232 episodes

Welcome to DataFramed, a weekly podcast exploring how artificial intelligence and data are changing the world around us. On this show, we invite data & AI leaders at the forefront of the data revolution to share their insights and experiences into how they lead the charge in this era of AI. Whether you're a beginner looking to gain insights into a career in data & AI, a practitioner needing to stay up-to-date on the latest tools and trends, or a leader looking to transform how your organization uses data & AI, there's something here for everyone.

Join co-hosts Adel Nehme and Richie Cotton as they delve into the stories and ideas that are shaping the future of data. Subscribe to the show and tune in to the latest episode on the feed below.

DataFramed DataCamp

    • Technology

Welcome to DataFramed, a weekly podcast exploring how artificial intelligence and data are changing the world around us. On this show, we invite data & AI leaders at the forefront of the data revolution to share their insights and experiences into how they lead the charge in this era of AI. Whether you're a beginner looking to gain insights into a career in data & AI, a practitioner needing to stay up-to-date on the latest tools and trends, or a leader looking to transform how your organization uses data & AI, there's something here for everyone.

Join co-hosts Adel Nehme and Richie Cotton as they delve into the stories and ideas that are shaping the future of data. Subscribe to the show and tune in to the latest episode on the feed below.

    #219 Building a Data Platform that Drives Value with Shuang Li, Group Product Manager at Box

    #219 Building a Data Platform that Drives Value with Shuang Li, Group Product Manager at Box

    Whether big or small, one of the biggest challenges organizations face when they want to work with data effectively is often lack of access to it. This is where building a data platform comes in. But building a data platform is no easy feat. It's not just about centralizing data in the data warehouse, it’s also about making sure that data is actionable, trustable and usable. So, how do you make sure your data platform is up to par?
    Shuang Li is Group Product Manager at Box. With experience of building data, analytics, ML, and observability platform products for both external and internal customers, Shuang is always passionate about the insights, optimizations, and predictions that big data and AI/ML make possible. Throughout her career, she transitioned from academia to engineering, from engineering to product management, and then from an individual contributor to an emerging product executive.
    In the episode, Adel and Shuang explore her career journey, including transitioning from academia to engineering and helping to work on Google Fiber, how to build a data platform, ingestion pipelines, processing pipelines, challenges and milestones in building a data platform, data observability and quality, developer experience, data democratization, future trends and a lot more. 
    Links Mentioned in the Show:
    BoxConnect with Shuang on Linkedin[Course] Understanding Modern Data ArchitectureRelated Episode: Scaling Enterprise Analytics with Libby Duane Adams, Chief Advocacy Officer and Co-Founder of Alteryx
    New to DataCamp?
    Learn on the go using the DataCamp mobile appEmpower your business with world-class data and AI skills with DataCamp for business

    • 41 min
    #218 Designing AI Applications with Robb Wilson, Co-Founder & CEO at Onereach.ai

    #218 Designing AI Applications with Robb Wilson, Co-Founder & CEO at Onereach.ai

    All the hype around generative AI means that every software maker seems to be stuffing chat interfaces into their products whenever they can. For the most part, the jury is still out on whether this is a good idea or not. However, design goes deeper than just the user interface, so it’s also useful to know about how the designs interact with the rest of the software. Once you move beyond chatbots into things like agents, there are also thorny questions around which bits of your workflow should still be done by a human, and which bits can be completely automated. True insight in this context lies in a gray area, across software, UX and AI.
    Robb is an AI researcher, technologist, designer, innovator, serial entrepreneur, and author. He is a contributor to Harvard Business Review and the visionary behind, OneReach.ai, the award winning conversational artificial intelligence platform that ranked highest in Gartner's Critical Capabilities Report for Enterprise Conversational AI Platforms. He earned an Academy Award nomination for technical achievement as well as over 130 innovation, design, technology, and artificial intelligence awards, with five in 2019 including AI Company of the Year and Hot AI Technology of the Year. Robb is a pioneer in the user research and technology spaces. He founded EffectiveUI, a user experience and technology research consultancy for the Fortune 500, which was acquired by WPP and integrated into the core of Ogilvy’s digital experience practice. He also created UX Magazine, one of the first and largest XD (experience design) thought leadership communities. 
    In the episode, Richie and Robb explore chat interfaces in software, the advantages of chat interfaces over other methods of interaction with data & AI products, geospatial vs language memory, good vs bad chat interfaces, the importance of a human in the loop, personality in chatbots, handling hallucinations and bad responses, scaling chatbots, agents vs chatbots, ethical considerations for AI and chatbots and much more. 
    Links Mentioned in the Show:
    Onereach.aiInvisible Machines PodcastGartner: The Executive Guide to Hyperautomation[Skill Track] Developing AI ApplicationsRelated Episode: Building Human-Centered AI Experiences with Haris Butt, Head of Product Design at ClickUpSign up to RADAR: AI Edition
    New to DataCamp?
    Learn on the go using the DataCamp mobile app
    Empower your business with world-class data and AI skills with DataCamp for business

    • 45 min
    #217 Data & AI at Tesco with Venkat Raghavan, Director of Analytics and Science at Tesco

    #217 Data & AI at Tesco with Venkat Raghavan, Director of Analytics and Science at Tesco

    Loyalty schemes are a hallmark of established retailers—not only do they build consumer trust, they are intelligent and constantly evolving, and Tesco’s Clubcard is the UK’s favorite retail loyalty program. The effects of these discounts are far-reaching, especially for families who rely on getting the best deals to make the most of their money. As Tesco’s tagline goes, every little helps. In turn, the identification and specific details of discounted products can have a profound impact on how consumers view the largest supermarket retailer in the United Kingdom, as well as the operational costs and profits that shareholders are concerned with. How do data and AI inform these offers, what goes into the enterprise-scale analytics that keeps Tesco’s Clubcard the UK’s favorite?
    Venkat Raghavan is Director of Analytics and Science at Tesco. Venkat’s area of expertise is customer analytics, having been very heavily involved with the Tesco Clubcard loyalty program. Venkat also set up an analytics center of excellence to help break down data silos between teams. Previously, he was a Director of Analytics at Boston Consulting Group and Senior Director for Advanced Analytics & AI for Manthan and a Cross Industry Delivery Leader at Mu Sigma.
    In the episode, Richie and Venkat explore Tesco’s use of data, the introduction of the clubcard scheme, Tesco’s data-driven innovations in online food retail, understanding customer behavior through loyalty programs and in-app interactions, improving customer experience at Tesco, operating a cohesive data intelligence platform that leverages multiple data sources, communication between data and business teams, pricing and cost management, the challenges of data science at scale, the future of data and much more. 
    Links Mentioned in the Show:
    Tesco ClubcardMcKinsey: State of Grocery Europe 2024[Course] Data Science for BusinessRelated Episode: Scaling Enterprise Analytics with Libby Duane Adams, Chief Advocacy Officer and Co-Founder of AlteryxSign up to RADAR: AI Edition
    New to DataCamp?
    Learn on the go using the DataCamp mobile app
    Empower your business with world-class data and AI skills with DataCamp for business

    • 42 min
    #216 Perplexity & the Future of AI with Denis Yarats, Co-Founder and CTO at Perplexity AI

    #216 Perplexity & the Future of AI with Denis Yarats, Co-Founder and CTO at Perplexity AI

    Arguably one of the verticals that is both at the same time most ripe for disruption by AI and the hardest to disrupt is search. We've seen many attempts at reimagining search using AI, and many are trying to usurp Google from its throne as the top search engine on the planet, but I think no one is laying the case better for AI assisted search than perplexity. AI. Perplexity doesn't need an introduction. It is an AI powered search engine that lets you get the information you need as fast as possible.
    Denis Yarats is the Co-Founder and Chief Technology Officer of Perplexity AI. He previously worked at Facebook as an AI Research Scientist. Denis Yarats attended New York University. His previous research interests broadly involved Reinforcement Learning, Deep Learning, NLP, robotics and investigating ways of semi-supervising Hierarchical Reinforcement Learning using natural language.
    In the episode, Adel and Denis explore Denis’ role at Perplexity.ai, key differentiators of Perplexity.ai when compared to other chatbot-powered tools, culture at perplexity, competition in the AI space, building genAI products, the future of AI and search, open-source vs closed-source AI and much more. 
    Links Mentioned in the Show:
    Perplexity.aiNeurIPS Conference[Course] Artificial Intelligence (AI) StrategyRelated Episode: The Power of Vector Databases and Semantic Search with Elan Dekel, VP of Product at PineconeSign up to RADAR: AI Edition
    New to DataCamp?
    Learn on the go using the DataCamp mobile appEmpower your business with world-class data and AI skills with DataCamp for business

    • 36 min
    #215 Seeing the Data Layer Through Spatial Computing with Cathy Hackl and Irena Cronin

    #215 Seeing the Data Layer Through Spatial Computing with Cathy Hackl and Irena Cronin

    Spatial computing is revolutionizing the way we interact with digital and physical worlds, but its adoption comes with questions about practicality and return on investment. As businesses explore this cutting-edge technology, they must consider how it can enhance productivity and streamline operations. What are the best strategies to integrate spatial computing into your current systems? How can you ensure that it not only boosts efficiency but also delivers measurable benefits to your bottom line? 
    Cathy Hackl is a web3 and metaverse strategist, tech futurist, speaker and author. She's worked with metaverse-related companies such as HTC VIVE, Magic Leap, and AWS, and currently consults with some of the world's leading brands, including P&G, Clinique, Ralph Lauren, Orlando Economic Partnership and more. Hackl is one of the world's first Chief Metaverse Officers and the co-founder of Journey, where she works with luxury, fashion, and beauty brands to create successful metaverse and web3 strategies and helps them build worlds in platforms like Roblox, Fortnite, Decentraland, The Sandbox, and beyond. She is widely regarded as one of the leading thinkers on the Metaverse.
    Irena Cronin is SVP of Product for DADOS Technology, which is making an Apple Vision Pro data analytics and visualization app. She is also the CEO of Infinite Retina, which helps companies develop and implement AI, AR, and other new technologies for their businesses. Before this, she worked as an equity research analyst and gained extensive experience in evaluating both public and private companies.
    In the episode, Richie, Cathy and Irina explore spatial computing, the current viability of spacial computing and it's prominence alongside the release of Apple's Vision Pro, expected effects of spatial computing on gaming and entertainment, industrial applications as well as data visualization and AI integration opportunities of spatial computing, how businesses can leverage spatial computing, future developments in the space and much more. 
    Links Mentioned in the Show:
    Cathy’s BookIrena’s BooksApple Vision ProMarvel Studios and ILM Immersive Announce 'What If...? - An Immersive Story'[Course] Artificial Intelligence (AI) StrategyRelated Episode: Why the Future of AI in Data will be Weird with Benn Stancil, CTO at Mode & Field CTO at ThoughtSpotSign up to RADAR: AI Edition
    New to DataCamp?
    Learn on the go using the DataCamp mobile appEmpower your business with world-class data and AI skills with DataCamp for business

    • 51 min
    #214 Learning & Memory, For Brains & AI, with Kim Stachenfeld, Senior Research Scientist at Google DeepMind

    #214 Learning & Memory, For Brains & AI, with Kim Stachenfeld, Senior Research Scientist at Google DeepMind

    Memory, the foundation of human intelligence, is still one of the most complex and mysterious aspects of the brain. Despite decades of research, we've only scratched the surface of understanding how our memories are formed, stored, and retrieved. But what if AI could help us crack the code on memory? How might AI be the key to unlocking problems that have evaded human cognition for so long?
    Kim Stachenfeld is a Senior Research Scientist at Google DeepMind in NYC and Affiliate Faculty at the Center for Theoretical Neuroscience at Columbia University.  Her research covers topics in Neuroscience and AI. On the Neuroscience side, she study how animals build and use models of their world that support memory and prediction. On the Machine Learning side, she works on implementing these cognitive functions in deep learning models. Kim’s work has been featured in The Atlantic, Quanta Magazine, Nautilus, and MIT Technology Review. In 2019, she was named one of MIT Tech Review’s Innovators under 35 for her work on predictive representations in hippocampus. 
    In the episode, Richie and Kim explore her work on Google Gemini, the importance of customizability in AI models, the need for flexibility and adaptability in AI models, retrieval databases and how they improve AI response accuracy, AI-driven science, the importance of augmenting human capabilities with AI and the challenges associated with this goal, the intersection of AI, neuroscience and memory and much more. 
    Links Mentioned in the Show:
    DeepMindAlphaFoldDr James Whittington - A unifying framework for frontal and temporal representation of memoryPaper - Language models show human-like content effects onreasoning tasksKim’s Website[Course] Artificial Intelligence (AI) StrategyRelated Episode: Making Better Decisions using Data & AI with Cassie Kozyrkov, Google's First Chief Decision ScientistSign up to RADAR: AI Edition
    New to DataCamp?
    Learn on the go using the DataCamp mobile appEmpower your business with world-class data and AI skills with DataCamp for business

    • 43 min

Top Podcasts In Technology

The Neuron: AI Explained
The Neuron
All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg
All-In Podcast, LLC
Acquired
Ben Gilbert and David Rosenthal
Good Game
Imran Khan and Qiao Wang
The AI in Business Podcast
Daniel Faggella
Domain Name Wire Podcast
Andrew Allemann

You Might Also Like

Super Data Science: ML & AI Podcast with Jon Krohn
Jon Krohn
Data Engineering Podcast
Tobias Macey
Data Skeptic
Kyle Polich
Practical AI: Machine Learning, Data Science
Changelog Media
The TWIML AI Podcast (formerly This Week in Machine Learning & Artificial Intelligence)
Sam Charrington
Talk Python To Me
Michael Kennedy (@mkennedy)