Proud #mspartner. #dataanalytics #poweraddict #dataproducy. Always helping people get results and improve. Love training #elearning.

Joined January 2012
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AI could dramatically reshape entry-level jobs over the coming years — and that should be a concern for every business leader, not just job seekers ⚠️🤖 Many graduate and junior roles have traditionally served as the foundation for developing future managers, specialists and leaders. As AI increasingly takes on routine tasks in areas such as marketing, finance, law, software development and customer service, organisations face a new challenge: how do you develop talent when the traditional learning ground starts to disappear? In this thought-provoking article, Bernard Marr explores why the biggest risk may not simply be job displacement, but the long-term impact on skills development, workforce planning and the future talent pipeline. Businesses that focus solely on short-term efficiency gains could find themselves facing significant skills shortages in the years ahead. An essential read for leaders thinking about the future of work, AI adoption and building sustainable organisations. Read the full article here: bernardmarr.com/ai-could-wip… #AI #ArtificialIntelligence #FutureOfWork #Leadership #WorkforceDevelopment #DigitalTransformation #SkillsDevelopment #Innovation
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"That void brews anxiety." Fei-Fei Li, Stanford professor and one of the most influential AI researchers, says students are feeling both hope and anxiety about AI. It can give people new agency, but it can also make them fear losing it. The danger is that public discourse is being dominated by hype and extremes.
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Anthropic has warned about the "risks of humans losing control over AI systems" and has called for a plan to slow down or temporarily halt AI development Read more ⬇️ trib.al/KQkwZ9Q
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The creator of Linux just publicly called out the AI hype. Word for word. Linus Torvalds took the stage at Open Source Summit 2026 and said this: "When I see people saying 99% of our code is written by AI, I literally get angry. Because those same people — I can pretty much guarantee — 100% of their code is written by compilers. But they never say that." He is not anti AI. The Linux kernel saw a 20% jump in submissions this release because of AI tools. He uses it. He gets it. His point is something most people are too afraid to say. AI is a productivity tool exactly like compilers were. Compilers boosted programming by 1000x. AI adds another 10x on top. Enormous. But nobody says "the compiler wrote my code." So why are we saying AI wrote it? He also flagged something nobody is talking about. AI is flooding small open source projects with drive-by bug reports. Someone runs a prompt, files a report and disappears when asked for a patch. Maintainers with one or two people are drowning trying to keep up. "Sometimes AI reports a bug and when you ask for more information the person has done that drive-by and does not even answer your question. That is the real burnout issue." And his final warning was the sharpest of all. "People who do not understand the complexity of systems will prompt systems and write processes that will fail." The AI hype crowd is very loud right now. Linus has been building real systems for 35 years. When he talks, engineers listen. Full interview here: thenewstack.io/torvalds-ai-p…
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Miles - Global Digital and Data Product Leader retweeted
🦔Microsoft canceled its internal Claude Code licenses this week after token-based billing made the cost untenable, even for a company with effectively infinite cloud resources. Uber's CTO sent an internal memo warning the company burned through its entire 2026 AI budget in just four months. American AI software prices have jumped 20% to 37%, and GitHub (owned by Microsoft) is dropping flat-rate plans for usage-based billing across its products. My Take The AI subsidy era is ending in real time. The same company that put $13 billion into OpenAI and built the Azure infrastructure powering most of Anthropic's compute just looked at the bill from a competitor's coding tool and decided it was not worth paying. That is not a productivity failure on Anthropic's end. Token-based pricing is forcing every enterprise customer to confront the actual cost of running these models at scale, and the number turns out to be far higher than the flat-rate experiments suggested. This ties directly to my Gemini Flash post yesterday. Anthropic, OpenAI, and Google all raised effective prices in the last six months. Enterprises that built workflows assuming AI costs would keep falling are now watching annual budgets evaporate in months. Two outcomes look likely from here. Either enterprises scale back AI usage to fit budgets, which slows the revenue ramp the labs need to justify their valuations ahead of IPOs, or the labs cut prices and absorb the losses, which makes the unit economics worse at exactly the wrong moment. Both paths land in the same place, the numbers stop working, and somebody has to take the writedown. Hedgie🤗
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More #Ai good news. What's the USMC saying? - "Adapt, Improvise, Overcome".
Artificial intelligence is creating a ‘desperate base of workers who then have no full-time employment’ and they are going from ‘well-compensated positions to piecemeal gig work' in 'horrific condition’, author and journalist Karen Hao says.
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Miles - Global Digital and Data Product Leader retweeted
Artificial intelligence is creating a ‘desperate base of workers who then have no full-time employment’ and they are going from ‘well-compensated positions to piecemeal gig work' in 'horrific condition’, author and journalist Karen Hao says.
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Nice to see this topic coming back up. Not seeing the problem going away anytime soon though. I've friends (senior and middle management) who are in meetings all day and do their "day job" in their own time. Been going on since I started working.
Busyness is killing strategic thinking. Here’s how to prevent that from happening. When your business requires transformation, being busy isn’t the answer. fastcompany.com/91542342/bus… #strategicthinking #business #leadership
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Miles - Global Digital and Data Product Leader retweeted
AI didn’t replace your job. Someone who documents their process, measures the output, automates the repeatable parts, and shows up with receipts became harder to ignore. The advantage isn’t "using AI." The advantage is turning messy work into a system other people can trust using tools like OpenClaw or Codex. That’s the whole game. Start small, think big.
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Well my garden office is finally finished. 24 electrical sockets. Beer fridge. Sofa bed. Desk. Sadly it's the hottest weekend of the year and a fan just aint gonna cut it. Time to fall asleep in garden or garden hehe
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Miles - Global Digital and Data Product Leader retweeted
150,000 Tech Jobs Gone in 4 Months — What Data Leaders Aren’t Telling Their Teams I’ve been in rooms where the decision gets made. Here’s the honest version of the conversation nobody’s publishing ai.plainenglish.io/150-000-t…
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An analysis of 16,000 U.S. customers in California and Virginia shows how further disclosures and permissions can actually reassure customers. s.hbr.org/4unyZZq
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🌐 AI is becoming less visible, and far more powerful. In this video, I explain ambient intelligence, what it is, why it matters, and how it is changing the way we experience AI at work and in everyday environments. Instead of relying on people to open apps, type prompts, or check dashboards, ambient intelligence embeds AI into the environment so it can work quietly in the background. That could mean smarter offices, more responsive hospitals, improved asset tracking, stronger logistics visibility, and better energy efficiency. I explore how AI is shifting from something we actively use to something built into the spaces around us, helping systems become more aware, more responsive, and more useful. If you want to understand the future of AI, smart buildings, workplace technology, logistics, and real-time intelligent systems, this video will give you a clear and practical overview. 🔹 In this video: What ambient intelligence means How ambient intelligence works Where it shows up in business and daily life Why the best AI often removes friction What this tells us about the future of AI #AmbientIntelligence #ArtificialIntelligence #AI #SmartBuildings #FutureOfWork #DigitalTransformation #BusinessTechnology #IntelligentSystems #Logistics #SmartWorkplace
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I do like watching and reading about how other people made a success out of things. The failures, the rejection then proving the naysayers wrong.
Jeff Bezos explains how he decided to quit his job and start Amazon At 30 years old, Jeff Bezos had great Wall Street job working at the hedge fund D.E. Shaw. When he told his boss David Shaw about his idea to start an internet book store, David replied: “I think this is a good idea, but it would be an even better idea for somebody who didn’t already have a good job.” That made logical sense to Jeff, but he ultimately decided that the best way to make a very personal decision like this was to project himself forward to age 80: “When I’m 80 years old, I want to have minimized the number of regrets that I have. I don’t want to be 80 years old, in a quiet moment of reflection, thinking back over my life and cataloging a bunch of major regrets.” And Jeff believes that our biggest regrets are acts of omission: “It’s paths not taken that haunt us. We wonder what would have happened: I loved that person and I never told them, and then they married somebody else.” Once Jeff thought about it this way, the answer was immediately obvious to him: “I knew that when I’m 80, I would never regret trying this thing that I was super excited about and failing. If it failed, fine. I would be very proud of the fact when I’m 80 that I tried. And I also knew that it would always haunt me if I didn’t try.” Jeff believes this regret-minimization framework is a useful lens for any important life decision. Source: @Summit (Nov 2017)
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Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei: "AI will take us to a world where we have very high GDP growth and potentially also very high unemployment and inequality. We've never had a technology that's this disruptive. So the idea that we could have 5% or 10% GDP growth, but also, 10% unemployment, it's not logically inconsistent at all. It's just never happened that way before. And I'm really quite, for those both reasons, excited and worried. I have some engineering leads within Anthropic who have basically said to me, I don't write any code anymore. I just let Opus do the work and I edit it. There are still things for the software engineers to do, right? It's like, even if the software engineers are only doing 10% of it, they still have a job to do or they can take a level up. That's not going to last forever. The models are going to do more and more. " --- From "The Wall Street Journal" YT channel (link in comment)
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Miles - Global Digital and Data Product Leader retweeted
🚨 Anthropic’s Claude team just revealed how to build AI agents with actual memory in under 30 minutes. 24 minutes. Free. Straight from the people who built Claude AI. Honestly, this teaches more practical agent engineering than most expensive vibe-coding courses online. Instead of watching a movie tonight, watch this. Then read the full breakdown below ↓
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Ready to put AI to work for you? 👀 Introducing agents in Jira, now in beta. Assign agents to work, tag them in comments for help, and bring them into your workflows, right where your team is already collaborating. 🤝 Be among the first to try it out: go.atlss.in/f5j0f3
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A man spends 50 years teaching at MIT. He knows his time is running out. So he records one last lecture — everything he knows, distilled into a single hour. He died 5 months later. This is that lecture. The most important hour you'll watch this week. 👇 Bookmark it for later
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Many of us invest time on hacking life. Let’s also be mindful to spend a portion of time actually living and enjoying the life we hack.
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