TechFirst with John Koetsier

John Koetsier
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Jan 12, 2021 • 28min

YouTube #1 creator PewDiePie is coming to Facebook

PewDiePie is the top creator on YouTube, with over 107M subscribers and 26B views. Now he’s coming to Facebook, and we’re chatting with the cofounder of the company making it happen. Jellysmack is an influencer platform whose creators have a combined 10 billion monthly video views and reaches 125M unique viewers just in the United States. Co-founder Michael Philippe chats with us about bringing PewDiePie to the platform: why, how, what content, what's changing, what's not, and who he thinks PewDiePie's fans will be on Facebook. We also chat about the changing media/creator/influencer landscape, and what this is growing into.
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Jan 4, 2021 • 24min

Infosec is the new war. Big tech is ground zero. Chatting with Twitter's chief information security officer and Info-Tech Research Group

We’re in a crazy, complex, almost alternate reality now. We see hacking from nation-states, hacking from criminals, hacking for fun, hacking for profit ... and there's probably worse that we don't see. In that context, how does a Chief Information Security Officer function? We chat with Twitter's CISO Rinki Sethi and Info-Tech Research Group analyst Frank Sargent about information security in 2021. Topics:  - Russia  - SolarWinds Orion and Supernova hacks  - Big tech  - Social engineering  - US elections Most importantly, we talk about the stakes if we don't get this right ... to our power systems, to our government processes, to our military secrets, and to the companies that run the infrastructure that our lives depend on.
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Dec 22, 2020 • 18min

How do we make drones as smart as birds or bats? How Intel’s Loihi chip is 100Xing drone capability

Intel's Loihi chip is a neuromorphic chip which tries to emulate the human brain. As far as we've come with convention computing, we are still way behind tiny organisms like insects and birds at understanding the world and adapting to it. Now Intel is applying neuromorphic computing to autonomous drones: drones that can fly themselves at high speed in challenging, obstacle-filled environments. To do, essentially, what birds and bats and even tiny-brained insects can already do with ease. How? Partially, thanks to the Loihi chip,  which implements probabilistic computing to deal with uncertainty and ambiguity in in the natural world.  We chat with Mike Davies, who leads Intel's neuromorphic computing lab about how it all works ... Full transcript will be here: https://johnkoetsier.com/category/tech-first/ My guest works at Intel: https://www.intel.com/ And you can watch the full video on my YouTube channel here: https://youtu.be/c89S-oV-H1U 
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Dec 17, 2020 • 43min

Battery-free IoT: this bluetooth-based tag harvests energy from radio waves

The internet of things sounds great, but has huge issues. Ubiquity is one. Battery power is another. Cost of sensors -- and sensing tech to sense the sensors -- is another. But perhaps ... we're about to solve all the problems. Wiliot makes a super-smart ARM-based chip with onboard sensors that harvests energy from environmental radio waves to enable battery-free IoT. In this episode of TechFirst with John Koetsier, I interview Stephen Statler, a senior VP at Wiliot. The chip uses a custom-built operating system operating on nanowatt power and communicates to the cloud via standard Bluetooth. Cost looks to be an order of magnitude cheaper than RFiD. We chat about what it can sense, how it works, what the use cases are, and much more. Links:  - transcript: https://johnkoetsier.com/category/tech-first/  - Wiliot: https://www.wiliot.com/  - Stephen Statler's podcast, Mr Beacon: https://www.mister-beacon.com
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Dec 15, 2020 • 1h 18min

Deus ex machina: how AI is reshaping us and our world

Think about it: AI chooses your next song in Spotify, your next video in YouTube, your next news item in Flipboard, which updates from friends and family you see on Facebook, and more. Recently I had the opportunity to moderate a discussion between three AI experts: Danny Lange, who led AI at Uber and Amazon before jumping to Unity; Beena Ammanath, Executive Director of Deloitte AI Institute and Founder of Humans for AI; Cindy Gordon, CEO of SalesChoice and a writer at Forbes. We chatted about: How much impact AI has today Surveillance capitalism Reality bubbles Inclusion and normalization of bias Deepfakes and identifying what is real Building responsible AI Please enjoy … along with a new intro style and new intro music!
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Dec 10, 2020 • 34min

Quantum computing, quantum supremacy, and a new Quantum Moore's Law with D-Wave CEO Alan Baratz

What changes when quantum computing is mainstream? Quantum computing is on the far reaches of science, using technology that accesses aspects of matter at quantum scales where physics almost overlaps with magic.  Classical computing is simple: deterministic. You have something, or you have nothing. Quantum computing is complex: you can have something, or nothing, or both something and nothing at the same time. If that’s hard to wrap your head around, you’re in good company. Even Richard Feyman, 1965 Nobel Laureate in Physics and one of the founders of quantum computing famously said, “I think I can safely say that nobody understands quantum mechanics.” But we’re seeing major advancements in quantum computing today. You can now write a program and deploy it on quantum computers from anywhere. And D-Wave says that it's doubling qubits every 2 years. In this episode of TechFirst with John Koetsier we’re chatting with Alan Baratz, president and CEO of D-Wave.
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Dec 7, 2020 • 23min

iPhone 12 Pro's lidar enables 100X faster 3D scanning than conventional photogrammetry

There’s a brand-new sensor in the iPhone 12 Pro, and it’s a big clue about the future of technology.  Already just 1 month after iPhone 12 launch, the phone accounts for 5% of new uploads to Sketchfab, the largest global platform for immersive and interactive 3D models. It's much faster, high-quality especially at room-scale, but not the best at small-scale objects. In this episode of TechFirst with John Koetsier, we chat with Alban Denoyal, the CEO of Sketchfab about why. And about the implications of 3D scanning: where it's used, what it can do, and what it's changing in augmented reality, mixed reality, VR, and more.
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Dec 3, 2020 • 11min

From phone to Star Trek tricorder: This company is working with Qualcomm to put a spectrometer in your phone

I've always wanted a Star Trek tricorder ... a mobile sensor unit that tells you all about the world around you. (Who doesn't?) Now a company in Germany, Trinamix, has partnered with Qualcomm to deliver mobile spectroscopy in mobile phones. No attachments required. All onboard your smartphone. The first applications are in skin care and cosmetics, but the tech can also sense what is on your plate to help you record your diet, or tell you the composition of just about anything around you. In this edition of TechFirst with John Koetsier, we chat with Dr. Wilfried Hermes, the director of IR sensing for Trinamix.
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Nov 30, 2020 • 29min

Deepfakes, synthetic humans, and the future of stardom with Reface.ai cofounder Dima Shvets

Do deepfakes foreshadow the fall of civilization and the end of all truth? Or are they just good fun?  Or is there a third possibility: that they're the foundation of a massive new opportunity to experience what could never be real (for most of us) and a massive new opportunity (for influencers and stars) to essentially become a merger of real person and synthetic being in millions of ways in dozens of languages for billions of people ... simultaneously. In this episode of TechFirst with John Koetsier we chat with Dima Shvets, one of the cofounders of Reface.ai, the viral app with almost 70 million installs. We kick off with the app growth story. We move into the deepfake controversy. And we end with Dima's vision of the future: a merge of real and synthetic beings for brands, stars, and influencers. Video: https://youtu.be/WwB8iHrHPGY Transcript: https://johnkoetsier.com/category/tech-first/
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Nov 26, 2020 • 18min

Are robot chefs the future of food? From Flippy, the burger-making robot, to home cooking, robo-style

Are robot chefs the future of food? We chat with Buck Jordan, the cofounder of Miso Robotics, which makes Flippy … the robot that cooks. We talk about the future of robots in restaurant kitchens, whether this is killing jobs or not, what's available now and what's coming next. We also chat about home kitchens: whether we'll get robots to cook all our food in our homes ... and when that might be affordable. Buck's project: that's about 10 years away.

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