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[Music]
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[Applause]
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[Music]
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so I think I will add to the
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introduction and something I've never
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told you um which is when Sati and I
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started talking about uh combining
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Microsoft and Linkedin I knew there was
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a bunch of different very good ways in
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which the missions were friends the
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cultures cared about how do you elevate
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human potential and how do you make them
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productive and I knew that that was
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going to be part of the magic of
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combining the companies what I didn't
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fully know was that part of the magic
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would be also working with you um
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because not only is SAA a extremely
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smart and accomplished skilled executive
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but also genuinely looks at this kind of
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large scale and what are the things that
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uh the world is coming and how do you
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take your responsibilities for that
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world very seriously in shaping the
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world you want to get so it's been a
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honor and a pleasure being on this thank
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you so much re and the next time the
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board does my evaluation I'll ask you to
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put that in yes I I would be delighted
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to do that um so let's start from the
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the from the very scope of the world
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which is you know obviously we have um
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Wars uh pandemics and markets om my we
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have you know climate change world on
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fire we'll be talking to Bill about that
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at the you know closing uh of the last
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session of the conference but one of the
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things that you're doing and very much
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focused on your mission is how do you uh
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essentially uh use technology to help
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solve these large problems what are the
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what's the shape of the kind of the the
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ways that people should think about you
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know kind of technology and they solve
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solving scale problems in the world
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ahead in this world that has so much
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challenge yeah no it's it's something
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that I've been thinking a lot about in
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fact uh you talk since you mentioned
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Bill the month when that popular
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Electronics magazine came out you know
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which I guess Bill picked up along with
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Paul Allen and started
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Microsoft the same week there was a news
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week cover which talked about the energy
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crisis
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inflation uh and so that juxtoposition
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of those two magazine covers um sort of
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I think are back with us uh in some
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sense which is you have all the things
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that you talked about uh as the
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challenges or constraints and so so this
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idea of doing more with less of course I
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come at it with the bias of software as
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the most malleable resource that we have
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that we now got to use to tame uh all of
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what's happening but the way I think
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about let's talk about more what is what
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is more I would say economic growth I
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mean if I look at human history the last
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250 years have been pretty unique right
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it is the Scientific Revolution combined
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with a whole bunch of other things that
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happened uh which created Modern Life uh
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We've enjoyed it except we do have real
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challenges let's take energy right then
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whatever economic growth that comes next
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cannot break the planet uh we definitely
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also need more social cohesion inside
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the United States in the world so that
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means we have to deal with
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inequities um right so so to me thinking
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about technology that drives economic
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growth while we in some sense we need a
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new constraint solver where you need
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economic growth but don't break the
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planet create more trust create more
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Equity uh and that's what I think I I'm
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I'm most excited about or at least
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that's what Microsoft's mission is and
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in fact the way I describe it is what if
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we now maybe during the founding of
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Microsoft you picked one magazine and
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sort of created history this time around
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pick both the covers uh and then go to
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work on it and and speaking of creating
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history we are in this huge shift in
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artificial intelligence and one of the
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things that I think that uh Microsoft is
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is doing very well is thinking about how
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to amplify human beings and one of the
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products we already have in the market
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is co-pilot yeah so say a little bit
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about co-pilot and say how that isn't
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just like why it's really interesting on
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for engineering and developers and how
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technology the creation of Technology
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but also go to how this is a way that
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all professionals all creatives should
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be thinking about what kinds of
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Transformations are coming down the pike
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yeah I mean this if you step back for a
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second uh I think uh Greg Brockman is
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also coming later uh what's happening
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with these large uh multimodal models um
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is pretty phenomenal um and essentially
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the curve on intelligence
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basically by throwing more compute
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you're creating more
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intelligence um so let's take that um
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you know if you don't you know Greg I'm
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sure we'll talk a lot more about it but
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let's take that as a
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given the I love this idea or this
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metaphor of a co- pilot uh because it's
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it goes back to I think to the theme of
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Masters of scale it's such an empowering
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word even right so I'm the pilot and I
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have a co-pilot um the GitHub co-pilot
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it's essentially it's an AI pair
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programmer right uh in fact it's it's
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the thing that makes me feel just great
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every weekend whenever I feel like I
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bring up vs code you know it's kind of
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believe me I mean I wish I could code
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better uh but you know but nowadays with
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thanks to get up co-pilot I can get into
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anything and feel like a super person
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like super programmer um the idea that
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you can really tame the learning curve
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on the most sort of intense knowledge
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work right software programming is just
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pretty phenomenal I mean one of the the
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you can prompt for whatever it is that
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you want to do um and it'll generate the
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code for you yeah but it's just not that
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right you can just highlight a bunch of
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code this is stuff that we have in the
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labs now which is you can highlight a
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bunch of code it'll explain it for you
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in English right which is sort of a
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great way to learn it let's say you know
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one of the things that's happening is
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everybody's saying hey C++ to rust right
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which is sort of how do I move to
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perhaps a more security first language
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from C++ and it'll translate it for you
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yes so if you have something of that
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nature and it's like inside of the data
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we have it's around 30% 40% of the code
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is being generated by the AI programmer
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but you're still in the loop right the
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way the design even works is you don't
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feel the loss of control if anything you
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feel more in control more productive
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more EMP powered and I love that human
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feeling and somebody sort of described
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this to me which is when the first
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computers came how people felt using
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them is how I think the co-pilot
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recaptures it and to your point it'll
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change everything like we're working
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with Autodesk on Maya uh so you can
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imagine architecture industrial design
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uh pretty much any field you can have a
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co-pilot for everything and so that I
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think is a great metaphor uh there will
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be Automation and full automation
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somebody gave me this nice sort of AI
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metaphor of you are um in the loop on
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the loop or off the loop uh it's sort of
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a good way to think about the three
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designs uh this one is you're in the
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loop uh and that's a place to focus on
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yeah I mean it's one of the things that
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I think is gets so often lost in the
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discussion of artificial intelligence is
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that there because it's like well okay
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you know look at Hollywood Video most of
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it's like Terminator exmachina etc etc
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we the revolution we're in is enabling
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human beings right we will get to other
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questions that will be important
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questions around Equity important
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questions are handling it but the
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amplifying giving all human beings
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superpowers like that was one of the
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things that Dolly which are also doing
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with designer right which is you know
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how do you make everyone and all of
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their skills more able to do amazing
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things 100% And then then the one other
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thing Reed you mentioned let's take this
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entire energy transition I had not
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understood this and there are many more
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experts you're talking to bill later but
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the the thing that I I didn't realize is
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in order to move the world from one
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Paradigm to the other we kind of have to
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compress maybe 150 years of chemistry
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into like 5 years 10 years 20 years
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there's no way we can do that without a
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co-pilot for it uh like in other words
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just finding the new molecules that
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completely change uh what is our
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petrochemical base that's the type of
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stuff that I think is doing more with
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less to me yep and and what do you think
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when when when people think about uh
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what are the ways that they should kind
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of approach their own skills and careers
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like you also mentioned already with
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co-pilot your own coding but when
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they're thinking about these tools how
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should they think about how do I adjust
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how do I help how do I lead my
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organization what's the ways to think
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about this yeah
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it's first of all one of the things that
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are most when when we think about
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digital capability build right I go back
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you know when the PC was born um I I I
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distinctly remember the first time I
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used a spreadsheet uh I don't know how
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you all felt but you know it's just well
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I mean Excel is my most
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favorite you know what I might as well
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admit it right or uh the re but think
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about it right when you first were able
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to make sense or numbers right your
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relationship with numbers changed yes um
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and so knowledge work in particular in
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the early ' 9s as it started spreading
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uh you could even say late 80s but early
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90s is when with sort of the graphical
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interface completely changed um
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interestingly enough the question is
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what is that what is the moral equalent
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of that um I do believe a domain expert
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who has I'll call it Excel class skills
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can they create automation can they
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create workflows that's sort of I think
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the real uh way to think about even
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Skilling so one of the things is there
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will always be elite skills no no you
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know like the people doing these large
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scale AI models is one side but the most
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exciting thing to me is the Excel like
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skills that are going to spread around
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the world in every domain in fact one of
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the things that I've seen even in the
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pandemic where there wasn't enough time
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to go to the digital team to have them
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build stuff for you uh do M experts were
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turning to robotic process automation or
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these low code no code tools to create
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applications and guess what they were
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being assisted by AI in fact we have in
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Power Platform the idea that you can
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just take pictures of say some design
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you drew on a piece of napkin and turn
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it into an app right so there's AI that
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does the forms recognition generates the
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code and then you can probably add a
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formula too that type of skill is is in
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some sense takes the domain skill you
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have and makes it a digital skill and
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that's just fundamental amplification
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yeah this blurring and crossover of the
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world between atoms and bits is actually
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one of the things I think is really
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leading to the to the amplification so
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let's let's let's uh add to this uh
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metaverse and um start with digital
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twinning right so like because part of
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the whole thing about being able to
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amplify the world we live in the world
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we navigate is to use these tools within
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simulation environments within uh and be
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able to apply them in a much stronger
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way so what's the what's what's the way
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that you're thinking about this yeah I
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mean the way at least I think about it
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is all of um the software categories
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we've always had are all about
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essentially
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creating digital twins uh of people
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places and things right so there's you
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know Bill would always say to me there's
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only one software category it's called
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information management and I never
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understood what the heck does he mean by
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that but it fundamentally is that's all
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it is you schematize the world uh and
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then that helps you re you know reason
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about the world but the point about the
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meta wore to me is we've done it by uh
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reference right so you schematize
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something you know about a person a
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place a thing whereas for the first time
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you now can do it by value right so you
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can schematize the actual place
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um or or digitize the actual place the
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actual thing the actual person and then
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you put the two things together right
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embodied presence in a place without
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being there that's a killer app right I
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mean teams meetings are fantastic but
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what if we can have this type of setting
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where embodied presence uh can actually
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happen that to me is the killer app uh
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you know in a world where we move
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towards the metowers but to your point
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about digital twin
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I must say this a even in the pandemic
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one place where we saw a lot of
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acceleration is every Warehouse every
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Factory uh effectively got digitized um
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and the benefits of digitization mean
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that you can run in simulation uh that
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is less less waste less energy more
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accuracy the ability to sort of remotely
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debug things so I think that to some
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degree that thinking about this in as
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just the next phase where we are
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digitizing by value not just by
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reference is probably a good way to sort
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of think about the meters yep and how
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does the the metaverse work which
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obviously you know people it's very easy
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for people to imagine things like snow
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crash and entertainment and all the rest
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but part of what I wanted to highlight
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because this is a bunch of the work that
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that Microsoft and you guys are doing is
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it's not just that it's how you work
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it's how you solve difficult problems
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it's how you uh you know kind of uh game
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out things
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now how is that uh a core part of the
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cloud Revolution so talk a little bit
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about how metaverse and Cloud go
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together yeah I mean the
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the thing that I find um that cloud has
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just done is for any category whether it
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is AI or for metowers is created
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abundance of compute that at that at the
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foundational level I mean if you think
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about it right you know you had the main
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frames you had the minis you had the
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client server revolutions they were all
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about sort of really creating more
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elasticity in some sense of compute but
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the cloud is truly the first time where
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you can uh just throw lots more computed
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any problem you want the other thing is
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especially at a time when Mo's law seems
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to be running out of gas uh you now need
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new system architectures uh like
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basically in order to be able to train
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the large scale AI models we had to sort
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of completely build a new type of
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supercomputer uh which is very different
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than what you would do to run just say
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regular Enterprise VMS or what have you
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so that to me is what is really helpful
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which is you can have different system
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architectures like in order to think
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about realtime streaming or and
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visualization uh is a very different
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type of workload but that requires
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different type of computation and we can
00:15:56
build the cloud for that and then make
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it elastic you can do the same thing for
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training you can do the same thing for
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inference so that to me is why I think
00:16:03
the cloud Revolution is still in the
00:16:05
very early stages but the way I I myself
00:16:08
having started in the Microsoft cloud
00:16:09
way back in say 2010 and to recognize it
00:16:13
now I just can't I mean it's just a very
00:16:15
different Beast yeah uh and so when we
00:16:17
say cloud what do we mean we mean
00:16:21
compute systems that are changing by the
00:16:24
nature of the workloads yep and and then
00:16:27
to to shift a little let's let's talk
00:16:29
about the future of collaboration we've
00:16:30
all come out of you know the pandemic
00:16:33
we've all kind of suddenly gotten shift
00:16:34
many of us gotten shifted in location um
00:16:37
we have this kind of question and this
00:16:39
may also be you in terms of how you're
00:16:41
leading Microsoft not just the tech but
00:16:43
it's like you know 70% of people say
00:16:45
according to Microsoft they they want
00:16:47
this flexibility but also 70% say they
00:16:49
want more human connection so how is it
00:16:52
both leading Microsoft and the tools
00:16:54
you're navigating this you know apparent
00:16:57
Paradox it's hard
00:17:01
uh yeah it's
00:17:03
it's it's let first you know because um
00:17:07
there are a lot of people uh who during
00:17:10
even all of this came to work right so
00:17:12
the first line workers you know whatever
00:17:15
60% of the workforce didn't have the
00:17:17
option of working remotely or working
00:17:19
from home so I think let's recognize
00:17:21
that but having said that I think the
00:17:25
the the knowledge workers uh this just
00:17:28
just a real structural shift um we did a
00:17:33
survey
00:17:34
recently uh or just looked at data
00:17:37
pretty broadly across sectors across
00:17:39
Goos um and there were three findings
00:17:43
that at least we are staring at
00:17:46
including ourselves at Microsoft the
00:17:48
first one is what we describe as this uh
00:17:51
productivity Paradox right I mean to 85%
00:17:54
of the managers think their employees
00:17:57
are slacking off and 85% of the
00:18:00
employees think that they're working too
00:18:02
hard and they're burnt up right so I
00:18:05
mean and it's real data um and so we
00:18:08
have this Paradox as to how can you sort
00:18:12
of see the same thing in two different
00:18:14
ways um and so the only way around it
00:18:18
read to me is you got to use data in
00:18:20
other words Dogma is not going to help
00:18:22
um and you now need to ground yourself
00:18:25
on how do you act for example have a l
00:18:29
goals if anything I I think as Leaders
00:18:31
we have to learn how to bring Clarity to
00:18:34
what is the output uh that you would
00:18:36
like you like to see what are the
00:18:38
measures of it and then using that to
00:18:41
see whether it's working or not and then
00:18:42
create the Norms the other piece that's
00:18:45
very interesting is I mean think about
00:18:47
it right in the introduction of the
00:18:49
summit you sort of talked about people
00:18:51
came here not because you sort of set a
00:18:54
policy and mandated it they came for
00:18:57
other people right people come for
00:18:59
people not for policy yes and u i I like
00:19:02
to say that all of us are now event
00:19:04
managers right it's not just the uh
00:19:07
believe me if I say I have a meeting
00:19:08
nobody's going to show up uh but if I
00:19:11
say oh I have an
00:19:14
event people are going to come yes at
00:19:17
least once you know and then and so you
00:19:21
really have to learn I think as a leader
00:19:23
new soft skills around how to create
00:19:26
occasions what does it mean uh to hold
00:19:29
an event um and then I would say the
00:19:32
last thing is I think every one of us
00:19:35
you know grew a lot during the pandemic
00:19:38
uh just because you had one onboarding
00:19:41
which was a remote onboarding means
00:19:43
nothing right you have to re-recruit
00:19:45
re-energize so there's a lot of tough
00:19:48
tough work but there are lots of tools
00:19:51
there's lots of Technologies but the
00:19:53
interesting scarce commodity I think is
00:19:56
a little bit of what is the new set of
00:19:58
in new set of soft skills and Leadership
00:20:01
skills we have to learn just because you
00:20:04
were a great leader in
00:20:05
2019 you can't go keep going back and
00:20:08
saying I just want the world to look
00:20:10
like 2019 it just I mean maybe it will
00:20:13
but I don't think so yeah wishes were
00:20:15
fishes all right so we are actually in
00:20:16
overtime so very quickly leaders in this
00:20:19
room leaders in a live feed run other
00:20:21
teams one message about how the world is
00:20:24
changing technology Workforce Etc what
00:20:27
would it be
00:20:29
I think the the thing the world needs
00:20:34
today more than anything else from
00:20:36
leaders is optimism and energy uh it's
00:20:42
easy to sort of be down on everything
00:20:45
well the way you started the
00:20:48
conversation uh that's my
00:20:52
role not that you are referencing the
00:20:54
world yes so what does a leader do I I
00:20:58
think my true measure of any leader is
00:21:01
who can come into a situation bring
00:21:04
Clarity generate energy and solve over
00:21:07
constrainted problems and as long as you
00:21:09
do those three things then I think we'll
00:21:11
be a better place SAA always
00:21:15
[Applause]
00:21:23
amazing what's said at the summit stays
00:21:27
at the summit everybody will have to pay
00:21:29
attention almost no one sees this coming
00:21:33
those Founders are becoming more
00:21:35
globally ambitious they're coming after
00:21:38
your talent your Capital your market
00:21:41
share the difficulty is when a team has
00:21:44
been working so hard on one
00:21:48
thing if you are trying to use your time
00:21:51
and your talent and your money in the
00:21:53
service of others the work will never
00:21:55
end we have to deal with inequities
00:21:59
it's different if you're a Founder but
00:22:00
when you walk into something so big and
00:22:02
so perfect and so successful you know
00:22:04
it's not about me it's about me becoming
00:22:07
a part of it and just evolving it and
00:22:08
making it better the thing that I love
00:22:10
about it and it makes me so optimistic
00:22:12
is that there's it's just creating more
00:22:14
dialogue I'm here to tell you that wow
00:22:16
human innovation's incredible this is
00:22:19
masters of scale Summit