Innovation

Explore top LinkedIn content from expert professionals.

  • View profile for Jim Fan
    Jim Fan Jim Fan is an Influencer

    NVIDIA Director of AI & Distinguished Scientist. Co-Lead of Project GR00T (Humanoid Robotics) & GEAR Lab. Stanford Ph.D. OpenAI's first intern. Solving Physical AGI, one motor at a time.

    237,712 followers

    We trained a humanoid with 22-DoF dexterous hands to assemble model cars, operate syringes, sort poker cards, fold/roll shirts, all learned primarily from 20,000+ hours of egocentric human video with no robot in the loop. Humans are the most scalable embodiment on the planet. We discovered a near-perfect log-linear scaling law (R² = 0.998) between human video volume and action prediction loss, and this loss directly predicts real-robot success rate. Humanoid robots will be the end game, because they are the practical form factor with minimal embodiment gap from humans. Call it the Bitter Lesson of robot hardware: the kinematic similarity lets us simply retarget human finger motion onto dexterous robot hand joints. No learned embeddings, no fancy transfer algorithms needed. Relative wrist motion + retargeted 22-DoF finger actions serve as a unified action space that carries through from pre-training to robot execution. Our recipe is called "EgoScale": - Pre-train GR00T N1.5 on 20K hours of human video, mid-train with only 4 hours (!) of robot play data with Sharpa hands. 54% gains over training from scratch across 5 highly dexterous tasks. - Most surprising result: a *single* teleop demo is sufficient to learn a never-before-seen task. Our recipe enables extreme data efficiency. - Although we pre-train in 22-DoF hand joint space, the policy transfers to a Unitree G1 with 7-DoF tri-finger hands. 30%+ gains over training on G1 data alone. The scalable path to robot dexterity was never more robots. It was always us. - Website: https://lnkd.in/gxzgeP-2 - Paper: https://lnkd.in/g7PJdz_8

  • View profile for Gavin Mooney
    Gavin Mooney Gavin Mooney is an Influencer

    Energy Transition Advisor | Utilities, Electrification & Market Insight | Networker | Speaker | Dad

    59,259 followers

    Agrivoltaics – combining land for solar and agriculture – is a genuine win-win. It allows a single piece of land to produce both food and clean energy at the same time. Around the world, farmers are finding that solar infrastructure creates microhabitats that boost resilience, improve yields and reduce water stress. For the agriculture: ✅ Shade from the panels lower ground temperatures and reduces evaporation. In arid areas, this has doubled or even tripled crop yields while cutting irrigation needs by half. ✅ Shade-tolerant crops like lettuce, kale, berries and broccoli thrive under reduced heat stress, especially during extreme weather. ✅ Higher soil moisture also promotes healthier pasture, leading to more nutritious forage for grazing animals. For solar operators: ✅ Sheep naturally keep vegetation under control, reducing mowing and maintenance costs and lowering fire risk. They also prevent plants from shading the panels. ✅ Crops underneath the panels help to cool the modules, improving performance on hot days. And the animals benefit too. A 3-year study of 1,700 sheep at the Wellington Solar Farm in NSW found the sheep produced higher quality wool and more of it. The arrays offer shade in summer, shelter during storms and cooler microclimates throughout the day. Economically it's a strong proposition: - Landowners gain a stable income stream while keeping land productive. - Developers access more viable sites with fewer permitting hurdles. - Communities retain agricultural land and benefit from local investment and tax revenue. And in the US, a significant "solar grazing" industry is emerging, where farmers become vegetation managers. They rent out flocks of sheep to solar farm owners and the sheep trim the vegetation. Agrivoltaics is showing that solar and agriculture don’t have to compete for land. They can thrive together – and create more value in the process. Image credit: Enel Green Power #energy #renewables #energytransition

  • View profile for Daren Tang
    Daren Tang Daren Tang is an Influencer

    Director General at World Intellectual Property Organization – WIPO

    45,054 followers

    WIPO’s global report on IP filings is out and records are being broken. 2024 saw the highest ever patent filings – 3.7 million worldwide. Design filings also peaked at a record 1.6 mln, while trademark filings stabilized after two years of decline. But within this rich trove of data from nearly 150 IP offices, a few deeper insights stand out. First, emerging and developing countries continue to embrace IP-driven growth and transformation, whether driven by the need to diversify engines of growth, support increasing aspirations of local innovators and entrepreneurs, create more attractive investment environments, or simply seek new sources of growth. For the sixth consecutive year, India posts double-digit growth in patent filings, with Türkiye also up some 15%. Among the top 20 countries of origin, 12 saw increases in trademark filings, led by Argentina, Brazil and Indonesia, and with strong growth in upper middle-income economies like Colombia, South Africa, Thailand and Viet Nam. Design filings tell a similar story, with the fastest growth in India, Morocco and Indonesia. What this means is that many emerging economies are following the path of the world’s established innovation powerhouses in using IP as a strategic lever for economic growth, diversification, development and resilience. The next challenge is commercializing more of these filings, so they become real-world products and services. Second, we’re seeing more domestic, or “resident” filings. In areas like trademarks and designs, resident filings have traditionally made up the vast majority (+70%) as local businesses often register IP to protect brands and designs serving domestic markets. Now, we’re seeing the same dynamics in patents. Resident patent filings grew almost 7% last year, the fastest rise since 2016, to 72% of the total. This growth in domestic filings suggests that innovation ecosystems are maturing (even for high-tech discoveries, inventors typically file at home first before expanding abroad). It may also reflect shifts in global trade flows, with some industries becoming more localized. Third, many of the major trends in recent years continue to accelerate. Just as AI and digital innovation dominate the headlines, computer technology remains the top field for patent activity, with its growth outpacing all others. The gender balance in innovation is also improving. The proportion of women inventors in international patent applications has increased from 11.6% in 2010 to 18% last year. Beyond the individual data points, the value of this report lies in what it reveals about the global state of innovation and the direction it’s heading. This year’s WIPI shows that people everywhere continue to believe in the power of IP to protect ideas and incentivize innovation, and it gives WIPO the energy to continue strengthening IP ecosystems everywhere to give these innovators and creators the tools to protect and commercialize their ideas. 🔗 https://ow.ly/gub150XqnE7

  • View profile for Olivia Moore

    AI Partner at Andreessen Horowitz

    32,176 followers

    🚨 Introducing the AI Apps 50: Startup Edition Ever wondered how startups are spending their money when it comes to AI? Our team at Andreessen Horowitz worked with Mercury to crunch the numbers and rank the top applications by spend. The list + what we learned from it ⬇️ - Horizontal apps have a slight lead over vertical (60% of the list). This includes general assistants (ex. Perplexity) and SIX different meeting support tools (ex. Fyxer AI). But, it also encompasses creative tools and vibe coding tools that are used in roles across orgs. - Vertical apps can augment human labor...or replace it. We're mostly seeing the former - but five companies on the list allow customers to "hire AI" (ex. Crosby Legal, Cognition, 11x). Labor augmenters mostly assist with customer service, sales, and recruiting. - Vibe coding has landed in enterprises. It's not just a prosumer trend! Number three on the list, below OpenAI and Anthropic? Replit. Other listmakers in the category include Lovable and Emergent, while Cursor made the ranks for more technical users. - Products are making the consumer -> enterprise jump. 12 cos also appeared in our most recent Consumer AI Top 100 - almost all of which started out B2C and have migrated B2B over time. In fact, 70% of listmakers are available for individual use (no enterprise license needed)! Check out the full report: https://lnkd.in/gmMvfvSv

  • View profile for Harsh Pokharna

    Founder at OkCredit, Next Big Thing | IIT Kanpur | #HarshRealities

    85,818 followers

    A promising Indian health-tech startup I invested in just shut down. Hard lessons inside… I invested in Onco back in 2020. It was basically an aggregator for cancer hospitals. Patients could visit their website or app, see all the hospitals and treatment options, get online consultations with doctors, and then choose where they wanted to get treated. They raised over $7 million from top investors like Accel, Chiratae, and others. They also built a strong brand. At their peak, they had 25,000+ visitors and over 1000 unique leads (cancer patients) every month - all organic, across their website, app, and social channels. We really thought hospitals would see the value in owning or partnering with a brand like this. But it didn’t work out that way. I’m sharing some lessons I learned watching this journey. Might be useful for founders (and investors) trying to crack India’s healthcare market: 1. Hospitals in India hold all the power. If you’re trying to aggregate them, you’re basically at their mercy. They will delay payments, ignore contracts, and squeeze every bit of margin out of you. They don’t really need you. Your margins get eaten alive by collections and compliance costs. 2. Digital only healthcare sounds great in pitch decks, but it doesn’t work here yet. People don’t pay enough for online-only services. Digital is great for leads, but it can’t be your whole business. Unit economics just don’t work with digital-only solutions because of low ARPU. 3. Offline is necessary. And brutally capital-intensive. Healthcare in India is still very much offline. Patients want to see a real centre and talk to doctors in person. Building those offline centres isn’t cheap. Each one takes at least 12–24 months to break even. You need serious money upfront. If you can’t fund that, you’re stuck. So, if you are building an aggregator only business in Indian healthcare, think twice. If you don’t have strong answers for these challenges, you’re just setting yourself up to be a middleman with no leverage, no margins, and no way out. That’s business suicide. #HarshRealities

  • View profile for Lauren Stiebing

    Founder & CEO at LS International | Helping FMCG Companies Hire Elite CEOs, CCOs and CMOs | Executive Search | HeadHunter | Recruitment Specialist | C-Suite Recruitment

    57,856 followers

    What happens when a legacy CPG giant like PepsiCo acquires a fast-growing disruptor like Poppi? It’s a blueprint for the future of FMCG. PepsiCo has spent years evolving its portfolio, shifting toward healthier, functional, and better-for-you options. From acquiring Siete Family Foods to Sabra Dipping Company, and now Poppi, they’re doubling down on what today’s consumers want: ✅ Functional Ingredients: Poppi taps into the gut health boom, projected to reach $72B+ globally by 2032 (Source: Market Research Future® (MRFR)). Consumers aren’t just looking for hydration—they want drinks that boost immunity, digestion, and energy. ✅ Premiumization of Soda: Traditional soda sales have declined by 12% in the last decade, while functional and prebiotic sodas are growing 35% YoY (Source: Beverage Digest). Brands like Poppi prove that consumers will pay a premium for added health benefits. ✅ The Power of Challenger Brands: Nearly 60% of Gen Z & Millennials say they trust emerging brands more than Big CPG (Source: McKinsey & Company). PepsiCo knows the future belongs to brands that feel authentic, mission-driven, and community-led. So, The “Big Food vs. Challenger Brand” battle is over-it’s now about collaboration. Legacy brands need disruptors to stay relevant. Health & wellness aren’t trends-they’re becoming industry standards. If a brand isn’t innovating in functional benefits, it’s already falling behind. The next wave of acquisitions? Expect strategic buys in functional beverages, gut health, and personalized nutrition. This is just the beginning. Are Big CPGs moving fast enough to keep up with evolving consumer demands? #FMCG #PepsiCo #Poppi #GutHealth #ConsumerTrends #MergersAndAcquisitions #FoodAndBeverage

  • View profile for Brij kishore Pandey
    Brij kishore Pandey Brij kishore Pandey is an Influencer

    AI Architect & Engineer | AI Strategist

    719,053 followers

    Data Integration Revolution: ETL, ELT, Reverse ETL, and the AI Paradigm Shift In recents years, we've witnessed a seismic shift in how we handle data integration. Let's break down this evolution and explore where AI is taking us: 1. ETL: The Reliable Workhorse      Extract, Transform, Load - the backbone of data integration for decades. Why it's still relevant: • Critical for complex transformations and data cleansing • Essential for compliance (GDPR, CCPA) - scrubbing sensitive data pre-warehouse • Often the go-to for legacy system integration 2. ELT: The Cloud-Era Innovator Extract, Load, Transform - born from the cloud revolution. Key advantages: • Preserves data granularity - transform only what you need, when you need it • Leverages cheap cloud storage and powerful cloud compute • Enables agile analytics - transform data on-the-fly for various use cases Personal experience: Migrating a financial services data pipeline from ETL to ELT cut processing time by 60% and opened up new analytics possibilities. 3. Reverse ETL: The Insights Activator The missing link in many data strategies. Why it's game-changing: • Operationalizes data insights - pushes warehouse data to front-line tools • Enables data democracy - right data, right place, right time • Closes the analytics loop - from raw data to actionable intelligence Use case: E-commerce company using Reverse ETL to sync customer segments from their data warehouse directly to their marketing platforms, supercharging personalization. 4. AI: The Force Multiplier AI isn't just enhancing these processes; it's redefining them: • Automated data discovery and mapping • Intelligent data quality management and anomaly detection • Self-optimizing data pipelines • Predictive maintenance and capacity planning Emerging trend: AI-driven data fabric architectures that dynamically integrate and manage data across complex environments. The Pragmatic Approach: In reality, most organizations need a mix of these approaches. The key is knowing when to use each: • ETL for sensitive data and complex transformations • ELT for large-scale, cloud-based analytics • Reverse ETL for activating insights in operational systems AI should be seen as an enabler across all these processes, not a replacement. Looking Ahead: The future of data integration lies in seamless, AI-driven orchestration of these techniques, creating a unified data fabric that adapts to business needs in real-time. How are you balancing these approaches in your data stack? What challenges are you facing in adopting AI-driven data integration?

  • View profile for Panagiotis Kriaris
    Panagiotis Kriaris Panagiotis Kriaris is an Influencer

    FinTech | Payments | Banking | Innovation | Leadership

    158,229 followers

    AI is becoming a make-or-break factor for banks. But success will not depend on their ability to offer #AI, but on their competence in integrating it. Let’s take a look.   Banking is forecasted to feel the biggest impact from generative AI among sectors and industries as a percentage of their revenues with the additional value calculated between $200 bn and $340 bn annually (source: McKinsey). But why is the impact so powerful? One of the main reasons is because the abrupt surge of gen AI is exponentially increasing the speed with which #banking is being transformed. That is not to say that the transformation has started with or due to AI. On the contrary: during the past 10 to 15 years banking was already in the middle of transforming from a human-based, relationship-first industry to a more automated and technology-driven business following the #fintech revolution and the ascend of nimbler and more innovative competitors. But AI now does 2 things: —  It brings the transition to a new level, across 3 dimensions: speed, outcome and impact. —  It turbo-charges one of the biggest challenges in modern FS: the combination of AI and data that brings under the same roof two inherently opposing forces: mass and customization. In other words, AI seems to find a credible answer to achieving hyper-personalization. In a recent report Deloitte has provided realistic examples on how this is done across both cost efficiency and income growth: Cost efficiency: —  Workforce acceleration efficiencies across the board: 0–15% of total staff cost —  IT development and maintenance acceleration: 10–20% of IT staff cost —  Improved credit-risk assessment leading to 10-15% savings in impairment charges —  Improved FinCrime/fraud detection reducing litigation/redress charges and fraud losses Income growth: —  Next generation market analysis / predictive trading algorithms: 5–7% uplift on trading income —  Improved customer retention: 1–2% uplift on fees & commissions —  Improved customer acquisition through hyper-personalised marketing: 5-10% uplift from interest income and fees & commissions —  Tailored loan pricing based on credit risk assessment: 2–3% increase on net interest income Despite all the excitement around these estimated benefits, success will not be a walk in the park. It will depend on the banks’ ability to integrate AI in a seamless way into their day-to-day operations. Going forward AI will be re-writing much of the scenarios and use cases of the banking value chain. That doesn’t necessarily mean that they will all be different, but most will certainly be enhanced with impact spanning both across the back-end and the front-end. Given that resources are limited, one of the main challenges will be how to identify the ones to focus on. Factors such as #strategy, potential impact and a match with the existing skillset should be guiding the selection process.   Opinions: my own, Graphic source and use cases: Deloitte

  • View profile for Jeff Winter
    Jeff Winter Jeff Winter is an Influencer

    Industry 4.0 & Digital Transformation Enthusiast | Business Strategist | Avid Storyteller | Tech Geek | Public Speaker

    172,717 followers

    Ever heard of the Lippitt-Knoster Model for Managing Complex Change? It's a classic in the change management world, laying out the essential pieces needed to navigate big transformations. Taking a cue from that, I've adapted it to fit the world of digital transformation. There are seven key elements you can't afford to miss: Vision, Strategy, Objectives, Capabilities, Architecture, Roadmap, and Projects & Programs. Skip any one of these, and you're asking for trouble. Here’s why each one matters: • 𝐕𝐢𝐬𝐢𝐨𝐧: This is the 'what' of your transformation. A clear vision gives everyone a target to aim for, aligning all efforts and keeping the team focused. • 𝐒𝐭𝐫𝐚𝐭𝐞𝐠𝐲: Think of this as the 'why' and 'how.' A solid strategy explains the logic behind your vision, showing how you plan to get there and why it's the best route. It’s designed to guide everyone in the company on how to make decisions that support the vision, aligning all efforts and keeping the team focused. • 𝐎𝐛𝐣𝐞𝐜𝐭𝐢𝐯𝐞𝐬: These are your milestones. Clear, specific objectives make it easy to measure success and ensure everyone knows what's important. Without them, you can easily veer off course and waste resources. • 𝐂𝐚𝐩𝐚𝐛𝐢𝐥𝐢𝐭𝐢𝐞𝐬: These are what your company will now be able to do that it wasn't able to before in order to achieve the objectives. These can be organizational capabilities (like improved decision-making), technical capabilities (such as real-time operational visibility), or other types like enhanced customer engagement or streamlined processes. • 𝐀𝐫𝐜𝐡𝐢𝐭𝐞𝐜𝐭𝐮𝐫𝐞: A robust architecture ensures all your tech works together smoothly, preventing inefficiencies and costly headaches. This includes various types of architecture such as data architecture, IT infrastructure architecture, enterprise architecture, and functional architecture. Effective architecture is central to reducing technical debt and aligning software with broader business transformation goals. • 𝐑𝐨𝐚𝐝𝐦𝐚𝐩: Your roadmap is the game plan. It lays out the sequence of actions, helping you avoid uncertainty and missteps. It's your guide to getting things done right. • 𝐏𝐫𝐨𝐣𝐞𝐜𝐭𝐬 & 𝐏𝐫𝐨𝐠𝐫𝐚𝐦𝐬: These are where the rubber meets the road. Actionable projects and programs turn your strategy into reality, making sure your plans lead to real, tangible outcomes. From my experience, I think '𝐂𝐚𝐩𝐚𝐛𝐢𝐥𝐢𝐭𝐢𝐞𝐬' and '𝐑𝐨𝐚𝐝𝐦𝐚𝐩' are the two most overlooked. What do you think? ******************************************* • Follow #JeffWinterInsights to stay current on Industry 4.0 and other cool tech trends • Ring the 🔔 for notifications!

  • View profile for Severin Hacker

    Duolingo CTO & cofounder

    45,660 followers

    Should you try Google’s famous “20% time” experiment to encourage innovation? We tried this at Duolingo years ago. It didn’t work. It wasn’t enough time for people to start meaningful projects, and very few people took advantage of it because the framework was pretty vague. I knew there had to be other ways to drive innovation at the company. So, here are 3 other initiatives we’ve tried, what we’ve learned from each, and what we're going to try next. 💡 Innovation Awards: Annual recognition for those who move the needle with boundary-pushing projects. The upside: These awards make our commitment to innovation clear, and offer a well-deserved incentive to those who have done remarkable work. The downside: It’s given to individuals, but we want to incentivize team work. What’s more, it’s not necessarily a framework for coming up with the next big thing. 💻 Hackathon: This is a good framework, and lots of companies do it. Everyone (not just engineers) can take two days to collaborate on and present anything that excites them, as long as it advances our mission or addresses a key business need. The upside: Some of our biggest features grew out of hackathon projects, from the Duolingo English Test (born at our first hackathon in 2013) to our avatar builder. The downside: Other than the time/resource constraint, projects rarely align with our current priorities. The ones that take off hit the elusive combo of right time + a problem that no other team could tackle. 💥 Special Projects: Knowing that ideal equation, we started a new program for fostering innovation, playfully dubbed DARPA (Duolingo Advanced Research Project Agency). The idea: anyone can pitch an idea at any time. If they get consensus on it and if it’s not in the purview of another team, a cross-functional group is formed to bring the project to fruition. The most creative work tends to happen when a problem is not in the clear purview of a particular team; this program creates a path for bringing these kinds of interdisciplinary ideas to life. Our Duo and Lily mascot suits (featured often on our social accounts) came from this, as did our Duo plushie and the merch store. (And if this photo doesn't show why we needed to innovate for new suits, I don't know what will!) The biggest challenge: figuring out how to transition ownership of a successful project after the strike team’s work is done. 👀 What’s next? We’re working on a program that proactively identifies big picture, unassigned problems that we haven’t figured out yet and then incentivizes people to create proposals for solving them. How that will work is still to be determined, but we know there is a lot of fertile ground for it to take root. How does your company create an environment of creativity that encourages true innovation? I'm interested to hear what's worked for you, so please feel free to share in the comments! #duolingo #innovation #hackathon #creativity #bigideas

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