getting the outcomes we need, as opposed to some of the high-profile PR disasters we’ve seen with some A.I. initiatives.How A.I. can disrupt the way we work for the better and how can leaders prepare for this transformation.The early steps leaders can take to bring A.I. into their workplace to benefit both their employees and their organization. Whether A.I. is on your radar or not, what we learned in 2020 is that disruption is going to come whether you’re ready for it or not. And after talking with Neil, it’s become clear that A.I. will indeed be that next big wave of disruption that will soon hit your organization’s shores. Noteworthy links: Buy Neil’s book “Own The A.I. Revolution” on Amazon.*Learn more about Neil’s work in the A.I. field - neilsahota.com. *Affiliate link used to support this podcast.
The pandemic ensured that so much of our communication takes place remotely through chats, phone calls, video conferences, and e-mails. While these methods of communication keep organizations alive, they also leave a lot behind. How do we recover the value of in-person communication? The answer might be AI that offers real-time analysis to stakeholders during meetings. This episode is part of the HR Daily Advisor’s HR Technology Week 2021 (https://interactive.blr.com/HR-Tech-Week-2021). Our goal is to discuss HR technology in general, and AI technology specifically with our guest, Neil Sahota (https://www.neilsahota.com/), an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations A.I. Advisor, professor at UC Irvine, and globally-recognized speaker and author. Neil is a founding member of the UN’s Artificial Intelligence for Social Good Committee. He is the author of Own the A.I.Revolution, providing a future-forward look at A.I., focusing on how businesses can use it to commercialize while doing good in the world.
An artificial intelligence expert who's worked with the United Nations and IBM wrote a book on AI when he realized people are asking the same two questions about the subject: What should I be doing? How do I actually get started? Entrepreneur-author Neil Sahota says: “Most of the books were very technical, and people couldn't understand or they were really fear mongering. I thought: ‘I will solve this problem. I'll write a book for non-technical business leaders so they can answer those two questions'.” Neil had never written a book before, but Own the A.I. Revolution: Unlock Your Artificial Intelligence Strategy to Disrupt Your Competition was picked up by McGraw Hill and became a bestseller! Neil is a professor at UC Irvine, IBM Master Inventor, and advisor to the United Nations on artificial intelligence. He joins Published Author Podcast host Josh Steimle to discuss writing and promoting his first book. Top Takeaway: Have a Detailed Outline As a first-time entrepreneur-author, Neil has many takeaways, but the essential learning is that having a detailed outline is a must. “An outline makes the writing process so much easier,” says Neil, adding that his co-author Michael Ashley really helped him structure the book and frame the story. “I had lots of knowledge, lots of examples of things I had done, but they were just scattershot; they didn't make sense to anybody else,” he continues. “So we spent a good five or six hours in a couple of sessions, just throwing everything out there.” “We built a very detailed outline. It took about six weeks to build a detailed outline, it was about 54 pages long.” Leverage Your Network Neil reached out to thought leaders in his network for interviews to build the content for the book. This idea soon evolved into something bigger when Neil and Michael received incredibly rich contributions from big names in AI, including Peter Diamandis, Steven Kotler, Stephen Ibaraki, and Ben Goertzel. These interviews make up a full section of the book. The two authors also interviewed people across a range of industries, as well as smaller entrepreneurs, ensuring that the book was both comprehensive and deep. Consider Working With a Co-Author As a first-time author, Neil knew nothing about writing or publishing. He sought out co-author Michael, who has written more than ten books. “It was an experience that if I tried to do on my own, it probably would have fallen flat. I didn't realize how incredibly difficult it was right to write a book and how even more difficult is to get published,” says Neil. “I have a new appreciation for authors because it is a grind. It's a worthwhile grind. But it's still a grind!” Despite the grind, Neil adds: “The experience of writing the book was way better than I ever would have imagined. I was happy to get the book and just hoped to help people. But given the kind of feedback . . . As a first time author, I was totally stoked! Neil's collaboration with Michael has been extremely successful and they are planning two more books. Their next one is on disruptive thinking, while book number three will be on art and technology. Neil's other key takeaways as a first-time author are: Keep a firm focus on your audience and don't forget you are writing for them, not you A book needs to make sense to an audience and resonate with readers Even if you work with a traditional publisher, as an author you're still responsible for promoting and marketing your book Don't get too attached to your title; if your book is published by a traditional publisher the title may change Going with a traditional publisher means that they buy the book, own it, and can do whatever they want with it. Neil also discusses what it means when a publisher has an option on an author's next book, how he promoted Own the A.I. Revolution: Unlock Your Artificial Intelligence Strategy to Disrupt Your Competition, and how he was able to expand sales beyond the original target niche. Links Twitter Instagram LinkedIn NeilSahota.com SUBSCRIBE TO PUBLISHED AUTHOR PODCAST If you enjoyed this episode, don't forget to subscribe. And if you want to spread the word, please give us a five-star rating review and tell your friends to subscribe, too. We're available on Apple podcasts, Spotify, and everywhere else you listen to podcasts. And if you're an entrepreneur interested in writing and publishing a nonfiction book to grow your business or make an impact, visit PublishedAuthor.com for show notes for this podcast and other free resources. Twitter Youtube Facebook.com Linkedin.com Instagram.com Josh Steimle Josh Steimle - LinkedIn Josh Steimle's book: Chief Marketing Officers At Work
In this episode of AUHSD Future Talks, Superintendent Matsuda interviews Neil SahotaMr. Sahota is an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations (UN) artificial intelligence (AI) Advisor, author of the book Own the A.I. Revolution, and Professor at UC Irvine. Over his 20+ year career, Mr. Sahota has worked with enterprises on business and marketing strategies to create next generation products/solutions powered by emerging technology as well as helping organizations create the culture, community, and ecosystem needed to achieve success such as the U.N.’s AI for Good initiative. Mr. Sahota also actively pursues social good and volunteers with nonprofits. During the interview, Mr. Sahota discusses the A.I. Revolution, misconceptions about A.I., the application of A.I. to various subject matters, and the innovative Artificial Intelligence pathway at Kennedy High School in the Anaheim Union High School District.
Can A.I. help us solve today's biggest challenges? Today's guest on Power Lunch Live is Neil Sahota, an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations A.I. Advisor, professor at UC Irvine, and globally-recognized speaker and author. Neil is a founding member of the U.N.'s Artificial Intelligence for Social Good Committee, and he's here to talk about the ways we can harness the power of A.I. and use it for social good. Neil is also the author of Own the A.I. Revolution, providing a future-forward look at A.I., focusing on how businesses can use it to commercialize while doing good in the world. We'll discuss things like the challenges posed by A.I. and how we can overcome them, as well as which skill-sets are going to be most important in the future. #technology #powerlunchlive #linkedInLive #rhettpower
Can A.I. help us solve today's biggest challenges? Today's guest on Power Lunch Live is Neil Sahota, an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations A.I. Advisor, professor at UC Irvine, and globally-recognized speaker and author. Neil is a founding member of the U.N.'s Artificial Intelligence for Social Good Committee, and he's here to talk about the ways we can harness the power of A.I. and use it for social good. Neil is also the author of Own the A.I. Revolution, providing a future-forward look at A.I., focusing on how businesses can use it to commercialize while doing good in the world. We'll discuss things like the challenges posed by A.I. and how we can overcome them, as well as which skill-sets are going to be most important in the future.
In this episode, I’m really excited to have as my guest, Neil Sahota, an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations (UN) artificial intelligence (AI) Advisor, keynote speaker, author of the book, Own the A.I. Revolution, and Professor at UC Irvine. Over his 20+ year career, Neil has worked with enterprises on the business and marketing strategies to create next generation products/solutions powered by emerging technology as well as helping organizations create the culture, community, and ecosystem needed to achieve success such as the U.N.’s AI for Good initiative. Neil also actively pursues social good and volunteers with nonprofits. He is currently helping the Zero Abuse Project prevent child sexual abuse as well as Planet Home to engage youth culture in sustainability initiatives. In our discussion, Neil talked to me about: How the AI revolution is opening up new job opportunities Applications that are already using AI for good and helping people The "age of relationships" and human connection. Listen to the podcast to learn more. Show Notes and Blog The Podcasts See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Before the pandemic, awareness of the need for a well-crafted and -maintained company culture was high, and HR was making real strides toward taking charge of those efforts. That awareness has only been heightened, and being effective has simultaneously been challenged by the pandemic. How do HR professionals adapt? What tools do they discard, and what tools do they acquire? You can also listen to the episode here: https://bit.ly/37nuiqM In today’s episode, we tackle these questions with Neil Sahota (https://www.neilsahota.com/hrworks/) an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations A.I. Advisor, professor at UC Irvine, and globally-recognized speaker and author. Neil is a founding member of the UN’s Artificial Intelligence for Social Good Committee. He is the author of Own the A.I.Revolution, providing a future-forward look at A.I., focusing on how businesses can use it to commercialize while doing good in the world.
Neil Sahota is an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations AI Advisor, author of the book Own the A.I. Revolution., and Chief Innovation Officer the University of California. We discuss: Why it is so difficult for people to think differently [2:31] The trap of long-term consultant-client relationships [4:46] Why executives should get out there more often [6:38] What we forget about assumptions [9:27] Understand different: why consultants should fall out of love with their idea [12:32] Be different: how to avoid having a superior product fail [15:57] Own different: Why Tesla succeeded with electric cars while others failed [18:13] A little, disruptive, entrepreneurial piece within a big bureaucratic organization [19:57] Over his 20+ year career, Neil worked with enterprises to launch business ventures by creating next generation products/solutions powered by emerging technology as well as helping organizations create the culture, community, and ecosystem needed to achieve success, like the U.N.’s AI for Good initiative. Neil also actively pursues social good and volunteers with nonprofits like the Zero Abuse Project to prevent child sexual abuse. Learn more about Neil at Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/neil_sahota/). Thank You to Our Sponsor: SiteHub www.smashingtheplateau.com/sitehub (http://www.smashingtheplateau.com/sitehub)
A.I. As agency owners and leaders, we understand what it is and what it does, but we haven’t quite figured out the best way to use it in our own agencies for ours or our clients’ benefit. Many still believe it’s something inaccessible or unaffordable. But, A.I. can transform our deliverables, change the ROI we deliver to clients, and make us even better at what we do. Today. At an affordable price. My guest for this week’s episode is Neil Sahota, a professor at UC-Irvine in California. Neil is a specialist in artificial intelligence marketing. He was an IBM Master Inventor and is currently doing some astounding work as an A.I. Advisor for the United Nations. Neil authored the book, Own the A.I. Revolution, and is one of the foremost expert on emerging technologies as they relate to business strategy. In this episode of Build a Better Agency, Neil joins us to share his journey and technical expertise. He explains what agency owners can do to harness the power of artificial intelligence marketing so we can use it in ours and our clients’ favor. He also walks us through some of the most progressive A.I. tools marketers are using to communicate with their audiences more effectively. A big thank you to our podcast’s presenting sponsor, White Label IQ. They’re an amazing resource for agencies who want to outsource their design, dev or PPC work at wholesale prices. Check out their special offer (10 free hours!) for podcast listeners here. What You Will Learn in This Episode: How we as agency owners can harness the power of artificial intelligence marketing and use the technological disruption in our favor How to use A.I. to get data and use it in your client interactions What tools agencies can use to leverage data and turn it into ROI Where agency owners should look for guidance on what A.I. can do and how to do it What inspired Neil to write his book, “Own the A.I. Revolution” Neil’s perspective on the ethics of A.I. in marketing
Neil Sahota is an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations (UN) Artificial Intelligence (AI) Advisor, and Faculty at UC Irvine. Neil joined me on this episode of the podcast to talk about the opportunities that Artificial Intelligence offers us as a technology and a tool. We also talk about what we believe philosophically when it comes to humans and technologically becoming more and more inseparable and what the possible future holds as AI continues to grow and develop. With 20+ years of business experience, Neil works with clients and business partners to think disruptively and create next generation products/solutions powered by emerging technology. He is also the author of Own the A.I. Revolution, a practical guide to leveraging A.I. for social good and business growth and was named Best Business Book of 2019 by Soundview. Neil’s work experience spans multiple industries including health care, life sciences, retail, travel and transportation, energy and utilities, automotive, telecommunications, media/communication, and government. Prior to his current role, he was a thought leader, consultant, and practice leader in IBM Global Business Services, where he led the sales and delivery of consulting engagements in business strategy, new product development, revenue optimization, process improvement, and business/system integration. Neil has lived and worked in Ningbo, China, where he was involved in economic development projects, gaining extensive experience in assisting companies and entrepreneurs to define their products, establish their target markets, and structure their companies. He is a member of several investor groups and a director of various tech companies. Neil resides in California, and spends significant time traveling the world to participate in business development and global expansion projects. Connect with Neil at NeilSahota.com and follow him on Twitter, Instagram, and LinkedIn. See omnystudio.com/policies/listener for privacy information.
Neil Sahota is back for part two of our conversation on the podcast. In this episode we talk about a couple of the projects Neil is currently working on to utilize Artificial Intelligence to create social good in the world. We also talk about the development of technology over the years and how virtual reality could play a big role in education, entertainment, and more in the not so distant future. Neil Sahota is an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations (UN) Artificial Intelligence (AI) Advisor, and Faculty at UC Irvine. With 20+ years of business experience, he works with clients and business partners to think disruptively and create next generation products/solutions powered by emerging technology. He is also the author of Own the A.I. Revolution, a practical guide to leveraging A.I. for social good and business growth and was named Best Business Book of 2019 by Soundview. Neil’s work experience spans multiple industries including health care, life sciences, retail, travel and transportation, energy and utilities, automotive, telecommunications, media/communication, and government. Prior to his current role, he was a thought leader, consultant, and practice leader in IBM Global Business Services, where he led the sales and delivery of consulting engagements in business strategy, new product development, revenue optimization, process improvement, and business/system integration. Neil has lived and worked in Ningbo, China, where he was involved in economic development projects, gaining extensive experience in assisting companies and entrepreneurs to define their products, establish their target markets, and structure their companies. He is a member of several investor groups and a director of various tech companies. Neil resides in California, and spends significant time traveling the world to participate in business development and global expansion projects. Connect with Neil at NeilSahota.com and follow him on Twitter, Instagram, and LinkedIn. See omnystudio.com/policies/listener for privacy information.
Neil Sahota (萨冠军) is an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations (UN) Artificial Intelligence (AI) subject matter expert, and Professor at UC Irvine.With 20+ years of business experience, Neil works to inspire clients and business partners to foster innovation and develop next generation products/solutions powered by AI.Neil’s work experience spans multiple industries including legal services, healthcare, life sciences, retail, travel and transportation, energy and utilities, automotive, telecommunications, media/communication, and government. Moreover, he is one of the few people selected for IBM’s Corporate Service Corps leadership program that pairs leaders with NGOs to perform community-driven economic development projects. For his assignment, Neil lived and worked in Ningbo, China where he partnered with Chinese corporate CEOs to create a leadership development program.In addition, Neil partners with entrepreneurs to define their products, establish their target markets, and structure their companies. He is a member of several investor groups like the Tech Coast Angels and assists startups with investor funding. Neil also serves as a judge in various startup competitions and mentor in several incubator/accelerator programs.He actively volunteers with nonprofits for event management, fund raising, grant reviews, and site visits. Neil is an active member of the UCI Alumni Association and serves on the Board of Directors for the Orange County Marathon, supporting their work with the OC Kids program in fighting childhood obesity.
This podcast interview focuses on what it takes to create innovation that drives positive change. My guest is Neil Sahota, IBM Master Inventor, United Nations (UN) AI subject matter expert, and Professor at UC Irvine.With 20+ years of business experience, Neil works to inspire clients and business partners to foster innovation and develop next generation products/solutions powered by AI. Neil's work experience spans multiple industries including legal services, healthcare, life sciences, retail, travel and transportation, energy and utilities, automotive, telecommunications, media/communication, and government. Moreover, he is one of the few people selected for IBM's Corporate Service Corps leadership program that pairs leaders with NGOs to perform community-driven economic development projects. In addition, Neil partners with entrepreneurs to define their products, establish their target markets, and structure their companies. He is a member of several investor groups like the Tech Coast Angels and assists startups with investor funding. Neil also serves as a judge in various startup competitions and mentor in several incubator/accelerator programs and is the author of ‘Owning the AI Revolution.’I invited Neil to my podcast because of his drive to create meaningful change and social impact through innovation. We explore the myths around making money and creating social good. We dig into the need to change behaviour and remove resistance as a critical component of the innovation process in order to drive the impact and adoption we hope for. And we discuss the fine line around being successful and taking enough risk.Here are some of his quotes:“If you're not trying to disrupt yourself or your organization, someone else will. And I think there's just a lot of opportunities out there. But we're used to thinking about improvement, how do we make something faster, cheaper, less errors, rather than be more transformative and say: ‘How can I actually do this differently?’We live in a dynamic world, things are always changing, new capabilities are always coming out. How can I do something like different? That's what really drives me.”During this interview, you will learn four things:Why companies that drive positive social impact perform fundamentally better than the ones that don’tWhy solving a big problem with your software is only one aspect to success and momentum. It’s ability to change behaviour, buy-in and mindset is the other critical part.How we can deliver more success in driving change is by helping people ask a better first question.That you don’t always want to be a 100% successful. If you’re 100% successful, you’re actually not taking enough risk See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The Kingsley Grant Show: Where Emotional Intelligence (EI/EQ) and Leadership Skills Intersect
+++ IT HAS TO BE UP AND DOWN +++ Most times we use the phrase Up and Down to refer to life circumstances such as our health, work, relationship, and more. There are some things I wish had a Down component but unfortunately, it doesn't and that is my age. Why couldn't there be a Down component to it? Wouldn't that be nice? But it's a good thing, our attitude about it makes the difference. Well, enough on the age issue. This is not what this show is about. In this episode, you will hear the United Nations Artificial Intelligence advisor - Neil Sahota - shares his insights on how leaders should lead both up and down. He believes as I do, that as a leader, it is imperative that you develop the skills to not just lead those below you, but those above you as well. This notion is sometimes foreign to some people to even think they can and should do this. Well, this episode will help you if you happen to be one of those individuals. And if you were aware of this, you're going to truly appreciate this episode. +++++++++++++++ Who is NEIL SAHOTA Neil is an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations (UN) artificial intelligence (AI) Advisor, author of the book Own the A.I. Revolution., and Professor at UC Irvine. Over his 20+ year career, Neil has worked with enterprises on the business and marketing strategies to create next-generation products/solutions powered by emerging technology. He also helps organizations create the culture, community, and ecosystem needed to achieve success such as the U.N.'s AI for Good initiative. Neil actively pursues social good and volunteers with nonprofits. He is currently helping the Zero Abuse Project to prevent child sexual abuse as well as Planet Home to engage youth culture in sustainability initiatives. Contact Neil: https://www.neilsahota.com/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/neilsahota/ +++++++++++++++ Please share this episode with one other person and leave a comment on the platform through which you listen to this show and/or on social media. Thanks so much. And remember, you are ONE SKILL AWAY... P.S. If this show is one that you are benefiting from, why not show your love and support at www.patreon.com/kingsleygrant. Your gift helps to underwrite the monthly cost of producing the show. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/kingsleygrant/message
Neil Sahota is an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations (UN) artificial intelligence (AI) Advisor, author of the book Own the A.I. Revolution, and Professor at UC Irvine. Over his 20+ year career, Neil has worked with enterprises on the business and marketing strategies to create next generation products/solutions powered by emerging technology as well as helping organizations create the culture, community, and ecosystem needed to achieve success such as the U.N.’s AI for Good initiative. Neil also actively pursues social good and volunteers with nonprofits. He is currently helping the Zero Abuse Project prevent child sexual abuse as well as Planet Home to engage youth culture in sustainability initiatives. Special message to Manage Smarter listeners about the book: https://www.neilsahota.com/smarter/ In this episode, Audrey, Lee and Neil discuss: · The actual definition of AI · Ways you can use AI and your resources for social good · Why promoting incompetent people is a common leadership mistake · How to tell if a product is legitimately AI or inflated marketing hype · Organizations that facilitate you getting involved in using AI for social good "One of the things we're working on is a project where you create an AI buddy so to speak that gives people an outlet to communicate so if they are feeling lonely or have an episode or arer introverted they have something to talk to and have confidence and feel a part of something.” – Neil Sahota Join hosts Audrey Strong and C. Lee Smith every week as they dive into the aspects and concepts of good business management. From debunking sales myths to learning how to manage with and without measurements, you'll learn something new with every episode and will be able to implement positive change far beyond sales. Connect with Neil Sahota https://www.neilsahota.com/ https://twitter.com/neil_sahota https://www.linkedin.com/in/neilsahota/ Connect with the hosts of Manage Smarter: · Website: ManageSmarter.com · Twitter: @ManageSmartPod · LinkedIn: Audrey Strong · LinkedIn: C. Lee Smith Connect with SalesFuel: · Website: http://salesfuel.com/ · Twitter: @SalesFuel · Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/salesfuel/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Neil Sahota is an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations (U.N.) Artificial Intelligence (A.I.) Advisor and Faculty at UC Irvine. With 20+ years of business experience, he works with clients and business partners to think disruptively and create next-generation products/solutions powered by emerging technology. He is also the author of Own the A.I. Revolution, a practical guide to leveraging A.I. for social good and business growth and was named Best Business Book of 2019 by Soundview. Neil’s work experience spans multiple industries, including health care, life sciences, retail, travel and transportation, energy and utilities, automotive, telecommunications, media/communication, and government. Before his current role, he was a thought leader, consultant, and practice leader in IBM Global Business Services, where he led the sales and delivery of consulting engagements in business strategy, new product development, revenue optimization, process improvement, and business/system integration. Neil has lived and worked in Ningbo, China, where he was involved in economic development projects, gaining extensive experience in assisting companies and entrepreneurs in defining their products, establishing their target markets, and structure their companies. He is a member of several investor groups and a director of various tech companies. Neil resides in California and spends a significant amount of time traveling the world to participate in business development and global expansion projects. We talk about creating a "Tech for Good" mindset to drive social enterprise/entrepreneurship and building the ecosystem to bring business, technologists, and government together to solve problems. Neil also shares why Moonshots are good but we also need "Earthshots" - solutions to help tackle some of the big problems of our planet and society.
With the rate we are going in terms of technological advancements, it would not be too presumptuous to say that we are nearing a world where A.I. is at the center of our day to day lives. In this exciting conversation, Joshua Rhodes interviews artificial intelligence and machine learning expert, Neil Sahota. Neil is an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations (UN) Artificial Intelligence (A.I.) subject matter expert, and Professor at UC Irvine. Here, Neil takes us into the world of A.I. and cyborgs, removing the complexities of the topic and simplifies it into something more digestible. What is artificial intelligence? Are we in the A.I. Revolution? How can we use it in our daily lives? Where is A.I. headed? Neil answers these questions and more, helping us get ready for the future of A.I. that will surely come.
Neil Sahota is an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations Artificial Intelligence subject matter expert, and Professor at UC Irvine. With 20+ years of business experience, Neil works to inspire clients and business partners to foster innovation and develop next-generation products/solutions powered by AI. In this episode, Neil shares his insights about technology and gives us his tips to improve our businesses. 1.) Connecting the dots 2.) Staying calm 3.) Strong desire to help Connect with Neil Sahota: https://www.neilsahota.com/ (https://www.neilsahota.com/) Mentioned in this episode: Grow My Podcast Virtual Summit
“It’s surprising what a machine can do just as well if not better than us.” Neil Sahota is an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations A.I. subject matter expert, professor at UC Irvine, and globally recognized speaker and author. Neil is a founding member of the UN’s Artificial Intelligence for Social Good Committee, and author of the book, Own the A.I. Revolution, a best-seller that provides a future-forward look at A.I. Neil’s work experience spans multiple industries including healthcare, retail, travel and transportation, energy and utilities, automotive, telecommunications, media/communication, and government. Prior to his current role, he was a thought leader, consultant, and practice leader in IBM Global Business Services, where he led the sales and delivery of consulting engagements in business strategy, new product development, revenue optimization, process improvement, and business/system integration. Listen & Learn: How A.I. can boost profitability and grow your business. Using A.I. to understand buyer behavior. When A.I should be deployed and when it shouldn’t. Using artificial intelligence can transform the customer experience. The key components marketers should be considering when deploying A.I. strategies. What agencies and big brand marketers are doing to integrate customized A.I. programs into their strategies. TO FIND NEAL SAHOTA ON LINKEDIN, CLICK HERE. Call LORI JONES today at 303-678-7102 to learn more about the tools you need to understand buyer behavior and segmentation and move your customers through the sales funnel.
In the wake of COVID-19 it is time to look forward and use the pandemic as an opportunity to improve. How can we use AI to take aviation forward and shape the future? Neil Sahota, author of Own the AI Revolution, returns to the show to share how to rebuild the aviation industry. The aviation industry as we know it has changed: we have to start changing the way we think about business. -Neil Sahota Three Things You'll Learn In This Episode New metrics that will precisely target flying airline customer Use AI to find our customers' ‘why'. If we know why people were choosing to fly before the pandemic, we'll be more likely to find ways to win them back. How to change mindsets to reshape the industry Guest Bio Neil Sahota is a United Nations Artificial Intelligence subject matter expert, IBM Master Inventor and Professor at UC Irvine. He is also a speaker on inspiring innovation, and the author of Own the AI Revolution: Unlock Your Artificial Intelligence Strategy to Disrupt Your Competition. In the wake of the COVID-19 crisis, Neil is currently working on artificial empathy technology through the United Nations. To find out more about Neil, head to: NeilSahota.com You can also find his book at: https://www.amazon.com/Own-I-Revolution-Intelligence-Competition/dp/1260458377 Learn More About Your Host: Co-founder and Managing Partner for Northstar Group, Craig is focused on recruiting senior level leadership, sales and operations executives for some of the most prominent companies in the aviation and aerospace industry. Clients include well known aircraft OEM's, aircraft operators, leasing / financial organizations, and Maintenance / Repair / Overhaul (MRO) providers. Since 2009 Craig has personally concluded more than 150 executive searches in a variety of disciplines. As the only executive recruiter who has flown airplanes, sold airplanes AND run a business, Craig is uniquely positioned to build deep, lasting relationships with both executives and the boards and stakeholders they serve. This allows him to use a detailed, disciplined process that does more than pair the ideal candidate with the perfect opportunity, and hit the business goals of the companies he serves.
I work in technology. You might say I work on the forefront of some. But I must admit, when I hear someone lead a conversation with the statement, “We need an AI strategy,” my spidey-senses start to fire. Danger. Danger. Danger. I don’t just mean AI. The statement could be any of the following… We need a machine learning strategy. We need a big data strategy. Let’s hire a data scientist. We need podcast strategy. When you hear someone in your company talking like this, you can sound like the trillion dollar coach, Bill Campbell, by asking the group, “What problem (opportunity) are we trying to solve?” This very exchange is why I wanted to have Neil Sahota on Helping Sells Radio. I wanted Neil to save us from the insane conversations we’re having about all the different strategies these so-called visionaries are telling us we need. Neil Sahota is an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations (UN) Artificial Intelligence (AI) Advisor, Faculty at UC Irvine, and author of the book, Own the AI revolution: Unlock your artificial intelligence strategy to disrupt your competition. Even Neil says, in the subtitle of his book, that we need an AI strategy. Spidey-senses. So I asked him about that. “Why did you put that phrase in your subtitle?" He answered with a story about a head of a major law firm who’s asks himself about artificial intelligence, "I know we should be doing something with AI. What is it?” Neil helps this person reframe the question. Most people think in terms of problem first, then leaping to finding a solution. Neil says we need to insert “opportunity” between those two. Problem > opportunity > solution. He asked a simple question: “What keeps you up at night?” The manager answers, “Talent. We are struggling finding the right lawyers to hire who fit us and are effective in court. We are losing too many court cases and our employee turnover is way too high. I wish we could be better at hiring.” Problem 1: Ineffective hiring Problem 2: Low business results (losing too many court cases) Opportunity 1: Improve employee retention with better hiring Opportunity 2: Improve win rate in court. Get new clients. Neil goes on to explain to the manager that he can solve both problems and take advantage of these opportunities with AI. “Did you know AI can solve this today? With AI, we can build profiles of your candidates based on 56 phsychological traits and tell us which candidates are a good match for what you are looking for?” “We can do that?” says the manager. Now we can talk about AI as a solution, but only because we started with the problem and then got specific about possible opportunities. Neil helped us get there. More about Neil and his bookNeil was kind enough to create a special page on his website for you, Helping Sells Radio Listeners. If you want to learn about AI, without the distractions of the hype, Neil’s book is for you. Check out his website here > https://www.neilsahota.com/helpingsells/ Get on the email list at helpingsells.substack.com
We’ve heard the stories that we should fear A.I, and that it’s going to take away all of our jobs, but what does a future with A.I. truly look like? In this episode we were joined by Neil Sahota, IBM Master Inventor, UnitedNations A.I. Subject Matter Expert, and Author of Own the A.I. Revolution. We dove deep into the future of A.I., and what we really need to be concerned about as this data starts to make important decisions. We also talked about the limitations of those decisions, and what we need to consider as this technology advances, and we talked about Emerging Technology and education through a standard university model. Is that really the right path to take for those who want to take on a career in these fields? Here is the official episode breakdown: 5:10 - We jump into Neil’s experience speaking in front of the UN along with hanging with Mike Tyson on his podcast to discuss which one was a scarier experience, and the misconceptions that the UN had about A.I. and what our future looked like. 6:24 - When it comes to working with these worldwide leaders, what level of education are they requiring to understand what the future looks like? 9:04 - People are fearful of A.I., and is that fear justified? 10:36 - We dive deeper into the applications of A.I. How exactly can we allow A.I. to make more in-depth decisions that would require a massive effort in coding? 13:58 - What’s the demand for data science as A.I. becomes better at making its own decision? Will data scientists eventually go away? Or will their roles become more important as A.I. advances? 16:28 - As we implement larger scale efforts to analyze data, are there other initiatives to actually baseline the data? 18:08 - As a society that tends to be on the lazier side, how do we take initiative as a human race to work smarter than the robots? 23:40 - Teaching A.I. to grad students and applying it in the legal field and on the business side, including the future of work, how will that impact business moving forward? 24:02 - What is the definition of the future of work? What are jobs of the future going to be, and what are the skills that will be required to fulfill those jobs? 26:38 - How will the role of standard jobs change if A.I. is taking away some of the time that it takes the newbies to catch up to speed, almost like the grunt work (i.e. researchers in a law firm)? 28:30 - Is the curriculum for these Emerging Technology Courses advancing fast enough to align with the speed of change of the actual technology. 31:06 - Do we even need the training for these Emerging Technologies to happen in the standard university level? 36:15 - Is A.I. so advanced that they actually were able to get it to write Shakespeare? 38:23 - When it comes to A.I. and Social Media, is A.I. advanced enough to predict when posts may even go viral? How can companies use this data for the future? 40:25 - How do we protect ourselves from things like deep-fake when it comes to helping to make important decisions, for example voting? 46:03 - We go back to the UN to discuss the new initiative that they have to help use A.I. for good. Want to learn more about Neil Twitter - https://twitter.com/neil_sahota LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/neilsahota/ Visit https://www.neilsahota.com/
Is AI the future of recruitment? Better yet, will AI replace the need for a resume? Tools are available to utilize AI in improving workflow and screening applicants. The question lies in their accuracy and viability in identifying the strongest people for your unique organization. Our guest today: Neil Sahota, AI Expert & Author of “Own the AI Revolution”. Neil Sahota is an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations (UN) Artificial Intelligence (AI) Advisor, Faculty at UC Irvine, and author of Own the A.I. Revolution. He is one of the few people selected for IBM's Corporate Service Corps leadership program that pairs leaders with NGOs to perform community-driven economic development projects. In addition, Neil partners with entrepreneurs to define their products, establish their target markets, and structure their companies. He is a member of several investor groups like the Tech Coast Angels and assists startups with investor funding. Neil also serves as a mentor in several incubator/accelerator programs. Today we are going to discuss All things AI, What is it, how does it help with hiring Why it is important today How to implement the effective use of AI into your hiring today Why is AI important in hiring through today’s landscape? People looking for work should be looking for more than just a paycheck. Why is this important? People quit when you bring the wrong person onto the team Productivity plummets Ai can eliminate the need for a resume! Rick’s Input Automating workflow Sourcing/screening Good at all things transactional How do we start leveraging AI to optimize hiring in today's landscape? Using AI to eliminate ego based hiring decisions Story of Omelveney (law firm)- use pymetrics Testing for cultural value Allow you to evaluate for culture and team fit Ai tools to analyze how well code is written AI Tools Currently Available: Pymetrics: https://www.pymetrics.ai/ Paradox.ai: https://www.paradox.ai/ Ayra: https://goarya.com/ Eightfold.ai: https://eightfold.ai/ Xor.ai: https://www.xor.ai/ Pandologic: https://www.pandologic.com/recruiting-with-ai/ Rick’s Nuggets Add CTA’s into your job postings to allow the cream to rise to the top Innovation is eliminating the resume Key Takeaways: Elimination of resumes Reduced bias in recruitment Increased diversity & inclusion (by accessing “non-traditional recruitment pools) Quantifying cultural/team fit
AI is a hot topic these days. Whether it's in an incoherent tech-startup pitch or ominous warnings from scientists about a techno-dystopian future, everyone seems to be talking about it. Yet, despite the publicity, many of us are confused about what it actually is — and what it means for the future of our businesses. To clear up the confusion, I spoke with Neil Sahota – IBM Master Inventor, United Nations (UN) Artificial Intelligence (AI) subject matter expert, and Professor at UC Irvine, to learn more about how AI is being used. He went over: - What AI is - What AI means for your business - Whether we should be excited or worried about AI - Why the human element will always be more important This blogpost includes highlights of our podcast interview with Neil Sahota, – IBM Master Inventor, United Nations (UN) Artificial Intelligence (AI) subject matter expert, and Professor at UC Irvine. For the entire interview, you can listen to The B2B Revenue Executive Experience. If you don't use Apple Podcasts, we suggest this link.
AI is a hot topic these days. Whether it's in an incoherent tech-startup pitch or ominous warnings from scientists about a techno-dystopian future, everyone seems to be talking about it. Yet, despite the publicity, many of us are confused about what it actually is — and what it means for the future of our businesses. To clear up the confusion, I spoke with Neil Sahota – IBM Master Inventor, United Nations (UN) Artificial Intelligence (AI) subject matter expert, and Professor at UC Irvine, to learn more about how AI is being used. He went over: - What AI is - What AI means for your business - Whether we should be excited or worried about AI - Why the human element will always be more important This blogpost includes highlights of our podcast interview with Neil Sahota, – IBM Master Inventor, United Nations (UN) Artificial Intelligence (AI) subject matter expert, and Professor at UC Irvine. For the entire interview, you can listen to The B2B Revenue Executive Experience. If you don't use Apple Podcasts, we suggest this link.
Neil Sahota is an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations (UN) Artificial Intelligence (AI) subject matter expert, and Professor at UC Irvine. Author of "Own the AI Revolution :Unlock Your Artificial Intelligence Strategy to Disrupt Your Competition". With 20+ years of business experience, Neil works to inspire clients and business partners to foster innovation and develop next generation products/solutions powered by AI.
Do you believe that a data-driven business can take advantage of artificial intelligence and you need help taking the first step? Today, Neil Sahota joins us with incredible insight into the world of artificial intelligence. Neil states that AI is not for the future, it is for today! Neil is an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations (UN) Artificial Intelligence (AI) subject matter expert, Faculty at UC Irvine, and author of Own the A.I. Revolution. With 20+ years of business experience, he works with organizations to create next-generation products/solutions powered by artificial intelligence. ------ #WorkTheSystembook #BusinessPerformanceArchitect #JoshFonger #Makemoreworkless #certificationprogramforbusinessconsultants #JoshFongerandSamCarpenter #Joshspeaking #documentyourworkproceduresnow #JoshFongerSmallBusinessSpeaker #systemizeyourbizin2020 #smallbusiness #AI #neilsahota #artificialinteligence #business #datadriven
Linklaters – Payments Monthly – Our view on payments law and regulation
Episode 4: Linkubator With all of the buzz around AI and machine learning, people can often lose sight of what it is. In this episode, Hamza catches up with Neil Sahota and Christian Storck to discuss what AI is, what its different applications are and can be in the legal industry, and the potential challenges around this. They also debate crucial questions such as to what extent AI will replace or augment the core functions of lawyers, and how aspiring and young lawyers can adapt to this new environment. Neil Sahota is an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations AI Expert, Professor at UC Irvine and Author of ‘Own the AI Revolution: Unlock Your Artificial Intelligence Strategy to Disrupt Your Competition’. Christian Storck is a Partner and Global Co-Head of Innovation at Linklaters
Episode 4: Linkubator With all of the buzz around AI and machine learning, people can often lose sight of what it is. In this episode, Hamza catches up with Neil Sahota and Christian Storck to discuss what AI is, what its different applications are and can be in the legal industry, and the potential challenges around this. They also debate crucial questions such as to what extent AI will replace or augment the core functions of lawyers, and how aspiring and young lawyers can adapt to this new environment. Neil Sahota is an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations AI Expert, Professor at UC Irvine and Author of ‘Own the AI Revolution: Unlock Your Artificial Intelligence Strategy to Disrupt Your Competition'. Christian Storck is a Partner and Global Co-Head of Innovation at Linklaters
In this episode of the IIoT Spotlight Podcast, we discuss the current state of AI in practice, the integration of AI and IoT, and the importance of new data sources designed for machine use. On a more human angle, we highlight the importance of measuring social impact while deploying disruptive technology. Neil Sahota is an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations Artificial Intelligence subject matter expert, and on the Faculty at UC Irvine. With over twenty years’ experience, Neil works with clients and business partners to create next generation products/solutions powered by emerging technologies. He is also the author of Own the A.I. Revolution, a practical guide to leveraging A.I. for social good and business growth. IoT ONE is an insight and advisory firm focused on helping companies manage the threats and opportunities presented by the Internet of Things. https://www.iotone.com
Neil Sahota is an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations A.I. subject matter expert, professor at UC Irvine, and globally recognized speaker and author. Neil is a founding member of the UN’s Artificial Intelligence for Social Good Committee. Neil is also the author of Own the A.I. Revolution, providing a future-forward look at A.I., focusing on […] The post Own the Artificial Intelligence Future appeared first on Jake A Carlson.
Topic Discussed : Our World in 2025-2030: Top 12 Transformational Shifts to 2030Speakers: Richard Sear, Partner & Senior Vice President, Archana Vidyasekar, Director, Frost & Sullivan,and Guest Speaker, Neil SahotaCompanies often overestimate the change that will occur in the next two years and underestimate the change that will happen in the next 10 years. Consolidation is inevitable across most industries that leverage digital technologies in multiple market segments. If companies are to thrive amid rapid transformation, they must reorient the relationships between society, government, and the way we do business. The ability to understand these global Mega Trends and key transformative themes and their impact on human lives over the next decade allows companies to better prepare for a future of growth.In this webinar session, Frost & Sullivan Futurists and IBM Master Inventor and United Nations Artificial Intelligence subject-matter expert Neil Sahota will discuss the 12 transformational themes emerging from our universe of Mega Trends along with real-world scenarios.The webinar is critical for the audience to understand:• How to effectively approach these points of disruption and outline a mechanism to act.• The core trends that will drive opportunities over the next decade.• The tools that translate trends into optimal growth potential.• How companies can embrace trends as innovation fuel to drive new ideation and support existing initiatives.For further insights, please join us for future podcasts and become a member of Frost & Sullivan’s Leadership Council by emailing us at: digital@frost.com or click here to Contact Us.Related Keywords: Frost & Sullivan, Connectivity, Convergence, 5G, Smart Cities, Deep Learning, Social Media, Biometrics, Augmented Reality, Blockchain Website: www.frost.com See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Lin Sun is an IBM Master Inventor with over 100 patents and a maintainer on the open-source project Istio.
In honor of Labor Day, I invited Neil Sahota on the show to talk about the AI revolution and how it will affect the working landscape. Technology is developing at such a rapid pace and it is really important to pay attention to how it will change work as we know it. Neil Sahota is an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations (UN) Artificial Intelligence (AI) subject matter expert, and Faculty at UC Irvine. He is also the author of the book: Own the A.I. Revolution . With 20+ years of business experience, he works with clients and business partners to create the next generation of products and solutions powered by emerging technologies. If you're a regular listener of the show, then you've heard from many of our past guests that are now doing things that didn't exist as careers 5-10 years ago. These new industries, such as social media manager and online educator, are but a few examples of the changing landscape of work. While most people (or the media) tend to focus on the negatives that can come about from these changes, I think Neil's book does an incredible job of showing all of the amazing things that can happen as a result of these technologies. His book does a wonderful job of addressing important issues like the speed of change that we're experiencing, how to utilize emerging technologies to disrupt our own industries, understanding the kind of careers that are on the horizon, and how we can either rework our skills or come up in a new profession. There is a tremendous amount of opportunity and if you pay attention to what's coming next you have a chance to build the career or business that you want. Neil is just the person to help us figure out what we should be doing with all of these emerging technologies and how we can better prepare ourselves for the working landscape in the future. Here is what we chat about in this episode: Why it's important to start learning about AI now. Why you're in the right position to disrupt the system with your current skills. Why you should learn to embrace change and learn how to better position yourself for it. And so much more! Where to find Neil: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/neil-sahota-%E8%90%A8%E5%86%A0%E5%86%9B-028143/ Website: https://neilsahota.com Twitter: https://twitter.com/neil_sahota Follow along for more: www.lessonsfromaquitter.com https://www.facebook.com/lessonsfromaquitter https://www.instagram.com/lessonsfromaquitter/ https://twitter.com/quitterpodcast
Future Squared with Steve Glaveski - Helping You Navigate a Brave New World
Neil Sahota is an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations A.I. subject matter expert, professor at UC Irvine, and globally-recognized speaker and author. Neil is a founding member of the UN’s Artificial Intelligence for Social Good Committee, and he’s here to talk about the ways we can harness the power of AI and use it for social good. Neil is also the author of Own the A.I. Revolution, providing a future-forward look at A.I., focusing on how businesses can use it to commercialize while doing good in the world. This was a wide-reaching and fascinating conversation in which we went down numerous rabbit holes, such as what true AI looks like, how AI can adopt our biases and prejudices, the impact on the future of work, AI developing consciousness, whether fears about AI’s capacity to destroy us are legitimate, augmented humanity and our cyborg future, developing countries leapfrogging the west, why philosophy and the arts matter when it comes to designing technology for humans, how organizations can start to take advantage of AI today, and so much more. With that, strap yourself in for my conversation with the one and only, Neil Sahota. Topics Discussed: What is AI? How do we define it? How far away is General AI, really? IBM Watson isn’t actually AI How AI makes decisions Encoding AI with human biases Decision-making challenges: how do you control for luck? 47% of U.S. jobs risk being automated by 2050 -- how will this affect me? Will we create more jobs than we destroy? What will humans do? The critical importance of philosophy and the arts The paperclip problem and perverse instantiation Will AI develop consciousness? At what point do augmented humans stop being humans and start being cyborgs? What aspects of the value chain can companies augment with AI today? How should they go about that? Show Notes: W: www.neilsahota.com/futuresquared/ T: neil_sahota IG: neil_sahota Get the book:https://amzn.to/328pz6o --- Listen to Future Squared on Apple Podcasts goo.gl/sMnEa0 Also available on: Spotify, Google Podcasts, TuneIn, Stitcher and Soundcloud Twitter: www.twitter.com/steveglaveski Instagram: www.instagram.com/@thesteveglaveski Future Squared: www.futuresquared.xyz Steve Glaveski: www.steveglaveski.com Medium: www.medium.com/@steveglaveski Steve's book: www.employeetoentrepreneur.io NEW Facebook group: www.facebook.com/groups/futuresquared/
I spoke with Neil Sahota, an IBM Master Inventor, an advisor to the United Nations, and the co-author of Own the A.I. Revolution: Unlock Your Artificial Intelligence Strategy to Disrupt Your Competition (McGraw-Hill Education, May 22, 2019). We discussed his inspiration for writing the book, how legal professionals can unlock their artificial intelligence strategy, ways to filter out the noise, and tips for maximizing its benefits.
I spoke with Neil Sahota, an IBM Master Inventor, an advisor to the United Nations, and the co-author of Own the A.I. Revolution: Unlock Your Artificial Intelligence Strategy to Disrupt Your Competition (McGraw-Hill Education, May 22, 2019). We discussed his inspiration for writing the book, how legal professionals can unlock their artificial intelligence strategy, ways to filter out the noise, and tips for maximizing its benefits.
I spoke with Neil Sahota, an IBM Master Inventor, an advisor to the United Nations, and the co-author of Own the A.I. Revolution: Unlock Your Artificial Intelligence Strategy to Disrupt Your Competition (McGraw-Hill Education, May 22, 2019). We discussed his inspiration for writing the book, how legal professionals can unlock their artificial intelligence strategy, ways to filter out the noise, and tips for maximizing its benefits.
I spoke with Neil Sahota, an IBM Master Inventor, an advisor to the United Nations, and the co-author of Own the A.I. Revolution: Unlock Your Artificial Intelligence Strategy to Disrupt Your Competition (McGraw-Hill Education, May 22, 2019). We discussed his inspiration for writing the book, how legal professionals can unlock their artificial intelligence strategy, ways to filter out the noise, and tips for maximizing its benefits.
Neil Sahota is an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations (UN) Artificial Intelligence (AI) subject matter expert, and faculty member at UC Irvine. With 20+ years of business experience, he works with clients and business partners to create next generation products/solutions powered by emerging technology. He is also the author of the new book, Own the A.I. Revolution: Unlock Your Artificial Intelligence Strategy to Disrupt Your Competition. Beyond data science, Neil actively volunteers with nonprofits for event management, fund raising, grant reviews, and site visits. Neil is an active member of the UCI Alumni Association and serves on the Board of Directors for the Orange County Marathon, supporting their work with the OC Kids program in fighting childhood obesity.
Artificial intelligence (AI) has been making headlines for several years now, but what's the story behind the hype? And what opportunities and risks does AI present for the security industry in particular? In this episode we're demystifying AI in cybersecurity with the help of three IBM experts: Carma Austin, Worldwide Sales Leader, Security Intelligence SaaS; Doug Lhotka, Executive CyberSecurity Architect, CISSP-ISSAP; and Jeff Crume, IT Security Architect, Distinguished Engineer and IBM Master Inventor. Listen now, and visit http://ibm.co/2kGtZyx to learn more about QRadar Advisor with Watson.
In episode 7, we interview Neil Sahota, who is an IBM Master Inventor, a United Nations (UN) Artificial Intelligence (AI) subject matter expert, and Professor at UC Irvine. With the UN, he’s a founding member of their Artificial Intelligence (AI) for Social Good Committee. He is currently writing a book, titled “Uber Yourself Before You Get Kodaked: A Modern Primer on A.I. for the Modern Business.” We talked about AI for Social Good, commercializing while doing good, how to overcome challenges with data gathering, and how blockchain technology might help. Lastly, we briefly discussed skill-sets that are going to be important in the next few years.
In part 2 we talk about net neutrality, blockchain, & a lot more. Michael Morton is the Chief Technology Officer of Dell Boomi, where he drives product direction and innovation. He has been leading and producing a wide range of enterprise IT solutions for over 25 years. Prior to joining Dell Boomi in 2013, Michael had an impressive career with IBM, where he became an IBM Master Inventor and worked directly with a number of Fortune 100 Companies. He was a founding developer and Chief Architect of IBM WebSphere Application Server, providing architecture leadership on the IBM InfoSphere data integration and IBM Tivoli systems management family of products. Michael’s experiences have allowed him to develop a deep understanding of the complexities and challenges that enterprise customers face when modernizing while attempting to remain competitive in their industry. Michael earned a B.S. in Computer Science degree from the State University of New York at Buffalo, and an M.S. in Computer Science degree from the State University of New York at Binghamton. www.boomi.com www.twitter.com/boomi www.facebook.com/DellBoomi
Michael Morton is the Chief Technology Officer of Dell Boomi, where he drives product direction and innovation. He has been leading and producing a wide range of enterprise IT solutions for over 25 years. Prior to joining Dell Boomi in 2013, Michael had an impressive career with IBM, where he became an IBM Master Inventor and worked directly with a number of Fortune 100 Companies. He was a founding developer and Chief Architect of IBM WebSphere Application Server, providing architecture leadership on the IBM InfoSphere data integration and IBM Tivoli systems management family of products. Michael’s experiences have allowed him to develop a deep understanding of the complexities and challenges that enterprise customers face when modernizing while attempting to remain competitive in their industry. Michael earned a B.S. in Computer Science degree from the State University of New York at Buffalo, and an M.S. in Computer Science degree from the State University of New York at Binghamton. https://boomi.com https://twitter.com/boomi https://www.facebook.com/DellBoomi
Rhonda Childress has earned more than her share of "firsts" over her 25 year IBM career: She was the first woman in IBM Security to become an IBM Fellow as well as the first woman in IBM Services to be named an IBM Master Inventor. Rhonda is a force to be reckoned with, and these day she's using her influence to help inspire the next generation of women in the security industry. Today, she joins the podcast to share her story and remind us all of a simple but inconvenient fact: growth and comfort cannot coexist. To read about more remarkable security professionals like Rhonda, view the entire Voices of Security series at https://ibm.co/2MvwGlu.
"Do you know who Tony Stark is? Do you know who Iron Man is? Would you be interested in having a Tony Stark-like experience with your computer?" These are the questions that led IBM Master Inventor Mike Spisak – and his 11 year old son Evan – to begin the development of Havyn, a voice-enabled digital assistant for cybersecurity analysts that uses Watson technology. But Mike’s many professional achievements are not the subject of this podcast. Instead, he and Heather Ricciuto, academic outreach leader at IBM Security, have a spirited conversation about their joint passion for cybersecurity education and share ideas for “hacking” the skills and diversity gaps that exist within the cybersecurity field. To meet more IBM Security team members who are working alongside Mike and Heather to make the world more cyber secure, follow our ongoing “Voices of Security” series on SecurityIntelligence.com: https://ibm.co/2MvwGlu.
The idea behind this show is pretty simple: A university campus is a destination for all kinds of interesting people, so why not invite some of these folks out to brunch, where we’ll have an informal conversation about their work, and then we’ll turn those brunches into a podcast?It’s a tough job, but somebody has to do it.An IBM Master Inventor, Hendrik Hamann holds approximately 100 patents and is currently helping to lead IBM’s worldwide activities in Internet of Things research. He and host Ted Fox start with a primer on what terms like "Internet of Things" actually mean and then discuss the technology rapidly transforming our day-to-day lives as well as the processes by which it is created and managed.
Dez gets up close & personal with Mickey Iqbal, IBM Fellow, IBM Master Inventor & Global Lead for GTS Enterprise IT Transformation Advisors, with insights what it takes to be an IBM Master Inventor, his patents, how he has lead cloud transformation for some of the world's most impactful enterprise organizations, his personal life journey, mentorship, and amazing recovery from a life threatening accident. Click here => http://bit.ly/ExpertAdvise to schedule a call with an IBM Expert
Charles "Tee" Rowe, President & CEO of America's SBDC which represents the nation's most trusted small business resource - SBDCs. America's SBDCs are the nation's proven, cost-effective, and accredited network focused on small business. SBDCs touch over 1 million businesses every year Shaun Buck has been a serial entrepreneur for over 15 years, and currently owns and operates The Newsletter Pro, based out of Boise, Idaho. In 2015, Shaun and The Newsletter Pro landed at No. 120 on the Inc. 500 Fastest Growing Companies list with a shocking growth rate of 2,975%. Shaun is a regular contributor to Entrepreneur.com and has two books to his name, one of which was written in collaboration with widely known marketing guru, Dan Kennedy William Hurley founder and CEO of Honest Dollar; a fintech startup bringing honesty, transparency, and simplicity to the financial services industry. Whurley's career has spanned over 20 years working for some of the most innovative companies on the planet including Apple Computer, and IBM. He has received numerous awards and recognitions including an Apple Design Award, being named an IBM Master Inventor, and being awarded the 2012 International Genius Grant from the City of Amsterdam For more information go to MoneyForLunch.com. Connect with Bert Martinez on Facebook. Connect with Bert Martinez on Twitter. Need help with your business? Contact Bert Martinez. Have Bert Martinez speak at your event!
Dr. Ruthie Lyle is currently the Technical Project Manager for the IBMSmartCloud, SaaS Web Delivery Platform. She joined IBM in 1999 shortly after becoming the first African American woman to earn a doctorate in Electrical Engineering from Polytechnic Institute of New York University (Poly-NYU). Dr. Lyle's career experience with IBM spans assignments in Intellectual Property Strategy and Monetization as well as Software Development and Hardware Development. She is a registered Patent Agent, and the Team Lead Emeritus of IBM's Smarter Planet Invention Review Team. Dr. Lyle is an IBM Master Inventor with 60 issued US patents and over 170+ pending patent applications making her the leading African American female inventor in the US.
Bharat Bedi, IBM Master Inventor, shows Brian Runciman MBCS the Universal Information Framework, an innovative idea that allows secure interactions that could benefit, for example, banking interactions.
Bharat Bedi, IBM Master Inventor, talks about the 'Living Safe' project run Balzano, Italy, to help older residents to live by themselves.
Show AH0010 marks the first of our audio podcasts (shows 1-9 are all video content). In this hour long episode we interview "IBM Master Inventor", Dr Prof Andy Stanford-Clark. We talk to him about his work in industrial telemetry integration that's lead him into the world of home automation. We chat about his hi-tech home, his internet connected mouse trap and monitoring his domestic power consumtion via Twitter.