Tools & Platforms
Post-Labor Day reflection shows urgency, opportunity of AI :: WRAL.com

Labor Day was not just a break from
work. For me, it was a time to reflect on the values that brought my family to
this country — hard work, opportunity and community — and how we must pass
those values forward through innovation and inclusion.
Wake County stands at a crossroads.
Artificial intelligence is no longer a buzzword. It is a tool being used in
local government, healthcare, education and small business. What we do now will
shape whether this technology strengthens our communities — or leaves people
behind.
Morrisville: A model for smart innovation
Right here in Wake County, Morrisville
is showing what’s possible. Our town has been nationally recognized with the CIO 100 and IDC Smart Cities North America Awards
for smart city leadership. Earlier this year, an international delegation
visited our Town Hall to learn from CIO Rick Ralph’s team and our
approach to innovation.
We’re now deploying generative AI to
help staff search documents more efficiently. And we are planning to introduce Morris the Cricket, a generative AI
chatbot that improves customer service by answering resident questions in
real-time.
This kind of smart city innovation
should not remain isolated. We need a framework to share best practices across municipalities and scale what’s
working. Wake County is uniquely positioned to lead the nation in regional AI
implementation — and now is the time.
The AI moment is already here in
North Carolina
Across the state, AI is moving from
promise to practice:
•
NC State University is embedding AI into educational
curricula.
•
Atrium Health is using AI to improve early cancer
detection.
•
School systems are piloting AI to enhance student
safety.
And while large companies are
leading the way, only 5.1% of small businesses currently use AI.
That figure is expected to rise. But AI isn’t wiping out jobs. It’s
transforming them —and we need to prepare workers to take on new roles that
require digital fluency and AI literacy.
As former Cisco CEO John Chambers
put it: AI success will depend on
common-sense strategies and strong leadership.
Leadership matters: Meet the people moving
us forward
We’re fortunate to have leaders
right here in the Triangle who are building the infrastructure—physical,
digital, and educational—for an inclusive AI economy.
Mark Hinkle
– Founder, Peripety Labs
Mark is building bridges between AI
entrepreneurs, enterprise users, and educators. His focus on open source innovation and practical workforce development ensures
that AI adoption benefits everyone—not just those in tech hubs. His Artificially Intelligent Enterprise
newsletter and work through the All Things AI community have helped thousands of
professionals navigate the AI transition.
Tom
Snyder – Executive Director, RIoT
Tom’s work through RIoT is critical. He’s scaling the
innovation economy beyond Raleigh and Durham by accelerating startups and
advocating for rural inclusion. RIoT’s incubators and workforce training
programs are helping new businesses grow and helping workers prepare for AI,
IoT, and automation-driven jobs.
John
Holden – Smart Cities Manager, City of
Raleigh
John’s regional vision is essential.
Through efforts like the Connected
Triangle Summit (next on Oct. 14),
he’s helping municipalities work together, not in silos. Raleigh’s smart city
strategies—and Holden’s focus on university, government, and private sector
collaboration—serve as a blueprint for how AI can be scaled regionally.
🗓️
Learn more about the Connected Triangle Summit.
These leaders remind us: the path
forward isn’t top-down or bottom-up. It’s collaborative.
Training is the foundation of the AI
economy
Technology moves fast. Workforce
training needs to move faster. A few priorities:
1. Rapid Upskilling and Reskilling
Wake Tech and NC State
must continue expanding programs that meet workers where they are. That means stackable credentials, bootcamps, and micro-certifications that quickly turn skills into jobs.
2. Align Local Action with Statewide
Strategy
Governor Josh Stein’s Executive Order No. 24
created the AI Leadership Council,
backed by a new AI Accelerator
inside the Department of Information Technology. Wake County should align
closely with this council to ensure our programs directly connect to state
strategy—and our residents get first access to new jobs.
3. Cross-Sector Collaboration
Regional forums like the Connected Triangle Summit allow
employers, schools, and government to coordinate. These meetings help translate
policy into programs, and training into employment pipelines.
4. Build Ethical, Community-Centered
AI
AI adoption must be grounded in
trust. Data privacy, algorithmic fairness, and access to tools shouldn’t be
afterthoughts. Ethics needs to be built into every program, pilot, and
platform.
A personal reflection
This work is personal to me.
My daughter Sonia Rao, a
journalist at The New York Times, and
my son Rayan, studying biomedical engineering at NC State, remind me daily why
this matters. Their futures—and the futures of all North Carolinians —depend on the investments we make now.
As the child of immigrants, I know
what opportunity looks like. I’ve lived it. And I want to make sure every resident, regardless of background, has
access to the tools, training and mentors to succeed in this next era.
Looking ahead: A challenge for Wake
County and North Carolina
We don’t need to wait. We need to
act. Here’s where we begin:
•
Expand
workforce access to AI training across all ages and
experience levels—students, veterans, mid-career professionals, and public
sector workers.
•
Partner
with the Governor’s AI Council to integrate local and state
training systems.
•
Ensure
every AI pilot or program centers people. Not just efficiency, but equity, access, and upward mobility.
The future won’t be coded in silicon.
It will be built by people
Wake County’s future in AI won’t be
written in code. It will be built by our neighbors, our students, our educators
and our leaders.
Let’s make it smart. Let’s make it
inclusive. Let’s make it ours.
Tools & Platforms
Global policymakers, executives urge open collaboration to share opportunities of AI-Xinhua
SHENYANG, Sept. 11 (Xinhua) — The 2025 Global Industrial Internet Conference concluded on Monday in Shenyang, the capital of northeast China’s Liaoning Province, having seen Chinese and international guests issue a call for open cooperation to share in the new opportunities presented by artificial intelligence (AI).
The conference brought together government and business representatives from over 10 countries, including Brazil, the United States, the Republic of Korea, Saudi Arabia and China, spanning sectors such as mobile communication, AI and high-end manufacturing. Attendees held in-depth discussions on how to better advance intelligentization, network connectivity and digitalization in economic development.
Piero Scaruffi, founder of Silicon Valley Artificial Intelligence Research Institute, said that AI technology is not a zero-sum game, but rather a catalyst for mutual benefits and shared success. Today’s advancements in AI have benefited greatly from international cooperation.
Tang Lixin, vice president of Northeastern University in Liaoning and an expert on industrial intelligence, told Xinhua that AI has become a strategic technology leading a new technological revolution and industrial transformation. It is a critical strategic resource driving global technology leaps, industrial optimization and upgrading, and overall productivity advancement, exerting profound impacts on economic and social development. Promoting the healthy, orderly development of AI has become particularly urgent, he noted.
“AI presents a shared opportunity for all humanity, as well as a common challenge we all face,” said Hermano Tercius, secretary of telecommunications at the Ministry of Communications of Brazil, adding that in the current complex and ever-changing international environment, strengthening international cooperation in the field of new technologies is crucial.
He said that as the world’s third-largest user of AI, Brazil still lags behind in data center construction. This necessitates collaboration with countries that have advantages in digital infrastructure to achieve complementary benefits and mutual success.
The further advancement of global AI technology hinges on the existence of an open, inclusive environment for innovative collaboration. During the conference, many participants highlighted challenges in areas such as governance frameworks and technical standards that current global AI development faces.
“AI has triggered significant transformations in the technological landscape. Without better compliance-driven rulemaking, it is difficult to predict its future trajectory. Global cooperation is essential to address these challenges,” said Alexandre V. Chidiac, managing partner of Iskandar Group, which is a company engaged in international shipping and trade.
“We advocate for inclusive policies and environments in the field of AI among all nations,” Tercius said. “Only through such efforts can we ensure that no country is left behind in this technological revolution, and build a robust bridge towards shared prosperity and an interconnected future for the world.”
Ben Sassi, general manager of the Warsaw Chamber of Commerce in Poland, stated that there is an urgent global need to strengthen dialogue, enhance mutual trust, and build widespread consensus in areas such as rule-making, technical standards and ethics to promote the healthy development of AI in a united manner.
Over the years, China has made positive explorations and contributed constructive ideas and solutions to the global governance of AI. The country launched the Global AI Governance Initiative in 2023. And last year, the 78th UN General Assembly reached a historic consensus by adopting a resolution on enhancing international cooperation for AI capacity building, which was spearheaded by China.
Participating guests also expressed their willingness to collaborate with China in the field of AI in the future. Pakistan Global Business Alliance Chairman Muhammad Asif Noor Farooqi, for example, said that he hopes China and Pakistan will enhance cooperation within the digital economy to strengthen Pakistan’s intelligent infrastructure. ■
Tools & Platforms
The Latest Tech News – SimCorp, Axyon AI

The latest technology news in the wealth management sector from around the world.
SimCorp, Axyon AI
SimCorp, the global
financial technology provider and subsidiary of Deutsche Börse
Group, is partnering with Axyon AI, a fintech firm specialising
in predictive, AI-driven solutions for asset managers, hedge
funds and institutional investors.
Axyon AI’s predictive analytics will integrate into the SimCorp
One investment management platform later this year.
Equity managers and analysts will gain access to predictive
alerts, helping them anticipate market shifts, identify emerging
opportunities, and assess potential risks, SimCorp said in a
statement.
“By integrating Axyon AI’s solutions into the SimCorp One
platform, portfolio managers benefit from seamless access to
asset forecasts, rankings and signals directly within their
existing workflows,” Marc Schröter, chief product and technology
officer at SimCorp, said.
As part of the deal, Axyon AI wil join SimCorp’s open
platform ecosystem, which will give SimCorp One users access
to third-party tools across the investment management value
chain.
SimCorp referred to industry research showing that there is
rising demand for AI in asset management. The 2025 Global
InvestOps Report found that 75 per cent of buy-side executives
recognise AI’s potential benefits but require more guidance on
how to embed it effectively.
Tools & Platforms
How AI Will Unlock Small Business Growth

Artificial Intelligence
getty
If AI is going to matter at all in our economy, it has to matter for small businesses first.
As a search fund entrepreneur, I’ve met and worked with more than 300 CEOs and founders in cities across the U.S. from New York to Las Vegas, Sunnyvale to Maryland. In every conversation, the same concern surfaces: the AI models in our smartphones are more advanced than the technology stacks running our businesses. While the devices in our pockets update monthly, most business systems remain unchanged for years. And nowhere is this more evident than in small businesses.
This matters because small businesses employ more than 61 million people, nearly half the private workforce. Yet just a fraction of 1% are building the kinds of technology ventures that attract institutional capital.
So this means that the overwhelming majority of small businesses are self-funded and family-run. They’re bootstrapped by owners who pour their own savings into businesses that anchor the communities they care about. These are the businesses still running payroll on technology built a decade ago.
Family Businesses Meet AI Startups
Trusted relationships build businesses.
getty
The other day, I joined a lunch meeting with 80 small business owners who lead multi-generational family firms. This gathering was a masterclass in human networks. However, not once was technology mentioned in the entire meeting.
Every three weeks, all 80 members gather at a private club on Park Avenue for a three-course meal. The purpose was to share business priorities and make referrals and introductions for each member. There were green pens and notepads on the tables embossed with the motto: “Trusted relationships build businesses.” Over lunch, if each of the 80 members received just five new customer introductions, that’s over 400 new channels opened before dessert.
Four hours later, I was downtown at the city’s newest restaurant for a startup forum. Here, every conversation was about AI and technology, from AI-powered roll-ups and cybersecurity to founders turning New York’s vacant warehouses into sushi pop-ups.
Startup Forum in NYC Restaurant
New York, NY
Two Worlds In One City
Across every city I’ve traveled to, these two business communities live side by side but rarely meet. One is led by families built through trusted introductions and intellectual property developed over decades. The other is driven by startups fueled by the race to deploy the newest technology at scale.
What happens when these two worlds connect? Imagine today’s most advanced technology powering small family-owned businesses.
For the past 40 years, one model of entrepreneurship has created more than $10 billion in value by doing exactly this: investing in established small businesses and building them with new technology and leadership. The Search fund model, first launched at Stanford in 1984, was designed to bring innovation into established firms. One of the earliest search funds invested in a 50-person roadside assistance company and built it into Asurion, now a global tech-care enterprise with 23,000 employees and 300 million customers. Another transformed a compliance services firm into RIA-in-a-Box, a leading SaaS platform used by over 2,600 firms nationwide.
What once took years and significant capital investment can now be done in months. Today, enterprise-grade tools once reserved for Fortune 500 corporations are within reach of nearly every business. The playbooks that small businesses have relied on for decades to build multi-generational, value-based businesses can, when paired with AI, scale impact in weeks instead of years.
Across core functions, generative AI is cutting work times by more than 60%. If you can sketch an idea on a napkin, it can be built in hours, not weeks. Supply chains, compliance, document processing and technical workflows are already showing double-digit productivity improvements. In some cases, technical tasks have been reduced by as much as 70%.
Search funds are one proven path to bringing technology into legacy businesses. Others are emerging as well, including AI consulting firms, AI studios and AI-powered roll-up strategies, each with their own strategies to rebuild established firms with the most advanced technology available today.
The tools are here, the cost has never been lower, and the door is wide open—for now.
If AI is going to matter at all, it has to matter for small businesses first. Once it’s put to work, it will power growth across Main Street and fuel an economy that directly supports half the workforce.
-
Business2 weeks ago
The Guardian view on Trump and the Fed: independence is no substitute for accountability | Editorial
-
Tools & Platforms4 weeks ago
Building Trust in Military AI Starts with Opening the Black Box – War on the Rocks
-
Ethics & Policy2 months ago
SDAIA Supports Saudi Arabia’s Leadership in Shaping Global AI Ethics, Policy, and Research – وكالة الأنباء السعودية
-
Events & Conferences4 months ago
Journey to 1000 models: Scaling Instagram’s recommendation system
-
Jobs & Careers2 months ago
Mumbai-based Perplexity Alternative Has 60k+ Users Without Funding
-
Podcasts & Talks2 months ago
Happy 4th of July! 🎆 Made with Veo 3 in Gemini
-
Education2 months ago
VEX Robotics launches AI-powered classroom robotics system
-
Education2 months ago
Macron says UK and France have duty to tackle illegal migration ‘with humanity, solidarity and firmness’ – UK politics live | Politics
-
Funding & Business2 months ago
Kayak and Expedia race to build AI travel agents that turn social posts into itineraries
-
Podcasts & Talks2 months ago
OpenAI 🤝 @teamganassi