JavaScript development has transformed dramatically since its inception, mirroring the rapid evolution of the digital world. Every few years, the tools and technologies integral to this field undergo significant changes, challenging developers not only to adapt but to master a whole new set of capabilities. This dynamic landscape of JavaScript development is marked by constant growth and an ever-expanding toolkit, …
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Service Highlight: .NET Development
Choosing the right development platform can greatly enhance your operational efficiency and innovation. Among the many options available, .NET development stands out as a robust and versatile choice, particularly for sectors like healthcare, finance, insurance, and agriculture. With its widespread adoption and notable success across various industries, .NET offers a unique combination of speed, scalability, and developer availability that few …
Gen AI in the Enterprise with Debbie Reynolds
Debbie Reynolds joins Zach on the podcast today. Debbie has been involved in digital transformation for decades across a variety of industries. She found her niche in data privacy, working on the bleeding edge with corporations as large as McDonald’s, helping them prepare for the General Data Protection Regulations (GDPR). Eventually, she started her own consulting firm, focused on counseling companies around data privacy compliance and strategy.
Debbie’s views on Generative AI are, of course, filtered through the lens of privacy. She cautions her clients, big and small alike, to be wary of the confidentiality of the information they input into LLMs. After the info is given to the AI, it can be extracted – even if code is written to suppress it. On the flip side, an absence of information can also be dangerous. Even though AI is a machine, it still holds biases, and these biases can encroach on liberty, run afoul of the laws, and even harm people.
Debbie encourages users to remember that it’s the AI developer’s profit and the user’s risk, so be diligent about the way you use it. Especially with the impending AI Act (which promises some of the stiffest legislative penalties), she prescribes leveraging AI and LLMs for low-risk use cases like summarizing content or drafting emails. In Debbie’s words, AI “is a source of information not a source of truth; you as the human have to bring the truth.”
Service Highlight: Cloud Services [Cloud Agnostic, AWS and Azure]
Cloud services are reshaping business operations, enhancing flexibility and efficiency in our rapidly changing tech environment. As companies transition from outdated systems to modern platforms, swift adaptation is crucial for competitive advantage. Keyhole Software has traversed this evolving landscape for decades, moving from Cobol to Java and now to cutting-edge cloud technologies. Their extensive experience uniquely positions them to streamline …
Gen AI in the Enterprise with Mark Herschberg
Zach hosts tech leader, CTO, MIT professor, and author – Mark Herschberg. Mark’s resume is impressive and storied; highlights include helping HBS develop market theory training software and parachuting into Fortune 500 companies to foster start-up-like innovation. He has also worked extensively with big data and machine learning since the 90s, developing many data-driven projects, some of which use AI.
Currently, Mark is doing a lot of work with Generative AI; he holds patents that use Gen AI and is currently working with a handful of companies whose products are based on AI. Zach and Mark talk about his current projects as well as several issues Gen AI poses to tech and society at large.
They hit on hallucinations and the need for Generative AI that cites its sources. They talk about AI’s impact on the signal-to-noise ratio (misinformation) and how both machines and humans need to be better trained to fact-check information. They also discuss future engineers and the continued need to understand what’s going on under the hood of the software, even if Gen AI makes troubleshooting easier.
