This is AIM’s YouTube channel—where AI takes center stage. Think industry trends, expert interviews, and glimpses into our events. It’s not rocket science (well, sometimes it is), but if you’re into tech or just poking around, we’ve got stuff you’ll actually enjoy.
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Top industry leaders like EY, PwC, Infosys, JPMorganChase, Salesforce, American Express, and many more are aggressively hiring data engineers to power their AI, analytics, and next-gen digital platforms. From financial analytics to customer experience, the demand is skyrocketing across industries.
Whether you're a seasoned pro or an aspiring engineer, this is your moment to step into the spotlight and shape the future of data. Attend the biggest Data Engineering Summit where industry leaders and innovators assemble —
Join us at the Data Engineering Summit 2025 in Bengaluru (May 15-16) - des.analyticsindiamag.com/
#DataEngineering #AIJobs #TechHiring #DES2025 #FutureOfData
1 month ago | [YT] | 308
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Tech pioneer and Naukri.com founder Sanjeev Bikhchandani has sparked a powerful conversation on India’s deep tech landscape, stating that startups alone cannot shoulder the burden of building breakthrough technologies like AI. In a detailed X post, he emphasized that deep tech ventures require a "longer time horizon of over 20-25 years" and massive capital – far beyond the reach of traditional VCs or individual entrepreneurs.
Citing OpenAI’s USD 58 billion funding journey, Bikhchandani explained that early backers were not VCs but deep-pocketed players like Elon Musk and, later, Microsoft. “Creating an Indian equivalent of OpenAI will still need around USD 12 billion – who has that kind of balance sheet?” he asked, pointing to the likes of Reliance Retail, Adani Group, Tata Group, Infosys, and even PSUs like ONGC Foundation as necessary contributors.
With consumer startups dominating headlines, Bikhchandani urged a shift in focus, highlighting the importance of technologies that solve societal challenges and create lasting impact. “The most impactful tech becomes invisible over time—like electricity, semiconductors, cloud computing,” he noted, adding that only long-term or perpetual capital can power such innovation. “It can’t just be the responsibility of the startup world to build deep tech… this needs to be thought through,” he concluded.
#DeepTechIndia #SanjeevBikhchandani #AIInvestment #IndianStartups #TechForImpact
1 month ago | [YT] | 523
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Delhi NCR is quickly becoming India’s next big GCC powerhouse. With major players like Microsoft, Google, and Ericsson setting up cutting-edge operations in Gurugram and Noida, the region is transforming into a hub for tech, innovation, and high-value jobs.
This video breaks down why global companies are choosing Delhi NCR, what it means for jobs and salaries, and how it could shape the future of work in India. Watch now to get the full story!
#delhincr #delhitech #gurugram #noida #delhistartups
1 month ago | [YT] | 35
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In a rare public appearance at Alibaba Group’s Hangzhou campus, co-founder Jack Ma urged technologists to steer AI toward serving—not superseding—humankind. “We’re not trying to make machines more like humans. We’re trying to make them understand humans, to think like us and do things we can’t,” Ma told Alibaba employees, reaffirming his long-held belief that AI should meet human needs and protect livelihoods.
Once likening AI to love, the Chinese billionaire emphasized that the responsibility lies with developers to ensure technology preserves humanity’s essence. “Technology isn’t just about conquering the stars and the oceans,” he said. “It’s about preserving the spark among all of us.”
Alibaba has made bold strides in AI, launching its own model series Qwen, rivaling the likes of OpenAI and China’s Deepseek. CEO Eddie Wu earlier declared the company’s new north star as artificial general intelligence (AGI)—an ambitious aim to create AI with human-level intellect. After years out of the limelight following his run-in with China’s regulatory forces, Ma’s reappearance—and his meeting with President Xi Jinping earlier this year—signals a renewed era of innovation and support for the private sector. His message is clear: the future of AI must be rooted in empathy, not ego.
1 month ago | [YT] | 355
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Super Early Bird passes expire TODAY for Cypher 2025!
The price goes up by 150% after this—no kidding.
Lock in your spot at India’s biggest AI summit now - cypher.analyticsindiamag.com/
#Cypher2025 #MeetMeAtCypher
1 month ago | [YT] | 49
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California-based startup nEye Systems has raised $58 million in a funding round led by CapitalG, Alphabet’s growth-stage fund. Backed by tech giants including Microsoft’s M12, Micron Technology, and NVIDIA, NEye is developing optical circuit switches—chips that transmit data using light instead of electricity, drastically cutting down energy consumption.
“Our goal isn’t just energy savings—it’s flexibility,” said Ming Wu, NEye co-founder and professor at University of California, Berkeley. The startup's innovation enables AI data centers to rewire themselves on the fly, optimizing performance based on real-time software demands. This mirrors the proprietary tech that Google once used to outpace NVIDIA with its internal AI supercomputer—now being made available to the broader market by NEye.
James Luo, general partner at CapitalG, believes NEye’s chip “is as applicable to traditional data centers as it is to AI,” underlining the versatile edge the technology brings. While still in the prototype phase, NEye plans to roll out production samples next year—marking a significant milestone in the race to power the future of AI infrastructure.
With $72.5M raised to date and support from the industry’s heaviest hitters, NEye is positioning itself to light up the data center world—literally.
1 month ago | [YT] | 187
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With the rise of AI tools like Replit, Cursor, Windsurf, and Lovable, the software engineering world is in flux—some calling it the beginning of the end for traditional coding. While AI-generated code is increasingly handling boilerplate tasks, many fear a future where engineers become obsolete. But voices like Todd McKinnon, CEO of Okta, call such fears “laughable,” predicting more engineers in five years, not fewer: “They’ll be building on top of current AI-driven systems,” he said.
OpenAI's Sam Altman sees a middle path—AI will make engineers exponentially more productive before potentially reducing the number of roles. Dario Amodei of Anthropic and Sridhar Vembu of Zoho echo the idea that AI could soon take over 90% of coding, especially the repetitive kind. But that’s not the whole story. As Satya Nadella points out, engineers are in high demand beyond tech—healthcare, finance, manufacturing, and more.
Google’s Sundar Pichai insists human talent is irreplaceable, especially “superstar engineers” skilled in AI, quantum computing, and cybersecurity. Despite a tighter hiring climate, Google still boasts a 90% offer acceptance rate. As François Chollet (creator of Keras) put it: “Code is largely worthless… problem-solving is where the value is.” AI isn’t replacing engineers—it’s evolving their roles.
Forget “vibe engineering”—real software engineering still demands system design, reliability, and scalability. As Gartner’s 2024 report suggests, 80% of engineers must upskill by 2027. In India, where many engineers are service-focused, this shift could be existential—or an opportunity to lead a new generation of AI-powered development. The engineer of the future? One person managing a fleet of AI coding agents.
Read the complete article to know more- analyticsindiamag.com/ai-features/we-will-need-10x…
1 month ago | [YT] | 113
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When Artisan launched its audacious “Stop Hiring Humans” billboard campaign across San Francisco, it didn’t just catch eyes — it ignited a firestorm. Designed to stand out in a sea of tech jargon, the intentionally provocative message positioned Artisan’s AI SDR, Ava, as the future of sales development. What started with a single misspelled billboard (“Stop Hirring Humans”) quickly snowballed into viral outrage, 35,000 Reddit, Inc. upvotes, media frenzy, and even death threats.
Despite the backlash, Artisan doubled down on the controversy, with CEO Jaspar Carmichael-Jack posting the campaign on r/mildlyinfuriating, sparking millions of impressions. “We wanted to draw eyes and spark interest... while driving a bit of rage with the wider public,” Jaspar admitted. Their strategy worked — Artisan was soon flooded with sales meetings, made headlines in top media houses and saw over $2M in new ARR.
Beyond the noise, the campaign paid off — Artisan is now one of the fastest-growing AI companies by brand search, per Ahrefs. “70% of the people I meet in San Francisco now know Artisan. Before it was 5%,” says Jaspar. Though the messaging stirred controversy, it struck gold with their actual audience: tech companies looking to automate grunt work, not replace humans entirely.
In the end, Artisan clarified: “The truth is, we love humans.” The mission isn’t dystopia — it’s about freeing humans from tedious tasks. Ava was built to take care of what people don’t want to do, not take their place. Bold, risky, and a little chaotic — Artisan’s campaign is a masterclass in standing out in tech’s loudest city.
1 month ago | [YT] | 106
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Bengaluru has moved far beyond being India’s tech labour haven—today, it stands as the undisputed innovation capital, with over 400 Fortune 500 companies making it their home. From AI Centres of Excellence to digital-first breakthroughs, the city’s Global Capability Centres (GCCs) are transforming the way the world’s biggest corporations operate.
“The primary reason for Bengaluru, in my opinion, is the access to a great talent pool here,” says Sreekanth Jayabalan, VP & CIO at Kimberly-Clark, which recently set up an AI CoE in the city. Their Bangalore-built AI platform Maestro is already saving millions globally.
Roche is flipping the traditional GCC script—“Our centre is built primarily for innovation,” shares Raja Jamalamadaka, Country Head, Roche IS India. At Roche, innovation isn’t an add-on—it’s the core, leading to breakthrough products and even patent filings. And at Daimler Truck AG Innovation Centre India (DTICI), CEO Raghavendra Vaidya shares their game-changing shift: “We decided that the accountability of making data and AI and the business benefits of that will be driven from Bangalore.”
From Walmart to Goldman Sachs, Target, IBM, and BlackRock, the message is clear—Bengaluru isn’t just where the work gets done. It’s where the future is being built.
#BengaluruInnovation #GlobalCapabilityCentres #AILeadership #FutureOfWork #BuiltInBangalore
1 month ago | [YT] | 278
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OpenAI, led by Sam Altman, is reportedly in talks to acquire io Products, the secretive AI device startup co-founded by former Apple design legend Jony Ive, in a deal valued at $500 million. According to The Information, the two have been collaborating since 2023 on a revolutionary AI-powered personal device — one that could rival smartphones, yet be “not a phone.”
Ive, the design visionary behind Apple’s most iconic products like the iPhone and Apple Watch, has brought in key former Apple execs to build this futuristic hardware, including Tang Tan and Evans Hankey. The goal? To create a screenless AI assistant capable of handling tasks like booking travel or identifying plants from images — going far beyond what today’s smartphones can do.
The move could put OpenAI on a collision course with Apple itself, which has been heavily promoting AI features but has stumbled in execution. As one Apple insider reportedly admitted, delays in rolling out AI updates to Siri have been “ugly” and left some employees “embarrassed.” With OpenAI now sitting on a $300 billion valuation and $40 billion in fresh funding, this acquisition could mark a new chapter — where design, AI, and futuristic hardware finally converge.
#openai #jonyive #aidevice #futureoftech #aihardware
1 month ago | [YT] | 86
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