AI Daily Podcast explores the latest innovations in artificial intelligence technology, where today’s biggest story is not just about more powerful models, but about making AI work inside real organizations. This episode looks at how enterprise adoption is shifting from experimentation to execution, highlighted by monō ai, the new company launched by Lendi Group co-founder David Hyman, which is focused on helping businesses move beyond AI pilots and toward measurable results.
We examine why the real challenge in AI is now deployment rather than capability: governance, security, workflow redesign, compliance, and trust. In regulated industries especially, the next wave of innovation may be driven less by flashy model releases and more by secure, accountable systems that can scale across real business environments.
The episode also looks further into the future with IBM and ETH Zurich’s new 10-year partnership, aimed at developing algorithms that combine AI, classical computing, and quantum systems. Their work on optimization, linear algebra, and complex systems modeling signals how AI innovation is expanding deeper into the infrastructure of computation itself.
We also break down Yann LeCun’s latest reality check on the state of AI. While today’s language models may sound fluent, LeCun argues they still lack real understanding of the physical world, cause and effect, and the consequences of their actions. As AI moves from chatbots to agents that must operate in software, labs, factories, and other real-world settings, that distinction becomes critical.
This episode explores LeCun’s argument that the next major breakthrough may come from “world models” — systems designed to predict outcomes, plan actions, and operate safely in dynamic environments. That shift could reshape where AI research and investment flow next, toward robotics, multimodal learning, simulation, sensory data, manufacturing, scientific discovery, and autonomous experimentation.
Together, these stories reveal AI evolving on two timelines at once: near-term enterprise integration and long-term computational transformation. The common thread is integration itself — embedding AI into business operations, connecting it with new computing architectures, and building systems that do more than sound intelligent: systems that can understand, predict, and create real-world impact.
Links:
David Hyman launches monō ai to scale enterprise AI
IBM Partners with ETH Zurich on 10-Year AI and Quantum Computing Initiative
In lecture at Brown, Yann LeCun discusses a new approach to AI