AI, smart homes, and the new battle for the living room

Posted by Mike Walsh

Oct 30, 2017 6:25:48 PM

Alex Capecelatro.jpg

 

The war for the living room used to be simple: influence whoever was in charge of the family TV remote. With the rise of the Internet of Things, smart speakers, and AI-enabled home automation systems - the home itself has become the next computing platform. To get a handle on what the future of smart homes might look like, I caught up with Alex Capecelatro in LA. Alex started his career as a research scientist for NASA, the Naval Research Lab, and Sandia National Lab. He later joined Fisker Automotive, ran his own startup, At The Pool, before creating Josh.ai, an AI agent for the home.

 

CATEGORY: Technology, Events & Meetings

Data, decision-making and the algorithmic healthcare revolution

Posted by Mike Walsh

Oct 16, 2017 8:25:34 AM

Rohan & Sahay.jpg

 

Healthcare is on the brink of a profound transformation, enabled by data, analytics and algorithms. As the health ecosystem moves from providing ‘sick care’, to an integrated, human-centric approach to helping people manage wellness - providers, payers and pharmaceutical manufactures will need to change. I spoke with healthcare analytics experts, D. Sahay and Rohan Fernando, from the global advisory group, ZS Associates, about how leaders can learn to make decisions based on data and algorithms rather than experience and excel spreadsheets.

CATEGORY: Technology, Healthcare

Complexity, agility and the future of the supply chain

Posted by Mike Walsh

Oct 1, 2017 6:36:52 PM

Rob Van Egmond.jpg

 

I’ve spent a lot of time lately thinking about logistics. Supply chains might not strike you as a particularly interesting topic, but if you think about it, one of the first industries to be disrupted by our obsession with ordering everything and anything online, is the complex business of moving things around. To get a better handle on just what that kind of complexity entails, I met up with Rob van Egmond in Amsterdam, who runs a company called Quintiq, which is part of Dassault Systèmes. In Rob’s view, complexity is the natural state of 21st century companies. Trying to control it is futile. The key to mastery is reacting to it with agility.

 

CATEGORY: Technology, Transport & Logistics

Deep-learning, empathy and what it takes to build an AI-first company

Posted by Mike Walsh

Sep 17, 2017 6:52:09 PM

JS Cournoyer.jpg

 

Montreal, it turns out, is ground zero for some of the best and brightest in the emergent AI community. Look closely at the newly hired AI ranks at Google, Uber or Facebook and you will lots of expat Canadians. Now, a new company called Element AI, is working to help other companies apply the very same cutting edge deep-learning research to commercial problems from manufacturing to logistics. One of the co-founders of Element AI is JS Cornoyer, who also started Montreal Startup and Real Ventures. Catching up at his co-working digs in downtown Montreal, we spoke about the future of deep-learning, and the kinds of empathetic skills that will be prized in humans in a post-automation future.

 

 

CATEGORY: Technology, Venture Capital

Analytical decision making, citizen development and the no-code revolution

Posted by Mike Walsh

Sep 3, 2017 2:41:58 PM

Rick Willett.jpg

 

Starting work in the nineties, I quickly discovered that professional mastery had a lot to do with your ability to manipulate complex Excel spreadsheets. Analysts crunched numbers, programmers cracked code. These days, 21st century companies are trying to do the exact opposite - putting the power to create software and automate activities, in the hands of people closest to the work. Rick Willett, CEO of Quickbase, is one of the people leading this no-code revolution. Formerly at GE, and now focused on reinventing enterprise collaboration, we spoke about the future of work and the power of algorithmic decision making.

CATEGORY: Culture, Technology