Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?
hey what's going on everybody welcome to the daily ai show today is april 9th 2026 it's my pops birthday so happy birthday pops and uh with us today we have beth andy i'm brian and joining us today for not the first time because i think technically gareth you were on the one where we did the the short interviews right so 600 the 600th episode oh 600 right so just about 100 episodes ago perfect
Chapter 2: What is the significance of AI strategy in healthcare?
uh gareth who uh if you don't know him by uh name or face because it's technically the second time he's been on the show but gareth you've been a long long time supporter uh um one of the instrumental people inside the comments day in and day out and really somebody we we uh all smile and cherish getting to see uh as part of the conversation we always say on the show that
The folks in the comments are vital to this show. We're always reading what's going on there, always watching, in my case, misattributing you versus somebody else or whatever.
Chapter 3: How does DeepMind's AlphaFold impact scientific research?
But the nice part about that is because we get so many comments so fast these days sometimes that it is actually hard to keep up. So welcome. Appreciate you being here. And before we jump into the news and all the fun stuff today, and I have some I have some
fun stuff to talk about for sure uh today gareth why don't you just uh give our audience a quick overview of what you're currently doing i see on the title there you know ai director i've heard a little bit about the current job you have but why don't you just kind of give us a quick quick overview or audience quick overview of what you do in ai right now
Yeah. So I work for a company called Scaled Health. Kind of like not your scaled, but my scaled. So different two scales.
Chapter 4: What advancements are being made with MedGemma in healthcare?
Okay. And yours, is it C or E?
Chapter 5: What is Meta's MuseSpark and its implications for AI?
No K like we have? So everybody calls us Scaled. No, it's spelled correctly. Not correctly, but spelled the normal way. And so I'm a director of AI strategy over there. And so basically what I'm doing is helping the company... Figure out ways to use AI. We're also creating new AI platforms. That's primary.
Chapter 6: How are open-source benchmarks evolving in AI?
My job is creating the AI platforms. So we're doing a couple of cool projects right now. And so, yeah, I mean, that's kind of the gist of what I do.
Hey, Gareth, I have a question. So you can be an entrepreneur, which means hiring lots of people around you, or you can be an intrapreneur in a large organization where you're applying these entrepreneurial innovations that way. Do you have, along with your intrapreneurial development of AI, do you have a team of people that report to you?
Not yet. We are talking about bringing on some additional resources because things are going so well. But I'm very much I feel like my own entrepreneur within a large organization. I have a great boss kind of lets me independently trust what I trust what I do. So.
Yeah, I mean, and that's the model for the future, in my opinion. We have solopreneurs out there now, you know, basically leveraging AI in order to avoid the complexities organizationally of trying to build a business in the early stages.
And similarly, inside major corporations, finding and securing someone like you who can do solopreneur type innovation for the company, I think is a really great model.
Yeah, I think it's the way as well. I mean, I had my own business, do a lot of AI consulting and stuff like that. I hate sales. So it's just a good fit for me to be within a smaller organization, kind of doing the same thing, but with not having to do the sales.
Yeah. It's also a great opportunity for people, right? Like it's a great, it's a great deal for the organization, but there are tons of people who would be delighted are in that position. Like, yup. Give me resources. I will center you for my innovation. A hundred percent.
Yeah, I have a dream job, I think. I mean, this is really my the best job I could ever have.
Very cool. Well, we appreciate you coming in and supporting. I know you're going to be supporting us while I'm out as well. So I appreciate it. You know, we we want to make sure we keep this show humming along and here five days a week.
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Chapter 7: What new developments are happening in AI funding?
well beyond episode 700, which is actually tomorrow.
Chapter 8: How does Ghost Murmur utilize AI for military applications?
Today is episode 699. So I'm going to use that as a weave since we were just talking about sort of being a solo entrepreneur inside a company. Because while not like in the... Last 24 hours, hyper news cycle of AI news for me was watching this amazing interview yesterday. I just I was so glad I turned it on. It was an hour and I wasn't going to do it. I was kind of like post post work.
I'd already done my workout earlier today and I was just in a veg mode. And I was like, I don't know. Honestly, I was sitting on the couch going, do I want to learn about AI right now? Do I want to have that much mental capacity going into this? But I'm glad I did. So you've heard me mention, and I know a lot of people follow her because she's got a big platform on YouTube, but Cleo Abram.
If you don't know Cleo Abram, you shouldn't. She does Huge If True. And for most of the time that she created content on YouTube until 2015, in the last year, I would say. It's very, very cool. It'd be about CERN. It would be about breakthroughs in science. It would be about a whole bunch of different topics and the name huge with an asterisk, if true, right? That was sort of her thing.
She does wonderful interviews. She is prepared to the tilt. She knows and she's ready to have good conversations. Well, recently she started doing these huge interviews and I think she kicked it off with Mark Zuckerberg, if I remember right. She's since had several other prominent people that we would talk about on this show.
Well, two days ago, April 7th, she did an interview with Google DeepMind CEO. Now, I would butcher his name. I'll give it to you. Unless somebody wants to jump in and tell me how to pronounce it. But it's like Demis Hassabis, and I may be saying that wrong.
That's very close. It is Demis Hassabis.
Okay, I'll take that. That's a win in my book, man. That's a Brian check right there. So thank you, Andy. I'm glad I didn't butcher, butcher that. Wow, is that a cool interview? Not only, okay, so this is what I'll just say really quick because really what I wanna say to people is just go watch it, right? It's an hour, but it's actually an hour and five minutes.
Not only is he super cool, you know, and just his where he came from and why the swerve was Gareth is because he went he agreed to have Google Google buy DeepMind because they gave him autonomy. They said, we'll give you the resources and you just keep doing what you're doing. Now, we have seen this story many times with other companies. Sometimes that's true.
Sometimes that comes with asterisks and caveats of, well, we kind of meant that, but we didn't really mean you could go do whatever excites you, you know, whatever. Well, Now going on, what, a decade plus, two decades, whatever it's been since Google bought DeepMind. It seems to be, and at least from his talking about it, who would know better than him?
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