Everyday AI Podcast – An AI and ChatGPT Podcast - EP 322: NVIDIA Speaks on 6G and AI - The Future of Communication in Your Pocket

Episode Date: July 25, 2024

Win a free year of ChatGPT or other prizes! Find out out.The future of communication might look a whole lot different than it does today. Why? More devices. Faster responses. AI-powered knowledge. NVI...DIA's Senior Vice President - Telecom Ronnie Vasishta joins us to give us the scoop. Newsletter: Sign up for our free daily newsletterMore on this Episode: Episode PageJoin the discussion: Ask Jordan and Ronnie questions on 6G and AIRelated Episode:EP 184: On-Device AI: What it is and do we need it? What no one’s talking aboutEp 264: AI-Powered Devices: Do we actually need them?Upcoming Episodes: Check out the upcoming Everyday AI Livestream lineupWebsite: YourEverydayAI.comEmail The Show: info@youreverydayai.comConnect with Jordan on LinkedInTopics Covered in This Episode:1. Edge AI and on-device large language models.2. Intersection of AI and 6G3. Role of NVIDIA in 6G and AI4. Learning Opportunities and the Value of 6G5. Future communication possibilitiesTimestamps:01:35 Daily AI news04:30 About Ronnie, NVIDIA senior VP leading telecom tech initiatives.08:12 5G brings faster communication speeds, enabling various applications.12:39 AI essential for seamless network and services.14:27 Evolution of 5G and AI in networks.17:38 Telecom operators investing in AI for services.26:05 Concerns about technology capabilities and network challenges.29:31 Advances in 5G network capabilities and monetization.32:10 AI will transform telecommunications for businessesKeywords:Ronnie Vasishta, Edge AI, Large Language Models, Communication, Work, Prime Prompt Polish Chat GPT Course, On-device Language Translation, Visual Collaboration, Autonomous Vehicles, Network Capacity, Technological Demands, Internet-connected Large Language Models, Humanoid Robots, Computer Vision, Everyday AI Podcast, 6G, AI News Updates, AI Industry, NVIDIA, Telecom Infrastructure, Telecommunications Network, 5G, Improved Coverage, Infrastructure Changes, Intelligent Connectivity, Spectral Efficiency, Bottleneck Period, Generative AI, Business Models, Innovative Services.Send Everyday AI and Jordan a text message. (We can't reply back unless you leave contact info) Start Here ▶️Not sure where to start when it comes to AI? Start with our Start Here Series. You can listen to the first drop -- Episode 691 -- or get free access to our Inner Cricle community and all episodes: StartHereSeries.com Also, here's a link to the entire series on a Spotify playlist. 

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is the Everyday AI Show, the everyday podcast where we simplify AI and bring its power to your fingertips. Listen daily for practical advice to boost your career, business, and everyday life. Meet Firefly AI Assistant, now live in Adobe Firefly, the all-in-one creative AI studio. Just describe what you want to create and the assistant handles the rest, orchestrating multi-step workflows across Photoshop, Premiere Express, and more in one conversational interface. You direct the outcome. The assistant accelerates execution. We're on our phones kind of all day, right?
Starting point is 00:00:49 Communicating with the rest of the world, talking to our colleagues. There's so much that we can accomplish on the go now. But what about when we think about the future and AI, right? There's a good chance many of us are on a 5G network right now, but what about 6G? What comes next for the future of mobile, the future of. the future of AI and how those two areas intersect. We're going to be talking about that today with one of the leaders in the industry from Nvidia about this exact thing.
Starting point is 00:01:21 So I'm extremely excited for today's episode, 6G and AI, the future of communication in your pockets. All right, what's going on, y'all? My name's Jordan Wilson, and this is Everyday AI, and this is for you. This is your daily guide on how to learn what's happening in the world of artificial intelligence and how we can use generative AI to grow our companies and to grow our careers. So if that's you, you are in the right place. If you're listening on the podcast, appreciate it.
Starting point is 00:01:49 As always, make sure to check out your show notes for more on today's conversation because we're going to be recapping all of the important takeaways in our newsletter that you can get right now if you go to your everyday AI.com, sign up for free. So before we get started on today's conversation, let's talk about what's going on in the AI news. So first, regulators in the U.S. and Europe have united to protect competition in the AI industry. So the Federal Trade Commission, the FTC, an international antitrust enforcer from the EU, and the U.S. Department of Justice, have jointly committed to safeguarding competition within the rapidly evolving AI ecosystem. So this initiative that they released a joint statement on aims to ensure fair and honest treatment for both consumers and businesses
Starting point is 00:02:36 addressing the significance competition risk posed by AI. So this joint statement, and you can read that in today's newsletter, it emphasizes vigilance against tactics that could undermine fair competition or lead to deceptive practices within the AI landscape. All right. Our next piece of AI news, we just slipped this into the newsletter yesterday, but missed it for the podcast. But Mistral has released a flagship new AI model called Large 2,
Starting point is 00:03:02 challenging open AI and meta. So Mistral has unveiled its latest AI model, Large 2, which the company claims rivals the latest models from OpenAI and Meta in terms of cogeneration, mathematics, and reasoning. The release of Large 2 comes literally just a day after Meta launched its own open source large model, Lama 31405B, and right after OpenAI said fine-tuning on its new GPT40 mini model would be free through September. So large to boast superior performance in code generation and math, achieving this with only 123 billion parameters compared to Lama 3-1s, 405 billion, and the old school, quote-unquote, GPT4, that had 1.8 trillion parameters. So these models are getting smaller and more powerful.
Starting point is 00:03:51 And the model is available on platforms like Google's vertex AI, Amazon Bedrock, Azure AI, IBM Watson X, et cetera, and on Mistral's own website. All right, last but not least, here's a funny one. So Google has launched a, quote, golden prompt competition to enhance the effectiveness of its AI products, with winners receiving unique prizes. This initiative aims to improve AI-Gyvern productivity within the Google workforce and collaboration tools in real-world applications. So Google announced their golden-prompt competition for its Gemini workspace product,
Starting point is 00:04:27 encouraging their employees to create efficient AI instructions. The competition aims to improve AI-driven tools like emails, calendars, and meat. Winners receive golden bomber jackets with a white Gemini symbol or spot bonuses. All right. So much more happening in the world of AI news. We'll be going over that in the newsletter and more on those stories. So if you haven't already, make sure to go to your everyday AI.com and sign up for that free daily newsletter. All right. Let's get into today's conversation. Hey, good morning and thanks for joining us live,
Starting point is 00:05:03 everyone, Michael and Rolando, Fred, and Christopher, Chris, Jason, everyone. Thanks for joining us. If you have questions, get them in now because I'm excited for today's guests. We're going to be talking about 6G and AI, the future of communication, extremely excited for this one. So please help me welcome to the show. There we go. We got him. Ronnie Vasishta, who is the senior your vice president of telecom at NVIDIA. Ronnie, thank you so much for joining the Everyday AI show. Well, thank you very much for having me, Jordan. Looking forward to a good conversation.
Starting point is 00:05:35 Yeah. And, hey, you know, you podcast listeners, you got to understand this is a live stream as well. So shout out to Ronnie for waking up at 5-ish a.m. And joining us West Coast time. But Ronnie, can you tell us a little bit about what you do in your role at Nvidia? Sure. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:49 So, as you said, senior vice president of Telecom at NVIDia. and my role is responsibility for Nvidia's telecom initiatives. And that's a very broad range, which I'm sure we'll get into some parts of that range in this conversation, a very broad range of areas. Everything from the infrastructure
Starting point is 00:06:12 that supports the telecommunications network and how Nvidia accelerated compute can really is changing the landscape of that infrastructure, which has been, it's a big task. because that infrastructure has been around the same form of infrastructure for quite a few decades. And then all the way to how telecommunication networks are being used and how it provides services, which of course are becoming more AI-centric,
Starting point is 00:06:42 but even video over a telecommunications network. So whether it be for businesses or consumers, and how do you interact with the telecommunications network, meaning on your phone, etc. So a lot of new services and capabilities that Nvidia platforms can offer over the network. And Ronnie, I kind of want to start here with the basics, right? Because even I'm not sure, right?
Starting point is 00:07:07 It's like I knew when 5G first came out. I'm like, oh, that means, you know, communications will improve. And yeah, people will be able to stream videos to their phones. What does 6G mean for both, you know, consumers, but also for business? is because, you know, I think a lot of people just see it as another, you know, letter out there and they're like, okay, this just means something's going to be faster. But let's just talk about 6G first. What does this mean for the future of communications? And when might we all be seeing 6G kind of out in the wild? Yeah. So maybe I'll take the last piece first, which is
Starting point is 00:07:42 generally every 10 years, it varies a little bit, but generally every 10 years, you see a new G. and the 3GPP standards develop a new node or a new G. So probably around 2028 to 2030 is the current estimation of when 6G will be deployed for you and I. So what is 6G? Well, we're still as an industry in the process of defining what is 6G. What has happened traditionally, and I would say in 5G it really happened more, is that there's certain types of use cases of the network that start defining the concept of what is that G. Let me give you an example. In 5G, it was to some extent it was around like machine-to-machine communication.
Starting point is 00:08:39 it was the ability to provide lower latency network, meaning that you could control things in a more efficient way. The reality is probably not many of those applications have really come around in the 5G space. 5G has been predominantly around faster communication throughput and speeds, so you can watch videos on your phone, download videos, upload videos in a more efficient way, even improved coverage. There have been changes in the infrastructure underneath the 5G network that have enabled
Starting point is 00:09:19 those kind of things to happen. As we look forward to 6G, 6G takes on the same kind of persona, which is use cases that will drive the 6G definition. However, these use cases, because of the advent of AI today. It's a really exciting time because there's enough time before the release of 6G to really infuse AI both in
Starting point is 00:09:52 the infrastructure that provides the 6G network but also the use models. Things like inferring inference on the phone, inference of applications such as as agents that you can talk to, any language, anywhere, lower latency, autonomous vehicle controls,
Starting point is 00:10:18 such that autonomous vehicles can become more prevalent and safer, the ability to provide the robots, whether the robot being a warehouse robot, an industrial robot, or a food delivery robot, things like that, but always connected all the time, making sure that the fleet management aspect of these things are, is very efficient. So there's just some examples of how 6G will be starting to transform the things that we do. And speaking of transforming the things that we do, I mean, artificial intelligence and large language models has transformed everything, especially when it comes to communication. I don't know. this is a good or a bad thing, even though I talk live to humans most days, you know, experts like
Starting point is 00:11:09 yourself, I spend more time talking to AI bots than I do humans, right? So where does artificial intelligence come into play for the future of telecoms and even, you know, this 5G, 6G transition? How does AI play into that equation? Yeah, so AI think of it as broadly two separate things, but they are connected. In 6G, there's going to be a much more important level of compute. The two things that I was referring is the infrastructure that provides a 6G connectivity. And there we're going to see the fusion of compute and connectivity, like to say intelligently connecting intelligence.
Starting point is 00:11:55 Up until now, 5G has been mostly around pipes that just transfer data. they haven't really been intelligent pipes. With 6G, the infrastructure is going to become much more intelligent that will have the fusion of compute and connectivity, as I say. And AI is going to play a very important role in the infrastructure piece. In fact, how do you ensure that connectivity of the right latency, of the right throughput, is always there in a downtown urban environment, versus a rural environment.
Starting point is 00:12:35 AI is going to make that ensure that that can happen. How do you get spectrum is incredibly important and incredibly expensive. How do you improve spectral efficiency, meaning getting more data and more throughput and more connectivity out of the available spectrum? AI is going to play a really important role in that. And then there's the second part.
Starting point is 00:12:57 The second part is AI in terms of the services that are provided to whether it be to businesses or to individuals. The AI is going to play a very important role in how you and I interact with the network and the services that can be provided over the network, whether it be in a business, in enterprise setting, like in a port, in a transportation hub, in a warehouse, in a retail outlet, or whether it be, you know, a consumer device and the devices are going to change we're going to have obviously more headset
Starting point is 00:13:39 availability where we're going to have more um reality on in the headset we're going to have the ability to have agents on our phone that you can book your travel and doctor's appointments and things like that and you want to have that connectivity accessible accessibility all the time so think of it as infrastructure, AI plays a role and services. So, you know, Ronnie, something you said in there, it's pretty interesting to me because, you know, you talked about all these new capabilities that, you know, AI and edge AI, you know, might bring into the fold. But then, you know, you also said it might be another four to six years until we kind of see, you know, 6G realized. So, you know, in the short term, right, when we're getting more and more artificial intelligence, we're getting more
Starting point is 00:14:32 edge AI, we're getting, you know, more and more agents to talk to, right, and more AI to use. Is there going to be almost a bottleneck period where we're getting so much innovation that's putting, you know, a lot of strain on our current communication systems? Like, is there going to be this period for the next couple of years where, you know, maybe the systems are a little overloaded until we kind of get this next 6G iteration? That's a great question, John. You know, there's obviously the 3GPP standards are evolve. So while we talk about 5G, 6G, there's intermediate steps as well, like 5G advanced.
Starting point is 00:15:11 And what we're going to see is some of these aspects infusing into the 5G network as much as they can to support some of the capabilities and features that you're talking about. And by the way, you know, as I said earlier, 5G really hadn't lived up to its expectations. expectations or its design early on. And so we're going to start seeing that evolution of 5G advanced, start to be able to promise the low latency, the throughput type of the machine-to-machine communication. And that will enable quite a few of those AI applications that I talked about. The infrastructure side of 6G and how AI becomes what we call an air-native interface, for instance,
Starting point is 00:15:57 meaning that AI is AI air-native interface, meaning AI enables that air interface and spectral efficiency to be enabled. That's going to be, I think, quite a game changer. And that will be a 6G. So think of it as a ramp-up of these services and capabilities. And then once 6-Gs are in place, we're going to see more of an explosion of the capabilities
Starting point is 00:16:25 of what we're ramping up to now. Speaking of capabilities and what we're ramping up to, Nvidia for years now has been the leader in this space about allowing the rest of the world to create new technologies, right? Whether we're talking about compute, whether we're talking about, you know, different things in video games, communications, right?
Starting point is 00:16:50 Invidia has been at the forefront for all of this. With that in mind, what are you even, personally, in your role at least, looking forward to when it comes to kind of this intersection of AI and how that changes communications, what are those things that you're even personally excited about new breakthroughs and enhancements? Yeah. So I must say, working at invidia has been incredibly exciting because of being at the forefront of many of these technologies. And telecommunications is one of those areas, I think, that it is, to use an overuse term, transformed by AI. The transformation is what excites me in what I do.
Starting point is 00:17:36 We're already starting to see, of course, the leverage of generative AI. And as I'm going in my daily work, we're starting to interface with many, many more telecom operators around the world, some of whom are investing in AI infrastructure, AI factories. This is a completely new business model that hasn't been open to a telecommunications industry that has been very traditionally focused on delivering consumers' connectivity. Now, telecom operators around the world, and I've been going around the world, meeting many of them who are building, investing capital in AI factories, such that they can create new business models for the operator.
Starting point is 00:18:23 The other things that are very exciting for us is we're starting to see some of these services that are being delivered. We're just at the very tip of the iceberg of how we interact with generative AI. What kind of language models do we have on the phone? What kind of language models do we now have on a local compute? You use the word age in your question to me.
Starting point is 00:18:48 You know, Edge has been talked about for a long time, but it hasn't really ever delivered on what it was meant to deliver on. Generative AI gives it the opportunity now to have a really intelligent edge that can deliver the services. So again, exciting because infrastructure is changing dramatically. Services that are being delivered over the network are changing dramatically and are dependent upon the infrastructure. So every day at work, we're starting to see this transformation happening across our industry. You know what? I do want to dive into that a little bit deeper here, Edge AI, because I think on-device generative AI, on-device large-language models, in my opinion, right, but this is why I bring on people way smarter than me.
Starting point is 00:19:37 But I think that is going to change how all of us communicate both personally and, you know, professionally through a company. And it also seems like even over the last week, right, we just talked at the top of the show about Mistral's new model, getting smaller and smaller, Open AI's model, smaller, you know, Meta's Lama, smaller, as these models become small enough and powerful enough to actually fit on a smartphone. How does that change? Just, you know, not just how we work, how we speak, how we communicate, but how does that change what is possible when we can have a large language model running locally,
Starting point is 00:20:14 on our device that goes with us everywhere. Yeah. So there's always going to be a limitation around the level of compute on a device because of battery power. And of course, we all expect a certain level of battery life on our device, whether it be a headset going forward
Starting point is 00:20:34 or whether it be a smartphone. Now, if you think about a use case, you can immediately say how valuable that is. You're in an environment where five languages are being spoken. You know, you've got an earphone and you're speaking in the language that you're native to, but you're hearing everybody's language translation coming to you in the language you're used to. And same for everybody else in that group. That kind of compute complexity, there needs to be an accessibility to a compute power that probably isn't going to fit on your phone.
Starting point is 00:21:14 And that's what I was talking about, edge, where you start to see these nodes of AI that have a latency with capability, and in the case of video, a jitter capability also, that can service you to meet that experience that you want to have. So there's going to be, as I mentioned earlier,
Starting point is 00:21:37 intelligently connecting intelligence. There'll be a level of intelligence on the phone, of inference capabilities and there'll be a level of intelligence that has to be accessible close enough to the phone for that experience to be valid and that's what we're going to start seeing more and more of so yes we'll see intelligence on the phone and yes we'll see a new topology of edge that hasn't been there today and that's going to be orchestrated to a large extent by a Adobe just introduced an entirely new way to create, bringing the power and precision of its creative suite into one conversational experience. Meet Firefly AI Assistant, now live in the Adobe Firefly app, the All In One Creative AI Studio.
Starting point is 00:22:33 Powered by Adobe's Creative Agent, Firefly AI Assistant lets you start with your vision, just describe what you want, and shape the outcome as it takes form with the Assistant. The assistant orchestrates multi-step workflows, drawing on 60-plus pro-grade tools across Adobe Creative Cloud apps, including Photoshop, Illustrator, Premiere, Lightroom Express, and more to help bring your ideas to life. You can also get started with creative skills, a growing library of pre-built workflows for common creative tasks, like batch editing photos, creating mood boards, portrait retouching, and creating social variations. Every step the assistant takes is visible, so you can refine, redirect or take over at any time. You stay in the driver's seat as the creative director.
Starting point is 00:23:19 Adobe Firefly AI assistant now in public beta. See it today at firefly.adobie.com. You know, that use case right there, that example, I think is, it's pretty profound, right? And that's something I think that we can think about how it impacts us personally and impacts how business can be done, right? Like if your phone in real time can translate language with low latency, I mean, that really opens up a world of opportunities for everyone to connect in more meaningful ways. What are some other future pieces of communication, Ronnie, similar to that, that, you know, kind of when we talk about, you know, AI, edge AI, when we talk about stronger telecom networks, you know, 6G, what are maybe some other example use cases? such as that, that really might change the way that we work or maybe change the way we can work
Starting point is 00:24:18 and open up new possibilities. Yeah, I think one of the one often talked about, but not realized yet, is the collaboration aspect, whether it be visiting a different part of the world, whether it be collaborating with work colleagues for a design of a vehicle, a house, enabling your designer of your house to, you know, kind of interact with you as you, in a real world environment, as you walk through that house or that factory yet to be built. And you're wearing headsets and you're communicating with each other and the ability to provide that visual collaboration experience as well. That, I think, is also a game changer.
Starting point is 00:25:05 visual collaboration with real-time audio and real-time audio in the language of your choice. So these are kind of experiences. And then, of course, autonomous vehicles and fleet management. While you and I can't really experience that or see that today, but there's a tremendous opportunity for the ability to manage fleets, whether they be delivery robots or whether they be autonomous vehicles driving around the road. You know, the network has to be capable of supporting connectivity for safety as well as fleet management reasons of all of those devices.
Starting point is 00:25:54 There have been incidents where, you know, a concept turns out in a city, the network usage goes up, and then all the autonomous vehicles in that city grind to a hole. because the network outage. You know, so we've got a tremendous, I think, opportunity ahead of us. And you said earlier, Nvidia enable, allowing others to develop. What we, you absolutely hit it on the nail on the head, which is Nvidia is a platform company. We actually don't even know some of the applications that we will see
Starting point is 00:26:29 as others take advantage of the platforms that we're able to provide. And we're going to see many, many of these types of applications that will drive something to talk about the killer app, but the use of the telecom networks. You know, you brought up something, again, that has me thinking here, right? So maybe I'm thinking a lot of this current technology that we're seeing today, maybe can't perform at the level we might want it to, right, because of, you know, there's just too much compute needed. And right now, a 5G network maybe can't handle it. Right. So I was lucky enough to, you know, be at GTC this year in Vitya's conference. And, you know, I got to saw, you know,
Starting point is 00:27:12 your CEO, Jensen Wong, kind of, you know, come out on stage with all these robots. And, you know, they talked about Groot, the new foundation model and Isaac Robotics. So even when we talk about that end, right, because there's a lot of news that even just came out today we'll have in our newsletter, just about, you know, expectations of, you know, robotics. and humanoid robots and in factories. And even in normal, like, quote unquote, office spaces, right? What kind of hurdles are still needed to start realizing some of these things, you know, because I'm guessing, you know,
Starting point is 00:27:47 when you have an internet-connected large language model on a humanoid robot, you know, computer vision, I'm guessing there's a lot of things on the network side that still have to happen in order for some of these kind of realization, to actually happen. So how do you see that playing out in the coming years? Yeah. So there's connectivity constraints that will limit maybe mobility in a wide area network. There will be some, as I mentioned earlier, some visual engagement constraints,
Starting point is 00:28:23 visual constraints over a network that like jitter and light latency that will mean that, you know, the experience might not be as realistic as you want continuously. The generation of video through large language models, for instance, as you're generating video over a network, for instance. So there'll be, as I said before, there'll be kind of a ramp up. We are seeing advances in the network. We're starting to also see some telecom operators investing in infrastructure. that is closer to the point of use and connecting that infrastructure to the traditional 5G network.
Starting point is 00:29:11 But I think in terms of mobility, in terms of experience, some of those will be constrained in terms of a wide area network by the telecommunications network. And a great question here from Jason. You kind of mentioned this earlier, but I want to. to dive in a little bit deeper. So Jason here asking, will we start to see more value in 5G or do we have to wait for 6G? So Ronnie, you kind of mentioned this like 5G advanced. I think you said is what it's called. So kind of what are these, you know, over the next four to six years until we might see a 6G, what are some of these 5G improvements that we might see? Specifically, how are they going to
Starting point is 00:29:55 change the way that we can do business, you know, here versus, you know, I know we kind of talked about more of the personal side, but, you know, what 5G advancements might change how we can do business in the coming years until 6G? Yeah. So the good news is we don't have to wait to 6G, as I said. There are advances in the network capabilities and 5G monetization opportunities within an enterprise, whether it be in a port or transportation hub and airport, there advances in terms of how you can put compute closer to the point of use. And we're doing, in video, that's a big focus for us, is to enable the convergence of connectivity and compute in a server, meaning that one server can handle both the connectivity compute and the AI compute and can orchestrate and provision one
Starting point is 00:30:57 as for instance, you know, in a city or in an enterprise, people go home at night. Why have the radio access network underutilized at that point? Because it's a separate network. If you combine the compute, you can use those spare cycles at that time for things like AI training or inference or you can do some AI applications on that to compute when it's available. That's all capable. That's all starting to happen in 5G. We're starting to see cameras, for instance, airports. When a plane comes in to the jetway, you know, certain functions need people need to come off and on and you start to have certain service vehicles coming in and out. That can all be managed actually through cameras and autonomously.
Starting point is 00:31:51 And that improves productivity. So there's things that are starting to happen like that in the 5G networks. You don't have to wait to 6G, but of course, as I said before, 6G gives us new opportunities and new capabilities, both on how the infrastructure is built for communication networks with AI and then also the services. So, Rodney, we've talked about. a lot in today's episode. We've, you know, even talked about autonomous vehicles. We talked about
Starting point is 00:32:22 edge AI and some of the obstacles until that's fully realized. And we've even touched on the future of communications that, or future communications that 6G may bring that we don't even have or even understand right now. But, you know, as we wrap up today's show, what's maybe the one most important thing that you want business leaders to understand when we talk about the future of communication and how AI impacts that. Yeah. So I would say for the business audience, those involved in telecommunications, I would say the future is extremely bright. AI can transform, again, to use an overuse term, but really change the business models around telecommunications. And that's what I'm really focused on. It's incredibly exciting because those of you who are involved,
Starting point is 00:33:15 in the communications network, whether it be an operator or whether it be the users of telecommunications network, you're going to have a highly productive, highly orchestrated network by the use of AI. That's kind of the, for those who you're not involved in the telecommunications industry, for those of you who are users of the telecommunications industry, you're going to have advantage of experiences and applications and services that we've been talking about in this podcast. And that is an incredibly exciting future because productivity changes, connectivity all the time, where you need it, when you need it, the services you need to be provided to your workforce, to your retail outlets. All of these experiences change dramatically. You just got me excited, right?
Starting point is 00:34:12 Talking about productivity and connectivity, I think those are things that we all want more of, right? We want to be connecting more to people, to business opportunities, and just to use AI to be more productive. So, Ronnie, today's conversation was extremely valuable. So I wanted to thank you so much for taking your time out to come on the Everyday AI show. We appreciate your time. Thank you very much for the opportunity. Really appreciate it. And hey, as a reminder, everyone, that was.
Starting point is 00:34:38 was a lot to take in. So maybe you were out driving or walking your dog and you couldn't jot down everything that's important. That's okay. We're going to be recapping it all as well as sharing a lot more resources in today's newsletter. So make sure if you haven't already, go to your everyday AI.com. Sign up for that free daily newsletter and we'll see you back tomorrow and every day for
Starting point is 00:34:57 more everyday AI. Thanks y'all. Meet Firefly AI assistant. Now live in Adobe Firefly, the Allman One Creative AI studio. Just describe what you want to create in your own. words and the assistant handles the rest, orchestrating multi-step workflows across Adobe Creative Cloud apps, including Photoshop, Premiere Express, and more in one conversational interface. You direct the outcome while the assistant accelerates execution.
Starting point is 00:35:31 Stand control with the ability to step in and refine at any time. See it today at firefly.adobie.com. And that's a wrap for today's edition of Everyday AI. Thanks for joining us. If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe and leave us a rating. It helps keep us going. For a little more AI magic, visit your everyday AI.com and sign up to our daily newsletter so you don't get left behind. Go break some barriers and we'll see you next time.

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