Tech Talks Daily

If every company is now a tech company and digital transformation is a journey rather than a destination, how do you keep up with the relentless pace of technological change? Every day, Tech Talks Daily brings you insights from the brightest minds in tech, business, and innovation, breaking down complex ideas into clear, actionable takeaways. Hosted by Neil C. Hughes, Tech Talks Daily explores how emerging technologies such as AI, cybersecurity, cloud computing, fintech, quantum computing, Web3, and more are shaping industries and solving real-world challenges in modern businesses. Through candid conversations with industry leaders, CEOs, Fortune 500 executives, startup founders, and even the occasional celebrity, Tech Talks Daily uncovers the trends driving digital transformation and the strategies behind successful tech adoption. But this isn't just about buzzwords. We go beyond the hype to demystify the biggest tech trends and determine their real-world impact. From cybersecurity and blockchain to AI sovereignty, robotics, and post-quantum cryptography, we explore the measurable difference these innovations can make. Whether improving security, enhancing customer experiences, or driving business growth, we also investigate the ROI of cutting-edge tech projects, asking the tough questions about what works, what doesn't, and how businesses can maximize their investments. Whether you're a business leader, IT professional, or simply curious about technology's role in our lives, you'll find engaging discussions that challenge perspectives, share diverse viewpoints, and spark new ideas. New episodes are released daily, 365 days a year, breaking down complex ideas into clear, actionable takeaways around technology and the future of business.

  1. 1 DAY AGO

    AI PCs Explained With Logan Lawler from Dell Technologies

    What actually happens when AI stops being a cloud-only experiment and starts running on desks, in labs, and inside real teams trying to ship real work? In this episode, I sit down with Logan Lawler, Senior Director at Dell Technologies, to unpack how AI workloads are really being built and supported on the ground today. Logan leads Dell's Precision and Pro Max AI Solutions business and hosts Dell's own Reshaping Workflows podcast, giving him a rare vantage point into how engineers, developers, creatives, and data teams are actually working, not how marketing slides suggest they should be. We start by cutting through the noise around AI PCs. At every conference stage, Logan breaks down what genuinely matters when choosing hardware for AI work. CPUs, GPUs, NPUs, memory, and software stacks all play different roles, and misunderstanding those roles often leads teams to overspend or underspec. Logan explains why all AI workstations qualify as AI PCs, but not all AI PCs are suitable for serious AI work, and why GPUs remain central for anyone doing real model development, fine-tuning, or inference at scale. From there, the conversation shifts to a broader architectural rethink. As AI workloads grow heavier and data sensitivity increases, many organizations are reconsidering where compute should live. Logan shares how GPU-powered Dell workstations, storage-rich environments, and hybrid cloud setups are giving teams more control over performance, cost, and data. We explore why local compute is becoming attractive again, how modern GPUs now rival small server setups, and why hybrid workflows, local for development and cloud for deployment, are becoming the default rather than the exception. One of the most compelling parts of the discussion comes when Logan connects hardware choices back to business reality. Drawing on real-world examples, he explains how teams use local AI environments to move faster, reduce cloud costs, and avoid getting locked into architectures that are hard to unwind later. This is not about abandoning the cloud, but about being intentional from the start, mainly as AI usage spreads beyond developers into marketing, operations, and everyday business roles. We also step back to reflect on a deeper challenge. As AI becomes easier to use, what happens to critical thinking, curiosity, and learning? Logan shares a candid perspective, shaped by his experiences as a parent, technologist, and podcast host, raising questions about how tools should support rather than replace thinking. If you are trying to make sense of AI PCs, local versus cloud compute, or how teams are really reshaping workflows with AI hardware today, this conversation offers grounded insight from someone living at the center of it. Are we designing systems that genuinely empower people to think better and build faster, or are we sleepwalking into decisions we will regret later? How do you want your own AI workflow to evolve? Useful Links TLDR AI newsletter and the Neurons. The Reshaping Workflows podcast Connect with Logan Lawler Follow Dell Technologies on LinkedIn

    36 min
  2. 2 DAYS AGO

    Cisco Live 2026 Amsterdam: Why AI Agents Fail Without Infrastructure Ready For Scale

    What does it really take to move AI from experimentation into something enterprises can trust, scale, and rely on every day? In this episode of Tech Talks Daily, I'm joined by Rob Lay, CTO and Solutions Engineering Director for Cisco UK and Ireland, recorded in the run-up to Cisco Live EMEA in Amsterdam. As agentic AI dominates conference agendas on both sides of the Atlantic, this conversation steps away from model hype. It focuses on the less glamorous, but far more decisive layer underneath it all: infrastructure. Rob explains why the biggest constraint on scaling AI agents in production is no longer imagination or ambition, but the readiness of the environments those agents run on. We talk about how legacy technical debt, latency, fragmented networks, and disconnected security tools can quietly undermine AI investments long before leaders see any return. As organizations move out of pilot mode and into real execution, those cracks become impossible to ignore. A big part of the discussion centers on why AI changes the relationship between network, compute, and security teams. Traditional silos struggle to keep up as autonomous systems make decisions at machine speed. Rob shares how Cisco is approaching this shift through tighter integration across the stack, with security designed directly into the network rather than bolted on later. When AI agents act independently, routing everything through centralized chokepoints does not hold up. We also explore how operational complexity is evolving. Tool sprawl is already overwhelming many IT leaders, and agent sprawl is clearly coming next. Rob outlines Cisco's platform strategy, including how agent-driven operations, human oversight, and context-aware automation are shaping a new approach to day-to-day resilience. This leads into a wider conversation about digital resilience as a business issue, where visibility, assurance, and learning from incidents matter more than static continuity plans that only get tested once a year. For European leaders in particular, data sovereignty and control remain at the forefront. Rob explains how Cisco is responding with flexible deployment models, local data residency options, and air-gapped environments that support AI innovation without forcing customers into a single rigid operating model. We close by looking at where enterprises are actually seeing value today, where expectations are still running ahead of reality, and what leaders attending Cisco Live should really be listening to as announcements roll in. If you are responsible for infrastructure, security, or technology strategy in an AI-driven organization, this conversation offers a grounded view of what needs to be ready before agents can truly deliver on their promise. As AI-powered systems start to move faster than most roadmaps anticipated, are you confident the foundations underneath them are ready to keep up, and what would you change if you were starting that journey today? Useful Links Connect with Rob Lay Cisco Live Follow Cisco on LinkedIn

    30 min
  3. 2 DAYS AGO

    IBM's Global Managing Partner on how CEOs Are Rethinking AI ROI

    What does it really take to move enterprise AI from impressive demos to decisions that show up in quarterly results? One year into his role as Global Managing Partner at IBM Consulting, Neil Dhar sits at the intersection of strategy, capital allocation, and technology execution. Leading the firm's Americas business and a team of close to 100,000 consultants, he has a front-row view into how large organizations are reassessing their AI investments. From global healthcare leaders like Medtronic to luxury retail brands such as Neiman Marcus, the conversation has shifted. Early proofs of concept helped executives understand what was possible. Now the focus is firmly on proof of value and on whether AI can drive growth, competitiveness, and measurable return. In this episode, I speak with Neil Dhar about what has changed in the boardroom over the past year and why ROI has become the central question. Drawing on more than three decades in finance and private equity, including senior leadership roles at PwC, Neil explains why AI is increasingly being treated as a capital allocation decision rather than a technology experiment. Every dollar invested has to earn its place, whether through productivity gains, operational improvement, or new revenue opportunities. Vanity projects no longer survive scrutiny, especially when boards and investors expect results on a much shorter timeline. We also explore how IBM is applying these same principles internally. Neil shares how the company has identified hundreds of workflows across the business, prioritized those with the strongest economic impact, and used AI and automation to drive large-scale productivity gains. The result is a potential $4.5 billion in annual run rate savings by 2025, with those gains being reinvested into innovation, people, and future growth. It is a candid look at what happens when AI strategy, leadership accountability, and disciplined execution come together inside a global organization. If you are a business leader trying to separate real value from hype, or someone wrestling with how to justify AI spend beyond experimentation, this conversation offers a grounded perspective on what enterprise AI looks like when it is treated as a business decision rather than a technology trend. Are you ready to rethink how AI earns its place inside your organization, and what proof of value really means in 2026? Useful Links Connect With Neil Dhar IBM Institute for Business Value, "The Enterprise in 2030" study Learn More About IBM Consulting

    28 min
  4. 2 DAYS AGO

    Why EY Thinks Ecosystems Will Define The Future Of Enterprise AI

    How Do Marketplaces Turn AI Ambition Into Scalable, Trusted Enterprise Reality? That is the question I explore in this episode with Julie Teigland, Global Vice Chair for Alliances and Ecosystems at EY, someone who sits right at the intersection of enterprise demand, technology platforms, and the ecosystems that increasingly power modern AI adoption. As organizations race to deploy AI at scale, many are discovering that the real challenge is not a lack of tools, but the complexity of choosing, integrating, governing, and standing behind those decisions with confidence. Julie explains why marketplaces are becoming a powerful mechanism for reducing friction in this process, helping enterprises move beyond experimentation toward AI solutions that are trusted, scalable, and aligned with real business outcomes. We talk about how marketplaces can collapse complexity, curate choice, and bring much needed clarity to leaders who are overwhelmed by the sheer volume of AI options available today. Julie also shares how EY approaches this challenge through its "client zero" mindset, turning the lens inward and treating EY itself as the first marketplace customer. By doing so, EY stress tests governance, security, and integration at real enterprise scale, serving tens of thousands of clients, running hundreds of thousands of servers, and processing hundreds of millions of transactions every day. That internal experience shapes how EY helps clients navigate trust, accountability, and cross-vendor integration risks, particularly as AI becomes more embedded into workflows and decision-making. We also explore how strong alliances with cloud leaders like Microsoft and SAP are shaping how AI solutions are vetted, standardized, and deployed across industries, as well as how regulation, particularly in Europe, is influencing a shift toward responsibility by design. This conversation goes beyond technology to focus on orchestration, trust, and outcomes, and why marketplaces are evolving from simple app stores into something far more strategic for enterprise AI. If you are trying to understand how ecosystems, governance, and marketplaces can help turn AI from isolated projects into sustained business value, this episode offers a thoughtful and grounded perspective.  I would love to know what resonated with you most. How do you see marketplaces shaping the future of AI adoption inside your organization? Useful LInks Connect With Julie Teigland Learn More About EY

    22 min
  5. 3 DAYS AGO

    Motive on Why Accurate, Real-Time Edge AI Saves Lives in Physical Operations.

    As someone who spends a lot of time covering AI announcements, product launches, and conference stages, it is easy to forget that most AI today is still built for desks, screens, and digital workflows. Yet the reality is that the vast majority of the global workforce operates in the physical world, on roads, construction sites, depots, and job sites where mistakes are measured in injuries, collisions, and lives lost. That gap between where AI innovation happens and where real risk exists is exactly why I wanted to sit down with Amish Babu, CTO at Motive. In this episode, I speak with Amish about what it truly means to build AI for the physical economy. We unpack why designing AI for vehicles, fleets, and safety-critical environments is fundamentally different from building AI for emails, documents, or dashboards. Amish explains why latency, trust, and reliability are non-negotiable when AI is embedded directly into vehicles, and why edge AI, multimodal sensing, and on-device compute are essential when milliseconds matter. This is a conversation about AI that has to work perfectly in messy, unpredictable, real-world conditions. We also explore how Motive approaches AI as a full system, combining hardware, software, and models into a single platform built specifically for life on the road. Amish shares how AI can help prevent collisions, support drivers in the moment, and create measurable safety and operational outcomes for fleets operating across transportation, construction, energy, and public sector environments. Along the way, we challenge common misconceptions around AI in vehicles, including the idea that it is about surveillance rather than protection, or that all AI systems are created equal when lives are on the line. If you are interested in how AI moves beyond productivity tools and into high-stakes environments where safety, accountability, and trust matter most, this episode offers a grounded and practical perspective from someone building these systems every day. I would love to hear your thoughts on this one. How do you see the role of AI evolving as it moves deeper into the physical world? Useful Links Connect with Amish Babu Learn More About Motive How Motive's AI works: Real-time edge intelligence, humans-in-the-loop, and continuous improvement.

    30 min
  6. 3 DAYS AGO

    Building Responsible Agentic AI: Genpact's Blueprint For Enterprise Leaders

    *]:pointer-events-auto scroll-mt-[calc(var(--header-height)+min(200px,max(70px,20svh)))]" dir="auto" tabindex="-1" data-turn-id= "54141b02-3c0e-46be-b764-c57b8d9d7ccc" data-testid= "conversation-turn-28" data-scroll-anchor="true" data-turn= "assistant"> In this episode of Tech Talks Daily, I sat down with Jinsook Han, Chief Agentic AI Officer at Genpact, to unpack one of the most misunderstood shifts in enterprise AI right now. Many organizations feel confident about the value AI can deliver, yet only a small fraction are able to move beyond pilots and into autonomous operations that actually scale. Genpact's Autonomy By Design research puts hard data behind that gap, and Jinsook explains why optimism often races ahead of readiness. We explore why agentic AI changes the rules entirely. When AI systems begin to act, decide, and adapt on behalf of the business, familiar operating models start to strain. Jinsook makes a compelling case that agentic AI cannot be treated like another software rollout. It demands a rethink of data, governance, roles, and even how teams define work itself. The shift from tools to teammates alters expectations for people across the organization, from frontline operators to the C-suite, and exposes just how unprepared many companies still are. Governance is a major theme throughout the conversation, but not in the way most leaders expect. Rather than slowing progress, Jinsook argues that governance must become part of how work happens every day. She shares how Genpact approaches agent certification, maturity, and oversight, using vivid analogies to explain why quality and alignment matter more than simply deploying large numbers of agents. We also dig into why many governance models fail, especially when they rely on committees instead of lived understanding. Upskilling sits at the heart of this transformation. Jinsook walks through how Genpact is training more than 130,000 employees for an agentic future, starting with executives themselves. The focus is not on abstract learning, but on proving that today's work looks different from yesterday's. Observability, explainability, and responsible AI are woven into this approach, with command centers designed to monitor both agent performance and health, turning early signals into opportunities rather than panic. This conversation goes well beyond hype. It is about readiness, responsibility, and the reality of building autonomous systems that still depend on human judgment. As organizations rush toward agentic AI, are they truly prepared to change how decisions are made, how people work, and how accountability is defined, or are they still treating AI as a faster hammer rather than a new kind of teammate? Useful Links Connect with Jinsook Han Learn More about Genpact

    32 min
  7. 4 DAYS AGO

    Slalom On The AI Leadership Gap Between Confidence And Capability

    What happens when leaders are confident about AI, but the people expected to use it are not ready? In this episode of Tech Talks Daily, I sat down with Caroline Grant from Slalom Consulting to explore one of the most persistent tensions in enterprise AI adoption right now. Boards and executives are spending more, moving faster, and expecting returns sooner than ever, yet many organizations are struggling to translate that ambition into outcomes that scale.  Caroline brings fresh insight from Slalom's latest research into how leadership, culture, and workforce readiness are shaping what actually happens next. We unpack a clear shift in ownership for AI transformation, with CTOs and CDOs increasingly leading organizational redesign rather than HR. That change reflects how deeply AI now cuts across technology, operations, and business models, but it also introduces new risks.  Caroline explains why sidelining people teams can create blind spots around skills, incentives, and trust, especially as roles evolve and uncertainty grows inside the workforce. The result is what Slalom describes as a growing AI disconnect between executive optimism and day-to-day reality. Despite the noise around job losses, the data tells a more nuanced story. Many organizations are creating new AI-related roles at a pace, yet almost all are facing skills gaps that threaten progress. We talk about why reskilling at scale is now unavoidable, how unclear career paths fuel employee distrust, and why focusing only on technical capability misses the human side of adoption.  Caroline also challenges assumptions about skill priorities, warning that deprioritizing empathy, communication, and change leadership could undermine effective human-AI collaboration. We also dig into ROI expectations, with most UK executives now  expecting returns within two years. Caroline shares why that ambition is achievable, where it breaks down, and why so many organizations remain stuck in pilot mode. From governance and decision rights to culture and leadership behavior, this conversation goes beyond tools and platforms to examine what separates experimentation from fundamental transformation. As AI becomes a test of leadership as much as technology, how are you closing the gap between vision and execution within your organization, and are you building a workforce that can keep pace with change rather than resist it? Connect With Caroline Grant from Slalom Consulting The Great AI Disconnect: Slalom's Insights Survey Learn More About Slalom

    32 min
  8. 5 DAYS AGO

    LastPass CEO: If the Browser is AI's New Interface, What Does it Mean for Security?

    Is the browser quietly becoming the most powerful and dangerous interface in modern work? In this episode of Tech Talks Daily, I sat down with Karim Toubba, CEO of LastPass, to unpack a shift that many people feel every day but rarely stop to question. The browser is no longer just a window to the internet. It has become the place where work happens, where SaaS lives, and increasingly, where humans and AI agents meet data, credentials, and decisions. From AI-native browsers to prompt-based navigation and headless agents acting on our behalf, the way we access information is changing fast, and so are the risks. Karim shares why this moment feels different from earlier waves like SaaS adoption or remote work. Today, more than ever, productivity, identity, and security collide inside the browser.  Shadow AI is spreading faster than most organizations can track, personal accounts are being used to access powerful AI tools, and sensitive data is being uploaded with little visibility or control. At the same time, attackers have noticed that the browser has become the soft underbelly of the enterprise, with a growing share of malware and breaches originating there. We also explore the rise of agentic AI and what happens when software, not people, starts logging into systems. When an agent books travel, pulls data, or completes workflows on a user's behalf, traditional authentication and access models start to break down. Karim explains why identity, visibility, and control must evolve together, and why secure browser extensions are emerging as a practical foundation for this next phase of computing. The conversation goes deep into what users do not see when AI browsers ask for access to email, calendars, and internal apps, and why convenience often masks long-term exposure. Throughout the discussion, Karim brings a grounded perspective shaped by decades in cybersecurity, from risk-based vulnerability management to enterprise threat intelligence. Rather than pushing fear, he focuses on realistic steps organizations and individuals can take, from understanding what data is being shared, to treating security teams as partners, to using tools that bring passwords, passkeys, and authentication into one trusted place as browsing evolves. As AI reshapes how we search, work, and make decisions, the question is no longer whether the browser matters. It is whether we are ready for it to act as the front door to both our productivity and our risk, so are you securing your browser for the future you are already using today? Connect with Karim Toubba LastPass Threat Intelligence, Mitigation, and Escalation (TIME) team page Phish Bowl Podcast

    30 min

Hosts & Guests

5
out of 5
42 Ratings

About

If every company is now a tech company and digital transformation is a journey rather than a destination, how do you keep up with the relentless pace of technological change? Every day, Tech Talks Daily brings you insights from the brightest minds in tech, business, and innovation, breaking down complex ideas into clear, actionable takeaways. Hosted by Neil C. Hughes, Tech Talks Daily explores how emerging technologies such as AI, cybersecurity, cloud computing, fintech, quantum computing, Web3, and more are shaping industries and solving real-world challenges in modern businesses. Through candid conversations with industry leaders, CEOs, Fortune 500 executives, startup founders, and even the occasional celebrity, Tech Talks Daily uncovers the trends driving digital transformation and the strategies behind successful tech adoption. But this isn't just about buzzwords. We go beyond the hype to demystify the biggest tech trends and determine their real-world impact. From cybersecurity and blockchain to AI sovereignty, robotics, and post-quantum cryptography, we explore the measurable difference these innovations can make. Whether improving security, enhancing customer experiences, or driving business growth, we also investigate the ROI of cutting-edge tech projects, asking the tough questions about what works, what doesn't, and how businesses can maximize their investments. Whether you're a business leader, IT professional, or simply curious about technology's role in our lives, you'll find engaging discussions that challenge perspectives, share diverse viewpoints, and spark new ideas. New episodes are released daily, 365 days a year, breaking down complex ideas into clear, actionable takeaways around technology and the future of business.

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