Afleveringen

  • In this episode, we meet Alok Aggarwal, Founder, CEO, and Chief Data Scientist of Scry AI, a software company with technologists and domain experts that develops enterprise applications using proprietary AI algorithms for different domains. In this interview, we discuss his recently published book “The Fourth Industrial Revolution & 100 Years of AI (1950-2050): The Truth About AI and Why It’s Only a Tool.” Alok has been working as an innovator and developer in the field of AI for four decades, and we discuss some of the major topics in his career and book, including similarities and differences across the four scientific revolutions, the capabilities, limitations, and history of AI, and where we are going next. He proposes that AI is a mirror in which humans can see their reflections and that as we create more advanced AI, we will need to understand ourselves better. I hope this conversation can help to clarify some misconceptions about AI and inspire the listeners to reflect on what AI can teach us about humanity!

    Thank you to our sponsor Nomono for the amazing podcast kit: https://nomono.co/

    Recommended sources:

    1. Aggarwal, Alok (2023). The Fourth Industrial Revolution & 100 Years of AI (1950-2050): The Truth About AI & Why It's Only a Tool: https://www.amazon.com/Fourth-Industrial-Revolution-Years-1950-2050/dp/B0CPQLQ7LL

    2. Scry AI website: https://scryai.com/about-us/

    3. Turing, Alan (1950). Computing Machinery and Intelligence, Mind, Vol LIX (236), 433–460. https://academic.oup.com/mind/article/LIX/236/433/986238?url=http://szyxflb.com&login=false

    Timestamps: 01:43:32

    [00:00:00] Intro of the episode.

    [00:01:22] Sponsor: Nomono Podcasting Kit.

    [00:02:16] Alok’s background in the fields of AI, Engineering and Computer Science, from

    The IBM research division and Thomas J. Watson Research Center, to setting up an IBM India research lab, and his entrepreneurial journey with EvaluServe and Scry AI.

    [00:07:00] Writing his recent book and the help from a book coach.

    [00:09:10] The four industrial revolutions, and the inspiration from 2001 A Space Odyssey, the future decrease in the human population, and Alan Turing’s 1950 paper.

    [00:17:37] Comparing technological changes with societal changes in perspectives of learning.

    [00:20:48] Understanding human and artificial learning.

    [00:23:00] Using AI as a tool for good rather than weaponizing it, and the implications of chat bots.

    [00:29:30] The eight characteristics of an industrial revolution.

    [00:47:39] The huge challenge with a globalized geopolitical discussion of regulations and data ownership.

    [00:58:44] AI as a mirror for humanity and pitfalls related to gene editing and inequality of access.

    [01:04:15] Opportunities for smaller players to make societal changes faster in education and beyond.

    [01:08:01] Dealing with known and unknown biases.

    [01:14:38] Diffiusion models

    [01:21:37] AI and creativity and understanding the limitations of AI.

    [01:28:40] Lost jobs and new jobs, and the future of flying cars.

    [01:34:15] The reasons for his work and the meaning of life.

    [01:42:36] Outro and concluding remarks.

  • In this episode, we meet Raphaelle Moatti, founder of Delicious Future, a public benefit corporation with a mission to accelerate the shift to regenerative eating. We discuss her work and how she combines human perspectives, systemic thinking, and rigorous research with technology to impact individual health and environmental sustainability. An added subtext narrative is about her journey of diverse skill acquisition and how courage and creativity can open new quests aligned with one’s identity and deeper values. This conversation made me completely rethink my relationship with food and consider the deeper meaning of eating, as well as how to synthesize the treads in my own aspiring entrepreneurship. I hope you will enjoy this conversation as much as I did!

    Thank you to our sponsor Nomono for the amazing podcast kit: https://nomono.co/

    Recommended sources:

    1. Article about the Delicious Future: https://www.alphyco.com/post/how-to-craft-a-winning-message-the-delicious-future-approach

    2. Internet Archive – Way Back Machine: https://web.archive.org

    3. The book Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge and the Teachings of Plants: https://www.amazon.com/Braiding-Sweetgrass-Indigenous-Scientific-Knowledge/dp/1571313567

    Timestamps: 01:05:19

    [00:00:00] Intro of the episode.

    [00:01:16] Sponsor: Nomono Podcasting Kit.

    [00:02:07] Delicious Future.

    [00:05:14] How her journey started with studies in political science and research.

    [00:10:50] Moving to San Francisco and entering the advertisement and tech industry.

    [00:18:17] The naïve optimism and idealism in tech and human centered design principles.

    [00:23:42] Working with health technology and personalized coaching.

    [00:28:46] Obsession with good food.

    [00:33:04] The interconnectedness between personal and professional transformation and tapping into multidisciplinary creativity.

    [00:37:41] The transformative potential of food.

    [00:43:01] Identifying a unique potential for contribution.

    [00:52:40] The mission of Delicious Future and its three pillars.

    [01:00:59] The meaning of life.

    [01:03:52] Outro and concluding remarks.

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  • In this episode, we meet Candace Locklear, co-founder of Mighty PR, a boutique PR agency, and We Are From Dust, a non-profit dedicated to putting participatory art in public spaces. She has worked with various cutting-edge companies in tech and beyond and has been deeply involved in the Burning Man community since the late 90’s. Candace embraces creativity and cogency like no other.

    In this conversation, we dive into her early embracement of her inner provocateur and clown persona, her work in tech PR and communication, Burning Man, her love for art and inclusive community building, the importance of relationships, and how the two worlds of tech and art fuel each other.

    I hope you will enjoy this interview as much as I did!

    Thank you to our sponsor Nomono for the amazing podcast kit: https://nomono.co/

    Recommended sources:

    1. Mighty PR website: https://mightypr.com

    2. Black Burner Project: https://www.blackburnerproject.com

    Timestamps: 01:01:55

    [00:00:00] Intro of the episode.

    [00:01:30] Sponsor: Nomono Podcasting Kit.

    [00:02:32] How her journey started: From North Carolina to San Francisco.

    [00:07:46] Burning Man and the Cacophony Society

    [00:09:54] The Tech PR journey.

    [00:11:23] Seeing art becoming derivative with AI.

    [00:15:40] Finding intersections between Tech and artistry.

    [00:19:56] Women in Tech and Communication.

    [00:22:22] Working with clients in Mighty PR, earned, owned, and paid media.

    [00:28:26] Talent scouting and recruitment.

    [00:31:05] Supporting others and being supported.

    [00:35:57] Black Burner Project.

    [00:38:58] Motherhood, processing of loss, and embracing new freedoms.

    [00:49:21] The need for art and artists.

    [01:00:13] Outro and concluding remarks.

  • In this episode, we meet Stephen Messer, an active serial entrepreneur, founder of Collective[i], and co-founder of LinkShare. Stephen has been an investor in the digital economy since the commercialization of the Internet. He is also an angel investor, a winner of several prestigious entrepreneurial awards, an affiliated research fellow at Columbia Business School, and a prominent speaker and keynote on technology and Artificial Intelligence. He has been featured in the NYTimes, WSJ, Fortune, Forbes, and other top publications.

    Stephen has an exceptional talent for identifying and activating new and disruptive business avenues with technology and AI. In this conversation, we dive into his mission to help people and companies prosper by building a foundation model for financial decision-making. We also discuss his thoughts on unleashing our full potential through AI, disruptive innovation, the road to Artificial General Intelligence, seed investments, and his close collaboration with his sister and family. Underlying it all is a profound vision for expanding human and societal potentials.

    I hope this interview can catch a glimpse of how a brilliant mind grasps opportunities from the deconstruction and reconstruction of complexities.

     

    Thank you to our sponsor Nomono for the amazing podcast kit: https://nomono.co/

     

    Recommended sources:

    1.     Collective[i] website: www.collectivei.com

    2.     Forecast, a 90-minute weekly online event that highlights innovation and leadership that will impact society:  www.ciforecast.com.

    Timestamps: 01:16:51

    [00:00:00] Intro.

    [00:01:44] Sponsor: Nomono Podcasting Kit.

    [00:02:51] How his journey started.

    [00:05:25] Building LinkShare and disrupting the advertisement industry.

    [00:19:09] Selling LinkShare and the process of company acquisitions.

    [00:26:25] Building Collective Intelligence and disrupting economic decision-making with foundational AI models.

    [00:34:52] AI as a cognitive revolution disrupting workflows and workflow software.

    [00:41:52] The road to Artificial General Intelligence and Super Intelligence.

    [00:44:00] Fear-driven AI debates, unintended and intended aims, and effects of regulation.

    [00:51:55] Fear of unlocking our full potential and the opportunity to unleash it with AI.

    [00:57:05] A responsibility to lift people by embracing AI in companies and education.

    [01:03:49] Being a seed investor and opportunities to learn about new areas and use cases.

    [01:07:39] Space, quantum, AI, and quantum technology.

    [01:09:48] Collaborating with his sister and family.

    [01:14:55] Outro and commentary.

  • I denne episoden møter vi Kjetil Kjernsmo, en teknolog med Ph.d. i informatikk, som har arbeidet med teknologiutvikling og informasjonsutvikling i mange år. Samtalen har fokus på tech og normer og hvordan normer i samfunnet kan dannes og inkorporeres i teknologisk utvikling og samfunnsstrukturer. Vi snakker også om kompleksiteten i det moderne samfunnet, alle de forhold som regulering av kunstig teknologi må navigere i et slik landskap, og hvordan dyp kunnskap innebærer et ansvar for aktiv deltakelse.

    In this episode, we meet Kjetil Kjernsmo, a technologist with a Ph.D. in informatics who has worked with technology and information development for many years. The conversation focuses on tech and norms and how norms in society can be formed and incorporated into tech development and societal structures. We also talk about the complexity of modern society, all the conditions that regulation of tech must navigate in such a landscape, and how deep knowledge entails a responsibility to participate.

     

    Takk til vår sponsor: Nomono: https://nomono.co/

     

    Anbefalte kilder:

    1.     Kjetil Kjernsmo sine nettsider: http://kjetil.kjernsmo.net/ og https://normative-technology.org/

    2.     Elinor Ostrom (2009). Beyond markets and states: polycentric governance of complex economic systems: https://dlc.dlib.indiana.edu/dlc/bitstream/handle/10535/7707/ostrom.pdf

    3.     Petter Törnberg (2023). How platforms govern: Social regulation in digital capitalism: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/20539517231153808

    Timestamps: 01:44:34

    [00:00:00] Intro.

    [00:01:13] Sponsor: Nomono Podcasting Kit.

    [00:02:18] Kjetils bakgrunn.

    [00:05:06] Samfunnets totale kompleksitet.

    [00:09:46] Teknologi, normer og definisjonsmakt i samfunnet.

    [00:13:20] Sentralisering, desentralisering og resentralisering.

    [00:14:52] Individets rettigheter, big tech og staten.

    [00:20:00] Åpenhet av data på et kontinuum, data hvelv og data promiskuitet.

    [00:31:10] Senter for normativ teknologiutvikling.

    [00:36:44] Tverrfaglig samarbeid.

    [00:42:13] Det normative bidraget og motivasjonen for teknologiutvikling.

    [00:46:10] Rekruttering av talenter med høy grad av etisk bevissthet.

    [00:50:08] Digital commons og normativ teknologistyring.

    [00:55:20] KI-milliarden til forskning og behovet for støtte til infrastruktur.

    [00:59:25] AI, etikk og trolley problemet.

    [01:04:25] Handlingsplan og bygging av et nytt sosiale medier.

    [01:13:12] Kunnskap og ansvar for aktiv deltakelse.

    [01:24:00] Politisk markedsføring og frihet til å velge og dele.

    [01:29:33] Normer og teknologilandskapet.

    [01:36:30] Motivasjon og inspirasjon.

    [01:43:08] Outro og kommentar.

     

  • In this episode, we meet Arjun Chandra, a computer scientist, entrepreneur, CEO, and founder of the AI-tech company Brua.io, who has extensive experience building machine learning and artificial intelligence systems. 

     

    Arjun has a human-centered vision for AI, in which the technologies we make can contribute to closing the gaps between us rather than competing with us. In this episode we discuss the depth of his journey of combining his interest in math, programming, robotics, and natural computation; his interest in the employment of algorithms for the optimization of natural phenomena in the real world and generalization in general; the creation of neural network systems and the use of principles of social and human behavior; educational and personalized technology; his work on the frontier of AI with Large language models and reinforcement Learning from human feedback; the questioning about his motivations in the field of AI, and the deployment of technology built on mindsets and adoption strategies that reflect social responsibility, which lays the ground for his new company, Brua.

     

    I hope Arjun’s intentions can inspire other developers and stakeholders in the AI field to think more explicitly about how we can, in his words, “sculpt more socially responsible roles for AI” and develop technologies deeply aligned with human-centered and democratic, prosperous visions for the future.

     

    Thank you to our sponsor: Nomono: https://nomono.co/

    Also check out the Brua website: https://www.brua.io

     

    Timestamps: 01:15:02

    [00:00:00] Intro.

    [00:01:45] Sponsor: Nomono Podcasting Kit.

    [00:02:39] Introduction to math, programming, robotics, and natural computation.

    [00:05:26] Natural Computation and neural networks.

    [00:13:45] Generalization part of ML and the study of socio-economic games.

    [00:25:03] Working with educational and personalized AI assistant technology.

    [00:27:20] Working at the frontier of AI with LLMs and RLHF.

    [00:31:50] The relationship between hardware and software development.

    [00:36:15] Reexamination of inner motivation to develop and deploy AI technology built on mindsets and adoption strategies that reflect social responsibility.  

    [00:40:05] Establishing a story of what AI is for.

    [00:46:40] What is Brua?

    [00:49:41] The special long-term case of education.

    [00:55:13] The core ethos of bringing people together for human thriving.

    [01:06:27] Alignment of partnerships and funding with the mission.  

    [01:14:12] Outro and concluding remarks.

     

  • In this episode, we meet Jonathan Kolber, an author and investor, with a fascinating idea for raising the experimental and disruptive approach of Silicon Valley to the level of society itself, albeit tempered by consensual values. Jonathan shares his vision of science-driven model society, based on ever-evolving systems, which he and his allies call A Celebration Society.

    We discuss the depth of the challenges and opportunities humanity faces, including sustainability, automation, and job displacement, rising fascism, the need for first principles thinking, a pay-it-forward approach to progress, and his detailed proposal of a comprehensive solution that celebrates human greatness to inspire more greatness, encouraging and building upon humanity’s finest qualities.

    I hope Jonathan's intellectual courage and curiosity can inspire us to think about the abundance we can achieve with emergent technologies and to think boldly about creating societies that celebrate our full potential.

    Thank you to our sponsor Nomono: https://nomono.co/

    Timestamps: 01:54:08

    [00:00:00] Intro of the episode.

    [00:02:57] Sponsor: Nomono Podcasting Kit.

    [00:03:50] Growing up with a vision.

    [00:05:48] Interest in nature, science, and finance.

    [00:09:50] The purpose of A Celebration Society.

    [00:11:18] Accelerating automation, its consequences, and the role of AI.

    [00:19:11] The future of job losses and the replacement of functions by AI.

    [00:22:10] A model society based on systems of sustainable technological abundance

    [00:24:41] Protecting our planet with technological abundance and true recycling

    [00:27:09] The essence of A Celebration Society and the scientific method.

    [00:28:28] Three pillars: Abundant clean energy, abundant matter, and organizing intelligence.

    [00:32:32] The potential of recent advancements in scalable sources of clean power.

    [00:34:29] Universal Basic Income approaches, capitalism, and future human endeavors.

    [00:40:28] Asteroid mining.

    [00:41:57] Future education, cultivation of passions, gamification and iTutors.

    [00:49:54] Current illness focused healthcare models.

    [00:49:54] Healthcare in A Celebration Society: emphasis on prevention and early detection.

    [00:54:20] The four branches of government in A Celebration Society.

    [01:01:48] The admission process in A Celebration Society: The code of ethics, The Rite of Passage, The Charter, and financial means.

    [01:09:25] Meeting basic needs and curtailing the appeal of charismatic manipulators.

    [01:12:20] Adjustable systemic societal design, including nudges to reduce costs and incentivize desired behaviors.

    [01:19:15] Animal welfare and Kobe beef prime rib cuts from a vat for the price of a McDonald's hamburger.

    [01:21:00] Complimentary currencies and global economic stability.

    [01:23:05] The use of uninhabited land and reduction of taxes.

    [01:26:30] Celebration societies in space and the hard science fiction series, Shadowking.

    [01:29:23] The necessity of legal sovereignty.

    [01:34:56] Potential challenges to success and serious criticisms.

    [01:44:34] Definition of happiness.

    [01:47:37] Early experiences shaping a deeper understanding of scarcity.

    [01:49:08] The importance of collaboration and supporters.

    [01:52:34] Outro and concluding remarks.

    Recommended reading:

    Kolber, J. (2015). A Celebration Society. https://www.amazon.com/Celebration-Society-Jonathan-Kolber-ebook/dp/B018RQTUNQ

    A Celebration Society Website: acelebrationsociety.com

  • In this episode, we meet Eric Bowman, a technology leader with a rich background in software engineering and architecture. Eric is a seasoned technologist with a fascinating background spanning from his early days as a mountaineer in Montana to his groundbreaking work on The Sims game and now exploring the potential of generative AI. Join us as we dive into Eric’s journey, his insights on the importance of purpose and values, and how he utilizes AI to enhance his decision-making and productivity. In this conversation, we’ll also discuss the concept of the adjacent possible, the importance of listening and learning, and the potential of AI to revolutionize education and help us realize our full potential. Don’t miss this engaging conversation with this exceptional technology leader and creative thinker who thrives on challenging the status quo!

    Thank you to our sponsor: Nomono: https://nomono.co/

    Timestamps: 01:18:42

    [00:00:00] Intro of the episode

    [00:01:29] Sponsor: Nomono Podcasting Kit

    [00:02:30] Mountaineering, early academic and work experiences

    [00:11:04] Interview with Maxis, The Sims & Bay Area in the 90’s

    [00:15:04] Openness to opportunities & the adjacent possible

    [00:21:34] Intellectual relationships and the reinvention of education with AI

    [00:29:54] ChatGPT, free will and decision-making

    [00:39:21] Human potential, values, work ethics, credentials, listening and learning

    [00:47:47] Confirmation biases and strategies to deal with it using AI

    [00:57:15] Attention span and learning

    [00:58:39] Maximizing your return on luck, the power of actions for cause and effect

    [01:06:52] Purpose and maintaining a constancy of purpose over time

    [01:13:21] Changes in inspirations over time

    [01:17:02] Outro and summary

    Recommended reading:

    1. Kauffman, S, (1996). At Home in the Universe.https://www.amazon.com/At-Home-Universe-Self-Organization-Complexity/dp/0195111303

    2. Johnson, S. (2010). Where Good Ideas come from: The Natural History of Innovation.https://www.amazon.co.uk/Where-Good-Ideas-Come-Innovation/dp/1594487715/ref=tmm_hrd_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1694872158&sr=1-1

    3. Zuboff, S. (2019). The Age of Surveillance Capitalism.https://www.amazon.com/Age-Surveillance-Capitalism-Future-Frontier/dp/1610395697

    4. Collins, J. (2001). Good to great.https://www.amazon.com/Good-Great-Some-Companies-Others/dp/0066620996

    5. Hickel, J. (1997). Less is More. How Degrowth will Save the World. https://www.amazon.com/Less-More-Degrowth-Will-World-ebook/dp/B085L9XSM1

    6. Skinner, B.F. (1968). Walden Two.

    https://www.amazon.com/Walden-Two-B-F-Skinner/dp/B005NXKUZ4

  • In this two-parts episode, we meet Bobby Chang, entrepreneur, philanthropist, industrial designer, and co-founder of Incase. Bobby is a Bay era native, who’s had a frontal seat to the meteoric rise in the transformation of technology. In this conversation we decided to do things a bit differently. We go down a more chronological path to elaborate on some pivotal aha moments that Bobby has experienced on his journey, to see if there are some patterns that connects it all. I am incredibly humbled by Bobby’s generosity, and his willingness to share some personal moments of change and precious nuggets that can inspire others on their personal and career path. This is essentially a story about a personal quest for creating the best opportunities for learning, innovation, and growth for oneself and loved ones. I hope you will enjoy this conversation with a very special entrepreneurial mind and human being, as much as I did.

    Recommended links and sources:

    “The Century of the Self” documentary: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eJ3RzGoQC4s

  • In this two-parts episode, we meet Bobby Chang, entrepreneur, philanthropist, industrial designer, and co-founder of Incase. Bobby is a Bay era native, who’s had a frontal seat to the meteoric rise in the transformation of technology. In this conversation we decided to do things a bit differently. We go down a more chronological path to elaborate on some pivotal aha moments that Bobby has experienced on his journey, to see if there are some patterns that connects it all. I am incredibly humbled by Bobby’s generosity, and his willingness to share some personal moments of change and precious nuggets that can inspire others on their personal and career path. This is essentially a story about a personal quest for creating the best opportunities for learning, innovation, and growth for oneself and loved ones. I hope you will enjoy this conversation with a very special entrepreneurial mind and human being, as much as I did.

    Recommended links and sources:

    “The Century of the Self” documentary: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eJ3RzGoQC4s

  • In this episode, we meet Melissa Daimler, a culture and learning thought leader, author and speaker, and Chief Learning Officer at Udemy, a leading learning technology company. The conversation focuses on her background as a learning and organization development leader in the field of tech and learning, about her new book ReCulturing, company cultures, as well as some ideas about education for the future. We also discuss the importance of understanding how to continuously adapt and transform when leading a whole system on to new territories.

    Recommended reading and sources:

    1. Melissa Daimler’s website: https://www.melissadaimler.com

    2. The book ReCulturing: https://www.amazon.com/ReCulturing-Company-Culture-Connect-Strategy/dp/1264278608

    3. Harvard Business review article: https://hbr.org/2018/05/why-great-employees-leave-great-cultures

  • In this episode, we meet Michael Morgenstern, Film Director and Founder/CEO of @ This is Definitely Real, a company that makes Alternate Reality Cinema that blurs the lines between reality and fiction. The conversation focuses on what's coming next with disinformation enhanced by AI, how tribalism forms, and how experiential storytelling can be used to modify our existing meta-narratives. How will we operate in a world where reality has broken down? We also discuss the film he is currently making, "Dared My Best Friend", his journey navigating the intersection between art and tech, and the future of human narratives.

    Recommended reading and sources:

    1. Dared My Best Friend to Ruin My Life: https://daredmybestfriend.com

    2. This is Definitely Real: https://definitelyreal.com

    3. About Frances Haugen: https://www.npr.org/2023/06/21/1183579433/frances-haugens-memoir-looks-back-on-why-she-blew-the-whistle-on-facebook

    4. About Tristan Harris: https://www.wired.com/story/tristan-harris-tech-is-downgrading-humans-time-to-fight-back/

    5. From Ted Hope on Transmedia storytelling: http://trulyfreefilm.hopeforfilm.com/2014/07/why-the-form-of-cinema-will-change.html

    6. AI Objectives Institute's Talk to the City project: https://aiobjectives.org/blog/introducing-talk-to-the-city-our-collective-deliberation-tool

    7. About Rick Smith: https://www.thetenderedge.com/ | https://youtu.be/mcNfoN7zqRU

    8. Unabomber Manifesto: https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/national/longterm/unabomber/manifesto.text.htm

  • In this double episode (episode #5 for English speaking listeners recorded on June 15, 2023, and episode #6 for Norwegian listeners, recorded on March 20, 2023), we meet Jon von Tetzchner, CEO of Vivaldi.

    The conversations focus on the internet, its development, and impacts, as well as what we need to be informed about to benefit from all the opportunities without putting ourselves or our societies at risk.

    In the English episode, we briefly touch upon web3, blockchain and crypto.

    Recommended reading list/sources:

    1. History of the Web: Sir Tim Berners-Lee. World Wide Web Foundation: https://webfoundation.org/about/vision/history-of-the-web/

    2. Ever get the feeling you’re being watched? Vivaldi: https://vivaldi.com/blog/privacy/ever-get-the-feeling-youre-being-watched/

    3. Floc and topic. https://www.theverge.com/2022/1/25/22900567/google-floc-abandon-topics-api-cookies-tracking

    4. Web inventor Tim Berners-Lee wants us to ‘ignore’ Web3: ‘Web3 is not the web at all’. CNBC. https://www.cnbc.com/2022/11/04/web-inventor-tim-berners-lee-wants-us-to-ignore-web3.html

  • In this double episode release (episode #5 for English speaking listeners recorded on June 15, 2023 and episode #6 for Norwegian listeners, recorded on March 20, 2023), we meet Jon von Tetzchner, CEO of Vivaldi.

    The conversations focus on the internet, its development, and impacts, as well as what we need to be informed about to benefit from all the opportunities without putting ourselves or our societies at risk.

    In episode #5, we briefly touch upon web3, blockchain and crypto.

    Recommended reading list/sources:

    1. History of the Web: Sir Tim Berners-Lee. World Wide Web Foundation: https://webfoundation.org/about/vision/history-of-the-web/

    2. Ever get the feeling you’re being watched? Vivaldi: https://vivaldi.com/blog/privacy/ever-get-the-feeling-youre-being-watched/

    3. Floc and topic. https://www.theverge.com/2022/1/25/22900567/google-floc-abandon-topics-api-cookies-tracking

    4. Web inventor Tim Berners-Lee wants us to ‘ignore’ Web3: ‘Web3 is not the web at all’. CNBC. https://www.cnbc.com/2022/11/04/web-inventor-tim-berners-lee-wants-us-to-ignore-web3.html

  • I denne episoden møter vi futurist og CEO i Amesto NextBridge, Lars Rinnan. Samtalen fokuserer på hva vi kan forvente fra AI i nær og ikke så nær fremtid, implikasjonene av AI for samfunnet, selskaper og individer, og AI for the good.Anbefalt lesing:1. Rapport fra Goldman Sachs: https://www.key4biz.it/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/Global-Economics-Analyst_-The-Potentially-Large-Effects-of-Artificial-Intelligence-on-Economic-Growth-Briggs_Kodnani.pdf2. Tegmark, M. (2017). Life 3.0 – Being human in the age of Artificial Intelligence. New York, NY: Knopf.

  • In this episode, we meet Dr. Eric Daimler, CEO and co-founder of Conexus AI and an esteemed AI expert with an extraordinary in-depth and broad knowledge of AI and decades of experience in the field – as an entrepreneur, executive, investor, technologist, educator, and policy advisor.

    The focus of this conversation will be on his journey in tech and AI, his passion for Category Theory and its potential for scaling deterministic and symbolic AI, as well as some contemplations about the future of AI - in particular, the likely increase in the use of hybrid AI solutions for complex systems.

    I hope this episode will invite more people from education, policy and research to participate in the conversation about how to define our goals and needs within each of these sectors, as more complex AI systems are being developed.

    Recommended reading:1. Eric Daimler (2022). Aftershock: Pattern Channeling. https://ericdaimler.medium.com/aftershock-pattern-channeling-f6a57f78135f2. Melissa Daimler (2022). ReCulturing: Design Your Company Culture to Connect with Strategy and Purpose for Lasting Success. New York, NY: McGraw Hill.

  • I denne episoden møter vi Ina von Turow, en av Norges første kvante-nettverksbyggere som er tilknyttet tenketanken OneQuantum. Samtalen vil handle om hvordan gjøre kvantefysikk og kvantekomputasjoner mer tilgjengelig, og hvorfor det er viktig for folk flest å engasjere seg allerede nå. Ina mener det er et stort og voksende behov for folkeopplysning om dette temaet, og at temaet må gjøres mer tilgjengelig for folk flest, fordi denne teknologien kommer til å ha en enorm effekt på samfunnet som helhet.

  • In this first Episode of the Chameleons podcast, we meet Dr. Mark Jackson, Senior Quantum Evangelist at Quantinuum. The conversation will focus on how quantum computing is applied in technological solutions today, some historical anecdotes and technological potential of quantum in the future. Quantum computing combines physics, computer science, and engineering. It is a new interdisciplinary field, and the development of modern quantum computers has tremendous implications for complex problem solving, beyond classical computing. Understanding what quantum computing is, its potential and implications is crucial for stakeholders and people in general, due to the wide-ranging and rapid advancements we see in this field today. A brief recommended reading list:1. Jackson, M. (2017). 6 Things Quantum Computers Will Be Incredibly Useful For.https://singularityhub.com/2017/06/25/6-things-quantum-computers-will-be-incredibly-useful-for/2. Konkoly-Thege, K. & Jackson, M. (2022). The Legal Implications of Quantum Computing. Scitech Lawyer, 18(3), 4-10. https://www.americanbar.org/groups/science_technology/publications/scitech_lawyer/2022/spring/the-legal-implications-quantum-computing/3. Coecke, B. & Gogioso, S. (2023). Quantum in Pictures. Publisher: Cambridge Quantum.https://www.amazon.com/Quantum-Pictures-New-Understand-World/dp/17392147144. Castelvecchi, D. (2023). Physicists make longsought topological quantum states. Nature, 617, 445-446. https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-023-01574-0