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Tech Talks Daily

Neil C. Hughes
Tech Talks Daily
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2355 episodes

  • Tech Talks Daily

    How DDN And NVIDIA Are Rethinking AI Infrastructure For The Rubin Era

    2026/03/24 | 32 mins.
    What does it really take to turn a massive AI infrastructure investment into actual business value?
    In this episode, I'm joined by Alex Bouzari, founder and CEO of DDN, for a conversation that gets right to the heart of where AI infrastructure is heading next. There is a lot of noise in the market about faster chips, larger models, and bigger data centers, but Alex argues that the real story has changed. According to him, GPUs are no longer the main constraint. The true bottleneck now lies in the data layer, where data is moved, cached, served, and managed across increasingly complex AI environments.
    That shift matters because many organizations are still thinking about AI in terms of hardware acquisition. Buy more GPUs, add more power, build more capacity. But as Alex explains, that mindset misses the bigger picture. 
    If your data architecture cannot keep pace, those expensive systems stall, efficiency drops, and the return on investment quickly becomes shaky. It was a timely discussion, especially as NVIDIA's Rubin platform points toward rack-scale AI factories where compute, networking, storage, and offload all need to work together as one operational system.
    One part I found especially interesting was Alex's focus on measuring efficiency. He argued that the future winners in AI will not simply be the companies with the most hardware. They will be the ones who think like industrial operators, measuring cost per token, rack utilization, time-to-value, and power consumption per unit of intelligence output. That is a very different conversation from the hype cycle, and it is one that business leaders need to hear. AI value is no longer about showing that something can work. It is about proving that it can work predictably, securely, and economically at scale.

    We also talked about DDN's collaboration with NVIDIA, the role of BlueField-4 DPUs, and why inference performance now depends on intelligent memory architecture and data movement just as much as raw compute. Alex shared how DDN is helping customers reach up to 99 percent GPU utilization and reduce time to first token for long context workloads. Those numbers are impressive on their own, but what matters most is what they represent—better throughput, lower waste, and AI systems that move from science project to production reality.
    There is also an important leadership lesson running through this conversation. DDN has been profitable for over a decade, powers more than one million GPUs worldwide, and has built its business by staying close to real customer pain points. Alex speaks with the kind of clarity that comes from building through constraints rather than simply talking around them.
    If AI factories are going to define the next phase of enterprise technology, how should leaders rethink infrastructure, efficiency, and value creation before they invest in the next wave, and what do you think?
  • Tech Talks Daily

    How GoTo Sees The Reality Of AI Adoption In The Workplace

    2026/03/23 | 32 mins.
    Are employees really ready for AI in the workplace, or are we moving faster than people can realistically keep up?
    In this episode, I'm joined by David Evans, Chief Product Strategist at GoTo, to explore what is actually happening inside organizations as AI becomes part of everyday work. There is a growing assumption that businesses are already well on their way, with employees confidently using AI tools and leaders rolling out strategies at pace. But David brings a more measured view, backed by research and real-world insight, that suggests the picture is far more complex.
    One of the biggest themes in our conversation is the gap between expectation and reality. Many companies assume that younger employees, particularly Gen Z, naturally understand how to use AI in a professional setting. David challenges that idea directly. He explains that while familiarity with technology is high, the ability to apply AI effectively, responsibly, and in a business context is something that every generation is still learning. Without clear guidance, training, and governance, organizations risk creating confusion rather than progress.
    We also talk about how AI is quietly becoming embedded in everyday workflows. Instead of replacing roles outright, it is helping people shift their focus toward higher-value work. That shift is already visible in areas like customer support, where contact centers are evolving through smarter automation, better tools for agents, and a growing acceptance of remote and distributed teams. David shares what this could look like over the next year, and why the balance between human and machine will remain central to delivering good experiences.
    Another area we explore is the growing need for integration. Many organizations are dealing with fragmented communication tools, rising costs, and increasing complexity. David explains why there is a clear move toward unified platforms that bring communication, collaboration, and AI together in a more cohesive way. That includes the rise of conversational AI, with tools like AI receptionists becoming easier to deploy and more widely trusted.
    Of course, none of this happens without challenges. Security, data privacy, and the risks associated with shadow IT and generative AI are becoming more visible. David outlines how technology providers are responding, and what leaders need to think about as they balance innovation with responsibility.
    This conversation offers a grounded look at where workplace AI is heading, cutting through assumptions and focusing on what leaders need to understand right now.
    So as AI becomes part of the fabric of everyday work, are organizations doing enough to support their people, or are they expecting too much too soon?
  • Tech Talks Daily

    How TheyDo And PwC Are Rethinking Customer Experience At Scale

    2026/03/22 | 24 mins.
    How can companies be drowning in customer data and still struggle to make better decisions?
    In this episode, I speak with Jochem van der Veer, CEO and co-founder of TheyDo, about a problem that many business leaders quietly recognize but rarely solve. Organizations are investing heavily in customer experience and AI, yet the results often fall short. There is more data than ever before, more dashboards, more reporting, and still a disconnect between insight and action.
    Jochem offers a refreshing perspective shaped by his work with global brands like Ford, Atlassian, Cisco, and Home Depot. He explains that the issue is not a lack of data, but a lack of alignment.
    Teams operate in silos, each working with their own version of the truth, which leads to fragmented decisions that make sense internally but fail from the customer's point of view. It is not intentional, but the outcome is the same. A disconnected experience that slows progress and creates hidden costs across the business.
    We spend time unpacking what this looks like in practice. Many customer experience teams are still focused on collecting and reporting data rather than influencing decisions. Insights travel up the organization, often reaching senior leadership, but rarely translate into meaningful action. That gap, as Jochem describes it, turns customer experience into a cost center rather than a driver of growth.
    What makes this conversation particularly relevant right now is the role of AI. While AI has made it easier to process vast amounts of unstructured data, it has also exposed how unprepared many organizations are to act on it.
    Jochem shares how experience intelligence is emerging as a new way of thinking, one that connects customer feedback, operational data, and business outcomes into a single, actionable view. It shifts the focus from understanding what happened to deciding what to do next.
    We also explore the partnership between TheyDo and PwC, and how combining structured frameworks with journey management technology can help organizations move from strategy to execution. From reducing wasted investment to identifying the real root causes behind customer issues, there is a clear opportunity to rethink how decisions are made.
    This episode challenges some widely held assumptions, including the idea that customer experience is a standalone function. Instead, it is becoming a capability that needs to be embedded across the entire organization.
    So as AI continues to accelerate the pace of business, are companies ready to move beyond reporting and finally turn customer insight into meaningful action?
  • Tech Talks Daily

    How Permutable AI Is Turning Unstructured Data Into Trading Insight

    2026/03/21 | 21 mins.
    What happens when financial markets stop reacting to data and start reacting to narratives in real time?
    In this episode, I'm joined by Wilson Chan, CEO and founder of Permutable AI, to explore how artificial intelligence is reshaping the way financial institutions interpret the world around them. Wilson brings a rare perspective, combining years of experience as a trader with a deep background in computer science, and it shows in the way he describes this shift. 
    We talk about how markets are moving away from traditional quant models and toward AI-native systems that can reason over vast amounts of unstructured global information. That includes everything from policy changes and geopolitical events to the subtle ways narratives form and spread across media.
    What stood out to me in this conversation is how Wilson challenges the idea that markets are driven purely by fundamentals. Instead, he argues that perception and reality are increasingly intertwined.
     If enough people believe a story, that belief can influence price movements just as much as financial performance. Permutable AI is built on this idea, scanning hundreds of thousands of articles in real time to identify how narratives evolve and impact commodities, energy markets, and currencies. It's a fascinating shift that raises important questions about how investors separate meaningful insight from noise.
    We also explore the role of vertical LLMs and why generic AI models fall short in financial environments. Wilson explains how embedding financial relationships and ontology directly into models creates outputs that are structured, traceable, and ready for decision-making. That focus on explainability and auditability becomes even more important as AI systems take on greater responsibility. If something goes wrong, understanding why it happened is what maintains trust, and without that, adoption quickly stalls.
    There's also a broader conversation here about where all of this is heading. From multi-agent systems replacing traditional analytics stacks to the ambition to build a full-world simulator for capital markets, it feels like we are at the early stages of something much bigger. But at the same time, Wilson is honest about the challenges, from integration hurdles to the human skills gap that continues to hold many organizations back.
    So if markets are now shaped by narratives, AI reasoning, and real-time global signals, how should business leaders and investors rethink their decision-making in the future?
  • Tech Talks Daily

    How Legrand Turned Customer Feedback Into Action Across A Global Business

    2026/03/20 | 29 mins.
    What does customer experience look like inside a company most people associate with switches, infrastructure, and engineering rather than surveys, empathy, and brand perception?
    In this episode, recorded at the Qualtrics X4 event in Seattle, I sit down with Jerome Boissou, Head of Global Customer and Brand Experience at Legrand. Jerome has been with the company for 28 years and now leads a customer experience program designed to help Legrand better understand a customer base that is changing fast. 
    This matters because Legrand is no longer serving only its traditional markets. The company now operates across a huge product portfolio, serves commercial buildings as well as residential markets, and plays a significant role in areas such as data centers and hospitality.
    At the heart of our conversation is Legrand's "Best Of Us" program, which was originally launched in 2018 and then revamped in 2021. Jerome explains that the original focus was on personas and journey mapping, but the company soon realized it needed a more quantitative approach too. What followed was a broader strategy built around three connected pillars: customer satisfaction, customer centricity, and brand equity. Rather than treating customer experience as a dashboard exercise, Legrand is using those pillars to improve business performance, spread customer knowledge internally, and help teams understand what different customer groups really want, expect, and struggle with.
    One of the strongest themes in this conversation is that feedback without action creates frustration. Jerome is very clear on that point. He explains how Legrand built a "close the loop" process, then went further with what the company calls a "customer room" process. That means identifying pain points and weak signals, routing them to the right internal teams, tracking them with KPIs, and making sure action follows. He shares that 100 percent of detractors are meant to be handled through that closed-loop approach, and that around 80 percent of pain points can be solved as quick wins. That is a refreshing reminder that customer experience only matters when it changes something.
    We also talk about the scale of measuring experience in a global B2B organization. Legrand runs yearly relational surveys for both direct and indirect customers, covering around 50 different personas, and supplements that with transactional surveys across 17 touchpoints. These include digital interactions, training, product launches, and post-case feedback from call centers.
     Jerome explains how Qualtrics became a key part of making that global program work, helping Legrand roll out surveys worldwide and giving teams a way to analyze feedback more easily and consistently.
    Of course, this being a tech podcast recorded at X4, we also get into AI. But what stood out to me is that Jerome does not talk about AI as a magic layer dropped on top of everything. He talks about context. In fact, context becomes one of the defining ideas in our conversation. Capturing feedback is useful, but understanding the environment around that feedback is what allows better decisions to happen. For Jerome, that is where AI becomes more useful, especially when it is trained within the reality of Legrand's complex markets rather than operating as a generic tool.
    Another part of this episode I found especially interesting is how Legrand brings employees into the customer experience process. Jerome shares an example of sending the same surveys to employees and asking them to answer from the customer's point of view.
    By comparing employee perception with actual customer feedback, Legrand can spot gaps, adjust training, and help teams build more empathy. In one case, factory teams thought customers were far less satisfied than they really were, simply because the internal metrics they saw every day focused only on pressure and output.
    Reframing that with real customer satisfaction data, including a product quality satisfaction score of around 95 percent, helped restore pride and perspective.
    This episode is really about something bigger than surveys or software. It is about how a global company can embed customer thinking into the culture, make people feel part of the process, and use data in a way that stays human. Jerome makes a strong case that customer experience in B2B is not separate from performance. It shapes brand perception, trust, internal alignment, and ultimately business outcomes.
    I'd love to hear your thoughts. How is your organization making sure customer feedback leads to action rather than just another report?

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About 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.
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