The TechEd Podcast Podcast Por Matt Kirchner arte de portada

The TechEd Podcast

The TechEd Podcast

De: Matt Kirchner
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The TechEd Podcast sits at the intersection of technology, industry, innovation and the people who make progress possible. Hosted by Matt Kirchner, each episode features builders, executives, educators, and policymakers shaping what’s next—AI, automation, advanced manufacturing, energy, and the systems behind them.


If you care about the future of work, the future of tech, and how talent actually gets built, you’re in the right place.

© 2026 The TechEd Podcast
Economía Exito Profesional
Episodios
  • How to Stay Sharper Longer: The New Science of Brain Aging and Dementia Prevention - Dr. Christin Glorioso, CEO of NeuroAge Therapeutics
    Mar 31 2026

    Imagine being able to track your brain health before serious decline sets in, understand your personal risk factors, and intervene early enough to help prevent dementia rather than simply react to it.

    In this episode of The TechEd Podcast, Matt Kirchner talks with Christin Glorioso, MD, PhD, founder and CEO of NeuroAge Therapeutics, about one of the most intriguing frontiers in health and longevity right now: whether brain aging can actually be measured, influenced, and in some cases pushed back. If you’ve paid attention to the rise of biohacking, brain games, cognitive optimization, or the broader longevity movement, this conversation gets underneath the trend and into the science.

    Glorioso explains how brain MRI, cognitive testing, blood biomarkers, genetics, and AI can be used together to create a more individualized view of brain health. More broadly, the conversation shows how brain health is starting to shift from late-stage treatment toward earlier measurement, prevention, and ongoing optimization.

    In this episode:

    • Why one of the biggest assumptions in dementia research may have been wrong for years
    • The 65% number that could completely change how you think about Alzheimer’s risk
    • Why brain aging starts earlier than almost anyone realizes, and what that means for prevention
    • Whether you can actually make your brain younger, not just protect it from decline
    • The 9 daily factors that may matter more than any miracle supplement or trend
    • How AI is enabling faster research and more personalized intervention
    • A roadmap for accessible tests + personalized recommendations for a healthier brain

    3 Big Takeaways from this Episode:

    1. Dementia is not one disease, and treating it like one has held the field back. Glorioso argues that Alzheimer’s has been approached too narrowly for too long, with the pharmaceutical industry spending decades focused almost entirely on amyloid. Her point is bigger than one protein: brain decline is multifactorial, which means future progress will depend on earlier diagnosis and more personalized intervention.

    2. Brain aging starts earlier than most people realize, but it is not a fixed downhill slide. In the episode, Glorioso says measurable shrinkage in the hippocampus begins in the mid-20s and accelerates with age. She also points to evidence that targeted exercise can increase volume in that same brain region, making the conversation far more hopeful than most people expect.

    3. You're more in control of your brain health than you may realize. Glorioso cites research suggesting that up to 65% of Alzheimer’s cases may be preventable through lifestyle interventions, then grounds that claim in concrete areas like exercise, sleep, stress, diet, metabolic health, and social connection. That turns brain health from an abstract fear into something people can measure, manage, and improve over time.

    Resources in this Episode:

    NeuroAge Therapeutics

    Follow Christin on Substack

    Visit the episode page for the rest of the resources: https://techedpodcast.com/glorioso/

    We want to hear from you! Send us a text.

    Instagram - Facebook - YouTube - TikTok - Twitter - LinkedIn

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    47 m
  • The AI Boom Is Forcing a Reckoning on Risk and Regulation - Patrick Sullivan, VP of Strategy & Innovation at A-LIGN
    Mar 24 2026

    Artificial intelligence is moving from novel feature to core infrastructure, and that shift is forcing companies, schools and regulators to confront a harder question than how to use the technology: how to govern it.

    In this episode of The TechEd Podcast, Matt Kirchner talks with Patrick Sullivan, Vice President of Strategy & Innovation at A-LIGN, about the emerging rules of the AI economy. From the EU AI Act and a patchwork of state-level regulation in the U.S. to new standards like ISO 42001, Sullivan explains why AI is beginning to look less like a software feature and more like a system that carries real operational, security and compliance risk.

    The conversation also gets into the practical tension leaders are facing now. How do you innovate without creating blind spots? How do you use AI to improve decisions without mishandling student data, exposing customers or introducing risk you do not fully understand? Sullivan’s argument is that done right, governance is not the brake pedal. It is the structure that allows organizations to move faster without losing control.

    In this episode:

    • Why AI products are starting to face the kind of scrutiny manufacturers already know well
    • What the EU AI Act reveals about where regulation can quickly become burdensome
    • Why adding AI without a clear value proposition is becoming an expensive mistake
    • All about new ISO standards for AI
    • How bias, de-identification, and prompt injection are reshaping AI risk

    3 Big Takeaways from this Episode:

    1. AI is forcing leaders to think about products, risk, and compliance in a new way. Patrick draws a sharp distinction between how the U.S. often treats AI as software and how the EU increasingly treats AI as part of a broader product, including embedded systems like medical devices. That shift matters because it changes how organizations think about safety, conformity, and responsibility before a product ever reaches the market.

    2. The AI race is producing a lot of motion, but not always much value. Many organizations are adding AI because the market expects it, not because the business case is strong. One MIT study suggests only a small share of enterprises surveyed were realizing meaningful ROI. Leaders need to ask whether the technology creates real value or simply creates new cost, risk, and complexity.

    3. Good governance is not a brake on innovation; it's what makes innovation durable. Patrick’s most effective metaphor is the football field: the lines are not there to punish you, but to show where you can move fast and where you are out of bounds. That idea comes through again when he discusses ISO management systems, lifecycle thinking, investor expectations, and enterprise buyers who increasingly want proof that AI is being developed and used responsibly.

    Resources in this Episode:

    • Follow Patrick on LinkedIn
    • ISO 42001 - AI Management Systems

    More links & resources on the episode page: https://techedpodcast.com/sullivan/

    We want to hear from you! Send us a text.

    Instagram - Facebook - YouTube - TikTok - Twitter - LinkedIn

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    54 m
  • Ask Us Anything: STEM Access, Hard Skills vs. Soft Skills & Lessons from the Manhattan Project
    Mar 17 2026

    Are employers hurting themselves by only asking for 'soft skills' and ignoring their real technical needs? How can homeschool students get the same access to STEM labs as students in traditional schools? And what can education leaders learn from the way the Manhattan Project mobilized talent and innovation to solve an enormous problem?

    These questions (and more!) came directly from the you, and we're answering them on this episode of Ask Us Anything. Entrepreneurship, career strategy, workforce skills, and the rapidly evolving role of AI in modern organizations - we cover them all!

    In this episode:

    • The best times to take entrepreneurial risks
    • Why your professional network is probably bigger than you think
    • The "soft skills" issue and why employers are actually hurting themselves by asking educators to teach them
    • Rapid-fire real examples of AI being used in business

    3 Big Takeaways from this Episode:

    1.Early-career risk can be an advantage for entrepreneurs. Matt explains that early in your career the consequences of failure are often much smaller, which makes it an ideal time to experiment with starting a business or pursuing a bold opportunity. With fewer financial obligations and more flexibility, young professionals often have the greatest ability to take meaningful risks.

    2. Industry is hurting itself by only asking schools for soft skills instead of technical ones. Businesses frequently tell educators they want graduates who communicate well, collaborate, and show initiative. So why is industry so shocked that there aren't enough students with any technical background or interest? Employers: take a look at your job postings and start asking education to teach all the skills for those jobs: soft and technical (hard) skills alike.

    3. Private schools have a unique opportunity to innovate in STEM education. Because they often have more flexibility than traditional public systems, private schools can move quickly to adopt emerging technologies, modern equipment, and new instructional models. That freedom creates an opportunity to design programs that expose students to advanced STEM fields earlier and more creatively.

    Resources in this Episode:

    • Jack Dorsey’s Block to Lay Off 40% of Its Workforce in AI Remake
    • Oppenheimer movie
    • Developing an AI Strategy: Best Practices for Business Leaders - Todd Wanek, CEO of Ashley Furniture Industries
    • Using AI to Build Better Relationships with Your Network - Canay Deniz, CEO of Ren

    More notes & resources on the episode page!

    We want to hear from you! Send us a text.

    Instagram - Facebook - YouTube - TikTok - Twitter - LinkedIn

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    44 m
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