711 episodios
- In today’s episode of AI Daily Podcast, we look at a major shift in artificial intelligence innovation: AI is no longer just about headline-grabbing models—it is becoming infrastructure. From enterprise strategy to open-source development, the story is now about how institutions are reorganizing around AI as a practical, deployable tool.
We begin with Wipro’s expanding AI bench, a sign that enterprise AI is moving beyond experimentation and into real implementation. Instead of a dramatic hiring surge, the company is focusing on readiness, cost discipline, specialized talent, and upskilling. It is a clear example of how AI progress now depends not only on better technology, but also on workforce planning, margins, and operational execution.
We also explore Linus Torvalds’ comments on AI coding tools and why they matter. As the creator of Linux, his view carries weight across the software world. His practical acceptance of AI-assisted coding—even with its flaws—signals that these tools are becoming normalized across the ecosystems that power modern software and AI development.
Then we turn to a striking example of AI-driven hardware design: Northwestern University’s experimental drone, Phantom Twist. Designed to be less noticeable to human observers, the drone uses spinning motion to disrupt visual perception rather than relying on cloaking materials. Researchers reportedly used AI optimization to test thousands of possible designs, showing how AI can help engineer physical machines around flight performance, visibility, and human perception.
Finally, we examine how AI is reshaping competition in digital platforms. Under Europe’s Digital Markets Act, Google is being required to open parts of Android and Search access to competitors, including third-party AI assistants and rival AI-powered search services. This highlights a critical reality of the AI era: competition is not just about models, but also about distribution, defaults, platform control, and ecosystem access.
Listen in for a deeper look at how AI is moving from hype to integration—transforming enterprise operations, open-source development, hardware design, and the balance of power in digital markets.
Links:
Wipro Prepares for Large Deals, Avoids Major Hiring Push
Linus Torvalds will "loudly ignore" anyone criticising AI code in Linux: "Fork it. Or just walk away"
This spinning drone hides in plain sight using a visual illusion
Taxpayer Watchdog Slams EU's Latest Tech Overreach AI Daily Podcast: Sovereign AI, Industrial Automation, and the New AI Infrastructure Race
16/07/2026 | 22 minAI Daily Podcast breaks down the latest innovations in artificial intelligence technology, where the focus is shifting from flashy model releases to the infrastructure, capital, and real-world systems that will define the next era of AI.
In this episode, we explore Airbus’ major multi-year deal with French cloud provider Scaleway, a move that shows how sovereign AI is becoming a real operational strategy. With Airbus already working with Mistral on customized AI for aerospace and defense, the company is building a fully European AI stack—linking European models, European cloud infrastructure, and industrial deployment in some of the world’s most regulated environments.
We also examine why this matters far beyond aviation. As Airbus embeds AI into aircraft design, engineering, production, enterprise systems, and eventually military and certified aviation use cases, success depends on more than performance. Security, legal jurisdiction, service continuity, and trusted infrastructure are becoming essential. With dozens of critical applications set to migrate in the coming years, this signals AI’s transition into mission-critical industry.
The episode also looks at the financial side of AI innovation through Warren Buffett’s growing investment in Alphabet. Berkshire Hathaway’s roughly $30 billion position suggests rising confidence that Google can remain one of the long-term winners in the costly AI infrastructure race. It’s a powerful sign that in today’s market, AI leadership may depend as much on deep capital, sustained investment, and durable competitive advantages as on technical breakthroughs.
On the industrial front, we cover how RAINBOWCO’s GENMA brand is advancing port automation through its GENSMART platform. By combining AI dispatching, sensor fusion, digital twins, equipment management, and data interoperability, the system is helping automated container cranes operate safely and efficiently in complex physical environments. This is a strong example of embodied AI moving into real commercial scale.
We also highlight how AI is spreading through global logistics networks, with deployments and retrofit projects across multiple international markets. These developments show that AI is no longer confined to software interfaces—it is becoming an operating layer for physical infrastructure, capable of predicting failures, optimizing workflows, and improving performance across entire industrial systems.
Finally, we turn to Appian and the rise of low-code automation, AI copilots, agent-building tools, and intelligent document processing. If industrial platforms like GENSMART show AI transforming ports and heavy operations, Appian represents the parallel trend of making AI easier to deploy across enterprise software and office workflows. Together, these stories show that the most important AI innovations today are about deployment, integration, governance, and operational impact at scale.
Tune in to AI Daily Podcast for a sharp, practical look at how artificial intelligence is reshaping infrastructure, industry, enterprise automation, and the global balance of technological power.
Links:
Airbus Signs Cloud Deal With Scaleway to Power Secure AI and Defense Applications
Warren Buffett Regrets Alphabet ‘Mistake’—Here’s What He Got Wrong
Стратегическое обновление бренда GENMA приносит ощутимые результаты -- крупные заказы и международное признание технологий автоматизации
Appian Corporation- AI Daily Podcast explores how artificial intelligence innovation is moving beyond eye-catching demos and into the systems, industries, and infrastructure that shape everyday life.
In this episode, we break down why InterSystems’ recognition in Gartner’s 2026 Magic Quadrant matters as a sign that AI is becoming embedded in core healthcare operations. We look at how platforms like IntelliCare reflect a broader shift toward workflow-level AI designed to reduce administrative burden, improve coordination, and function within regulated enterprise environments.
We also examine why success in enterprise AI is no longer just about model performance. In sectors like healthcare, interoperability, compliance, governance, and deployment flexibility are becoming just as critical as intelligence itself. That theme is contrasted by the controversy around Meta’s AI glasses, where the challenge is not technical capability, but public acceptance, privacy, consent, and trust.
The episode also covers TomTom’s pivot toward AI mapping and agentic location systems, showing how spatial intelligence is becoming a key layer for logistics, automation, and real-world enterprise decision-making. It’s a strong example of how AI is transforming legacy technology sectors into smarter operational platforms.
Beyond products and platforms, we look at two forces shaping the next phase of AI adoption: education and infrastructure. Harvard Business School’s new online AI course for managers highlights the growing importance of AI literacy among business leaders, while Australia’s focus on pairing data centre growth with renewable energy underscores the reality that scaling AI depends on power, cooling, regulation, and long-term planning.
Tune in to AI Daily Podcast for a sharp, practical look at the latest developments in artificial intelligence technology, and why the future of AI will be defined not just by breakthroughs in models, but by usefulness, accountability, and real-world deployment.
Links:
InterSystems EHR features in Gartner’s Magic Quadrant
Lorde Said What We're All Thinking About Meta's AI Glasses, And Celebs Like Kylie Jenner Could Take Note
TomTom logs Q2 profit as lower expenses offset weaker revenue
AI Essentials for Business (Online), Harvard University
AI Office Urged to Fulfill PM's Renewable Energy Promise - AI Daily Podcast explores a major shift in artificial intelligence innovation: the future of AI is no longer defined only by who builds the smartest model, but by who can drive everyday adoption, control key infrastructure, and secure the data that powers next-generation systems.
In this episode, we look at how generative AI is beginning to disrupt long-standing digital business models. Baidu’s reported ad pressure suggests users may be moving away from traditional search and toward AI chatbots, signaling a deeper transformation in the internet economy. The conversation highlights how success in AI now depends on product fit, distribution, and habit formation just as much as technical capability.
We also examine the physical side of the AI boom through a proposed large-scale data centre project in Australia. The story reveals that AI is not just software running in the cloud, it relies on vast real-world infrastructure with major implications for land use, energy demand, water consumption, traffic, and public policy. As AI scales, communities and governments are increasingly being forced to weigh its economic promise against sustainability and local impact.
The episode also covers a growing challenge inside organizations: getting people to actually use AI tools after launch. As businesses move from experimentation to deployment, many are discovering that the hard part is not installing AI, but embedding it into daily workflows. Trust, training, usability, manager support, and workflow redesign are emerging as decisive factors in whether AI creates real value or quietly stalls through low adoption and employee resistance.
Finally, we discuss why biometric data from health wearables is becoming a critical front in the AI race. Concerns around China-made connected devices point to a larger issue in AI innovation: the companies and countries that control high-quality real-world data may gain a major strategic advantage. From privacy and governance to supply-chain security and healthcare AI, this story shows that the future of artificial intelligence may depend as much on trusted data pipelines as on model breakthroughs.
Tune in to AI Daily Podcast for a sharp look at the latest AI technology news shaping the digital economy, enterprise transformation, infrastructure policy, and the global battle over data, trust, and competitive advantage.
Links:
Why is Baidu stock sliding today?
Plumpton questions raised
Webinar to tackle why workplace change fails to stick
Are your hearing aid and fitness tracker spying on you? - AI Daily Podcast explores the latest innovations in artificial intelligence through two defining themes: practical intelligence and public trust. In this episode, we look at how AI is moving beyond experimentation and becoming real infrastructure in workplaces, healthcare systems, and public communication.
We begin with new research from Queensland University of Technology, where machine learning models were used to predict musculoskeletal injury risk among 810 office workers across nine body regions. Rather than focusing only on posture or workstation setup, the study incorporated a wider set of factors, including sleep, workload, height, social support, job control, and emotional demands. The result points to a more predictive and personalized future for workplace health, where AI could help organizations prevent injuries before they happen.
The episode also examines a growing concern around AI-generated deception. At a government social media summit in Johannesburg, public leaders warned that deepfakes and synthetic media are becoming increasingly realistic, accessible, and harmful to public trust. As AI-generated content becomes harder to verify, the challenge is no longer only what AI can create, but how institutions and citizens can trust what they see and hear.
We also highlight Lantern’s growth as a powerful example of AI innovation delivering value inside the operational core of healthcare. The specialty care navigation company now serves roughly 12 million people through more than 1,000 employers, using AI to speed up claims pricing, shorten physician credentialing, and automate call summaries for care advocates. This reflects a larger shift in AI adoption: from flashy tools and demos toward systems that reduce friction, improve workflows, and deliver measurable efficiency at scale.
Across these stories, a bigger pattern comes into focus. AI is becoming most useful when it is specialized, context-aware, and deeply embedded into real-world systems. At the same time, its risks grow when generative tools make deception cheaper and easier to scale. Tune in to AI Daily Podcast for a sharp look at how AI innovation is reshaping health, governance, and industry—and why the future of AI will depend not just on better models, but on trust, usability, and responsible deployment.
Links:
Pain in the neck may be due to more than bad posture – work-related injury AI study
South African government communicators discuss artificial intelligence and public trust at Johannesburg summit
Lantern Doubles Workforce and Expands Dallas HQ as Employers Seek to Rein in Healthcare Costs
Más podcasts de Tecnología
Podcasts a la moda de Tecnología
Acerca de AI Daily
Everything that's happening in the rapidly changing world of Artificial Intelligence, OpenAI, Bard, Bing, Midjourney, and more.
Sitio web del podcastEscucha AI Daily, iSenaCode Live y muchos más podcasts de todo el mundo con la aplicación de radio.es

Descarga la app gratuita: radio.es
- Añadir radios y podcasts a favoritos
- Transmisión por Wi-Fi y Bluetooth
- Carplay & Android Auto compatible
- Muchas otras funciones de la app
Descarga la app gratuita: radio.es
- Añadir radios y podcasts a favoritos
- Transmisión por Wi-Fi y Bluetooth
- Carplay & Android Auto compatible
- Muchas otras funciones de la app


AI Daily
Escanea el código,
Descarga la app,
Escucha.
Descarga la app,
Escucha.
AI Daily: Podcasts del grupo






























