The official Twitter handle for The CTO Advisor a Advisor Bench Company

Joined August 2017
168 Photos and videos
The CTO Advisor retweeted
We are all set for keynote at #Googleio in Mountain View! Sitting here with @BBlosen, @CTOAdvisor, and @rseroter!
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The CTO Advisor retweeted
"Your agent just deleted prod. Now what?" AI agents are operating at scale — and when they go wrong, the blast radius isn't one file. It's entire buckets. Woon Ho Jung, CTO of @ClumioInc, breaks down why replication won't save you and what air-gapped backup across AWS and GCP actually looks like in practice. One policy. One portal. Two clouds. And a recovery point that no agent can touch. thectoadvisor.com/clumio-dat… Full conversation on the CTO Advisor podcast.
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The CTO Advisor retweeted
#googlecloudnext analyst reception fun - indie analysts galore! /cc @samcharrington @sarbjeetjohal @SanjMo @MaribelLopez @CTOAdvisor
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The CTO Advisor retweeted
Three musketeers @ the #googlecloudnext Analyst Reception last night. /cc @CTOAdvisor @samcharrington
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The CTO Advisor retweeted
Ran into @bocanuts at the show. I asked him if he had any AMD Strix Halo under that hat.
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The CTO Advisor retweeted
Roadtrip work life.
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The CTO Advisor retweeted
We are at @Articul8_AI as part of our #CTOARoadtrip talking the impact of Claude Code and Openclaw on enterprise AI adoption and speed.
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The CTO Advisor retweeted
We are making road trip stops to Equinix and Articul8 this week. I’m looking forward to learning more about their AI solutions heading into GTC.
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The CTO Advisor retweeted
The flying cloud has seen some things. We checked off three more states on this #CTOARoadtrip -Kentucky -Kansas -Utah
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The CTO Advisor retweeted
The CTO Advisor Road Trip 2026 ⁦@CTOAdvisor
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The CTO Advisor retweeted
When you open source data good things happen!!! We only dropped the HyperFRAME Research Lens AI stack data yesterday and already it is being picked up by the community. Check out my dear friend @thectoadvisor @CTOAdvisor recent blog 👇 thectoadvisor.com/blog/2026/…
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The CTO Advisor retweeted
One of the things people don’t always realize about the CTO Advisor Flying Cloud is that it isn’t just a mobile studio. It’s our home. Yes, it’s where we record interviews. Yes, it’s where we produce sponsored content. Yes, it’s where I work while driving across the country. But when companies or customers step inside the Airstream to do an interview, they’re not walking into a production set. They’re stepping into our living room. That changes the tone of the conversation. The interviews feel different. More relaxed. More honest. More like two practitioners talking through what’s actually happening in the field. Melissa plays a big role in that atmosphere. If you’ve ever been around The CTO Advisor at events, you know people ask two questions: “Where’s the Airstream?” and “Is Melissa here?” The Flying Cloud works because it’s personal. It isn’t a corporate studio. It’s our home on the road. And when vendors and customers sit down with us inside it, the conversation reflects that. #CTOARoadTrip @MrsCTO
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The CTO Advisor retweeted
Today was a good day. We got to interview the Town Manager of the Town of Vail during our #CTOARoadTrip One of the best AI stories I’ve heard so far.
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The CTO Advisor retweeted
Not AI. This is my office for the next couple of days.
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The CTO Advisor retweeted
The CTO Advisor Road Trip isn’t a vacation. It’s 1,300 miles down. And we’re only halfway to California. That means: • Client deliverables from truck stops • Strategy calls somewhere between state lines • Editing decks in the passenger seat • Planning interview shoots inside an Airstream Tomorrow? Dry runs for recording interviews. Testing audio in a rolling aluminum echo chamber. And washing 1,300 miles of road grime off the rig — before we drive another 1,300. This is the part people don’t see about “location freedom.” It’s not less work. It’s compressed work. Stacked work. Chosen work. We’re parked in one of the most beautiful parts of the country — the kind of view people take PTO to see. And I’m here… building. Shipping client outcomes. Creating content. Designing conversations that matter. Entrepreneurship isn’t about escaping responsibility. It’s about deciding which hard you’re willing to carry. 1,300 miles in. 1,300 to go. Wouldn’t trade it. I love my job. @MrsCto
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The CTO Advisor retweeted
The first content stop for #CTOARoadTrip is along the Vail Pass in Colorado. We’ll sit down with @KamiwazaAI @HPE to talk about their smart cities AI project with the Town of Vail.
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The CTO Advisor retweeted
Day 5 — Road Trip Today was a beautiful day, with the sun beaming down on my face. Keith is doing such a great job driving, making the journey smooth and peaceful. It was one of those days that turns into a great memory — simple, sweet, and filled with gratitude. @CTOAdvisor
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The CTO Advisor retweeted
Black History Month — Tech Edition | Legacy Day This month, I’ve been on the road. Literally. Driving across the country for the CTO Advisor Road Trip — meeting founders, executives, platform teams, and enterprise leaders shaping the future of technology. And as I’ve been driving, I’ve been thinking about something. A kid from Englewood, Chicago doesn’t end up in enterprise boardrooms, cloud strategy sessions, and AI infrastructure debates by accident. That path was paved. Paved by: Engineers who proved they belonged in rooms where they weren’t expected. Mathematicians who made mission-critical systems possible. Executives who cracked boardroom ceilings in the 70s and 80s. Founders who built platforms instead of waiting for invitations. Community builders who refused to pull the ladder up behind them. Every name we highlighted this month did more than achieve. They widened the road. When Ken Coleman entered executive leadership in eras where representation was rare, he widened the road. When John Thompson operated at the governance layer of Microsoft, he widened the road. When Kelsey Hightower demystified Kubernetes for operators, he widened the road. When Kimberly Bryant built pipeline infrastructure for young Black technologists, she widened the road. When Morgan DeBaun built distribution rails instead of waiting for legacy media access, she widened the road. None of them just climbed. They left lanes open. This road trip I’m on — professionally and literally — exists because others laid asphalt in places where there wasn’t pavement. Black history in technology isn’t a side story. It’s a structural story. It’s hardware. It’s math. It’s governance. It’s capital. It’s community. It’s leadership. And for a kid from Englewood to navigate enterprise infrastructure at scale — that’s not individual achievement. That’s generational contribution. The road is wider than it used to be. And the responsibility now is simple: Don’t narrow it. Keep building lanes. @MrsCto
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The CTO Advisor retweeted
I’m told I missed posting this to X yesterday. Black History Month — Tech Edition | Day 26 Today we highlight Fred Swaniker. Fred Swaniker is the founder of African Leadership University and African Leadership Group, institutions designed to develop the next generation of African leaders. This isn’t just an education story. It’s infrastructure. Swaniker’s thesis is bold: If you want to transform a continent’s economic future, you don’t start with capital. You start with leadership density. Enterprise IT professionals understand this intuitively. Technology doesn’t scale without: •Capable operators •Strategic thinkers •Ethical decision-makers •Long-term institutional builders You can import hardware. You can license software. You can attract capital. But leadership must be cultivated. Swaniker built institutions around that idea — not short programs, not bootcamps, but ecosystems designed to compound over decades. In technology, we talk about platform effects. Education is the ultimate platform. The lesson for today’s generation: Infrastructure is not just compute, capital, or code. It’s people prepared to lead at scale. Fred Swaniker isn’t just educating students. He’s architecting future governance, entrepreneurship, and innovation capacity. That’s long-horizon systems thinking. More tomorrow.
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The CTO Advisor retweeted
Black History Month — Tech Edition | Day 27 Today we highlight John W. Thompson. John Thompson served as CEO of Symantec and later became Chairman of the Board at Microsoft. That trajectory matters. He didn’t just build technology. He governed it. Thompson operated at the level where: •Cybersecurity becomes corporate strategy •Risk becomes board oversight •Leadership succession shapes company direction •Capital allocation determines platform futures When Satya Nadella became CEO of Microsoft, Thompson was Chairman. That means he wasn’t reacting to transformation — he was helping guide it. Enterprise IT professionals often focus on: •Architecture decisions •Vendor strategy •Cloud adoption •AI integration But there’s another layer above all of that: Governance. Boards don’t debate container runtimes. They debate: •Risk tolerance •Competitive positioning •Long-term investment bets •Ethical responsibility Thompson represents something rare: Deep technical roots translated into institutional authority at the highest levels of the industry. And historically, Black representation at that level in major tech companies has been extraordinarily limited. The lesson for today’s enterprise technologists: Technical excellence opens doors. Strategic leadership keeps them open. John Thompson didn’t just participate in the technology industry. He helped steer it. Tomorrow, we close the series.
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