Explore every episode of the podcast Quentin Adam
| Title | Pub. Date | Duration | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Europe needs its own DARPA - Opening Voices with André Loesekrug-Pietri | 03 Apr 2025 | 00:13:55 | |
Why does Europe need its own DARPA to stay competitive in deep tech? In this episode of Opening Voices, I talk with André Loesekrug-Pietri, Chairman of JEDI (Joint European Disruptive Initiative), about why Europe must rethink its innovation strategy to compete globally. We discuss: 📢 Join the conversation! Drop your thoughts in the comments. Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations. | |||
| Europe is losing the innovation race - Opening Voices with André Loesekrug-Pietri | 16 Apr 2025 | 00:17:27 | |
How can Europe catch up with the United States and China in terms of cutting-edge technological innovation? What role can bold initiatives like JEDI play in shaping Europe's technological future? In this episode of Opening Voices, I talk with André Loesekrug-Pietri, Chairman of JEDI (Joint European Disruptive Initiative), often referred to as the ‘European DARPA’, to discuss: 🔹 Why Europe needs a radical new approach to R&D and innovation; 🔹 How JEDI is pushing for a paradigm shift in the funding of disruptive technologies; 🔹 The challenges and opportunities of building a sovereign and competitive European technology ecosystem; 🔹 The lessons Europe can learn from the DARPA model and how to apply them. We address: 🔹 The difference between JEDI and DARPA, and why a non-bureaucratic approach is crucial; 🔹 The importance of flexibility and risk-taking in disruptive innovation; 🔹 The role of highly skilled ‘programme managers’ in innovation management. 📢 Join the conversation! Share your thoughts in the comments. 🔔 Subscribe for more in-depth analysis on Europe's tech future. Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations. | |||
| What can save Europe? - Opening Voices with André Loesekrug-Pietri | 30 Apr 2025 | 00:23:01 | |
How can Europe overcome its institutional challenges to become a global technology leader? In this episode of Opening Voices, I talk to André Loesekrug-Pietri, Chairman of JEDI (Joint European Disruptive Initiative), about the strategic issues shaping the future of research and innovation in Europe. On the programme: 🔹 Technological maturity levels (TRL) and their role in research and development; 🔹 The importance of linking basic research, applied research and industrialisation; 🔹 The challenges posed by European bureaucracy in the face of the agility needed to innovate; 🔹 The critical dependence on rare earths and its implications for the energy transition; 🔹 How to strengthen the technological intuition of European policy makers. 📢 Join the discussion by sharing your thoughts in the comments. 🔔 Subscribe so you don't miss out on any upcoming analysis on Europe's technological and sovereign future. Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations. | |||
| Europe needs a 'Sputnik Shock' to compete in Tech - Opening Voices with André Loesekrug-Pietri | 28 May 2025 | 01:12:03 | |
How can Europe reignite its innovation engine and avoid falling behind in the global tech race? What lessons can Europe learn from the US DARPA model? In this pilot episode of Opening Voices, I speak with André Loesekrug-Pietri, Chairman of JEDI (Joint European Disruptive Initiative), often called the 'European ARPA,' to explore: 🔹 The origins and mission of JEDI in driving disruptive innovation in Europe; 🔹 How JEDI's approach to funding advanced research differs from traditional European methods; 🔹 The key elements of the DARPA model that Europe can emulate, including a tolerance for failure and a focus on strategic impact; 🔹 Why Europe needs a sense of urgency and a willingness to take risks to compete with the US and China. 📢 Join the conversation! Share your thoughts in the comments. 🔔 Subscribe for more deep dives into Europe’s tech future. Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations. | |||
| Can Europe become a global technological power? - Opening Voices with André Loesekrug-Pietri | 14 May 2025 | 00:20:52 | |
How can Europe turn its incredible scientific potential into global technology leaders? In this episode of Opening Voices, I talk to André Loesekrug-Pietri, President of JEDI (Joint European Disruptive Initiative), to discuss the challenges and opportunities shaping Europe's technological future. We discuss: 🔹 The role of researchers and universities in creating a dynamic European ecosystem; 🔹 The barriers to transforming research into technological innovation; 🔹 Why Europe needs to take a bold approach and speed up project delivery; 🔹 The revolutionary impact of artificial intelligence on science and research; 🔹 The call for European philanthropists to support disruptive initiatives. 📢 Join the discussion by sharing your ideas in the comments. 🔔 Subscribe to discover more analysis on Europe's technological future. Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations. | |||
| Why Europe can't afford to lose the chip race - Opening Voices with Philippe Notton - SiPearl | 25 Jun 2025 | 00:21:15 | |
What’s really at stake if Europe loses control of its semiconductor industry? In this second part of my conversation with Philippe Notton, CEO of SiPearl—the European company designing processors for tomorrow’s supercomputers—we discuss: 🔹 The hidden geopolitical stakes of processor independence 🔹 Why relying on non-European chips is a critical vulnerability 🔹 The economic and strategic cost of lagging behind the US and Asia 🔹 How SiPearl is helping Europe catch up—without compromise Join the discussion! Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations. | |||
| Europe’s Future Depends on Chips - Opening Voices with Philippe Notton - SiPearl | 11 Jun 2025 | 00:14:54 | |
What does it take to build Europe's first high-performance microprocessor company? And why are processors essential to our technological sovereignty? In this episode of Opening Voices, I sit down with Philippe Notton, CEO of SiPearl—a European company designing the processors that will power tomorrow’s supercomputers—to explore: 🔹 Why Europe must regain control over its semiconductor infrastructure 🎧 Opening Voices is also available on all streaming platforms: Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations. | |||
| “We are 20 years behind the US in chips” – Opening Voices with Philippe Notton – SiPearl | 10 Jul 2025 | 00:23:42 | |
How can Europe bridge the semiconductor gap with the US and Asia—before it’s too late? In this third part of my conversation with Philippe Notton, CEO of SiPearl, we dig into the real-world consequences of Europe's chip dependency and the massive effort required to catch up. 🔹 Why Europe is at least two decades behind the US in chip design Join the conversation—what's your take on Europe's chip race? 🎧 Opening Voices is also available on all streaming platforms: Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations. | |||
| Why hyperscalers are designing their own CPUs – Opening Voices with Craig Prunty – SiPearl | 24 Jul 2025 | 00:35:51 | |
Why are tech giants like Apple, Amazon, and Google building their own processors—and what does it mean for Europe? In this new episode of Opening Voices, I sit down with Craig Prunty, VP at SiPearl, to explore how processor design is becoming a strategic lever for performance, sovereignty, and efficiency. We discuss: 🔹 Why ARM is taking over the server market 🔹 The real reasons hyperscalers are going boutique in chip design 🔹 What makes European players like SiPearl competitive—despite limited funding 🔹 The opportunities for Europe to scale its processor ambitions with partners like TSMC Join the conversation—can Europe reclaim control over its compute infrastructure? Subscribe for more deep dives into the future of European tech. 🎧 Opening Voices is also available on all streaming platforms: — Deezer: https://www.deezer.com/show/1001774171 — Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3QTe4gKhsmhWnlLZaUxNo1 — Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/fr/podcast/opening-voices/id1806281823 Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations. | |||
| "GPUs are overkill for AI" – Opening Voices with Philippe Notton & Craig Prunty – SiPearl | 06 Aug 2025 | 00:28:17 | |
Why are CPUs making a comeback in the age of AI? And how can Europe build a sovereign compute infrastructure in a world dominated by American and Asian tech giants? In this final episode of Opening Voices with the SiPearl team, I sit down with Philippe Notton (CEO) and Craig Prunty (VP) to explore the future of processor design and its impact on AI, sovereignty, and Europe’s industrial strength. We discuss: 🔹 Why CPUs can outperform GPUs in inference workloads 🔹 How SiPearl’s chip design drastically reduces energy consumption 🔹 The growing importance of chiplet architectures for modular compute 🔹 Why Europe needs its own electronic design cloud infrastructure 🔹 How to reclaim industrial skills and build a sovereign value chain 🔹 The difference between SiPearl and ASML in the semiconductor ecosystem 🔹 Why sovereignty isn't about isolation—but about control and resilience What role should Europe play in the next wave of AI infrastructure? Join the conversation in the comments. Subscribe for more deep dives into Europe’s tech future. 🎧 Opening Voices is also available on all streaming platforms: — Deezer: https://www.deezer.com/show/1001774171 — Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3QTe4gKhsmhWnlLZaUxNo1 — Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/fr/podcast/opening-voices/id1806281823 Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations. | |||
| Why AI Breaks Cloud Architecture - Opening Voices with Steeve Morin of ZML | 30 Jan 2026 | 00:30:37 | |
Why does AI suddenly make cloud infrastructure harder to operate, scale and predict? For years, cloud systems were designed around a simple reality: most applications were limited by network and storage, not by computation. In this first part of Opening Voices, Quentin Adam, CEO of Clever Cloud, talks with Steeve Morin, founder and CEO of ZML, about why this reality no longer holds — and what breaks when it does. Drawing from real production experience, Steeve explains:
This episode is about understanding why systems that worked for years start failing under new constraints, and what that means for engineers and organisations operating modern platforms. Opening Voices is also available on all streaming platforms:
Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations. | |||
| Europe's CPU vs Silicon Valley – Opening Voices with Philippe Notton & Craig Prunty – SiPearl | 24 Sep 2025 | 01:59:30 | |
How do you build Europe's first sovereign high-performance processor from scratch? What does it take to challenge Intel and AMD with just 200 engineers and €150 million? In this comprehensive episode of Opening Voices, I sit down with Philippe Notton (CEO) and Craig Prunty (VP) from SiPearl to explore Europe's most ambitious semiconductor project: 🔹 How 200 engineers across 5 R&D sites design a 60 billion gate processor 🔹 Why ARM is becoming the new battlefield for server processors 🔹 The €20 million data center built to emulate Europe's most complex chip 🔹 How hyperscalers like Amazon and Google are driving the custom silicon revolution 🔹 Why AI inference on CPUs can be 70x more energy efficient than GPUs 🔹 The chiplet revolution and Europe's opportunity in post-Moore's Law era We dive deep into the technical challenges, market dynamics, and geopolitical implications of building sovereign computing infrastructure in Europe. Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations. | |||
| Making AI Inference Affordable - Opening Voices with Steeve Morin of ZML | 18 Feb 2026 | 00:22:38 | |
If AI is to power the entire economy, inference must become affordable, scalable and widely available. In this third part of Opening Voices, Quentin Adam continues the conversation with Steeve Morin, founder and CEO of ZML, to explore what it really takes to industrialise inference. They discuss:
This episode explains why the next wave is not about building better models, but about making inference economically viable at scale. — Episode Chapters: Making Inference Available 00:00 – Introduction and Context 01:38 – AI as a Primitive vs. AI as a Product 04:19 – The Economic Unit of the Token 05:15 – Scaling Compute for Inference 07:31 – A Revolution Comparable to Mobile 08:43 – Beyond GPUs 10:56 – Compiler Errors and Efficiency Waste 12:38 – Understanding Chips 15:31 – The New "Blue Ocean" of Semiconductors 20:40 – Nvidia's Strategy and Competition 21:43 – Conclusion and Next Episode Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations. | |||
| Training vs Inference: Why Production Is the Hard Part - Opening Voices with Steeve Morin of ZML | 11 Feb 2026 | 00:23:13 | |
What really separates training a model from running it in production? And why does this difference matter so much at scale? In this second part of Opening Voices, Quentin Adam, CEO of Clever Cloud, continues the discussion with Steeve Morin, founder and CEO of ZML, to clarify a distinction that is often misunderstood. Starting from concrete explanations, Steeve walks through what training and inference actually involve from an engineering and industrial perspective:
This episode helps understand why the real challenge is no longer creating models, but running them reliably, efficiently and sustainably in production. Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations. | |||
| Breaking the AI Compute Monopoly – Opening Voices with Steeve Morin of ZML | 25 Feb 2026 | 00:19:40 | |
What happens when AI infrastructure depends on a single compute ecosystem? In this final part of Opening Voices, Quentin Adam concludes his discussion with Steeve Morin, founder and CEO of ZML, to explore how to bring competition back into AI compute. ZML’s approach is simple in principle, difficult in execution: make AI workloads run efficiently on any chip. They discuss:
The future of AI will not be decided by models alone, but by who controls the compute layer beneath them. Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations. | |||
| Who Controls AI Compute? - Opening Voices with Steeve Morin of ZML | 05 Mar 2026 | 01:28:28 | |
Artificial Intelligence is no longer just a software story. It is a compute story. In this full episode of Opening Voices, Quentin Adam speaks with Steeve Morin, founder and CEO of ZML, to explore a fundamental question: who controls the compute layer of AI? Together, they unpack:
As AI becomes a universal primitive across industries, control shifts from models to infrastructure. This episode connects architecture, economics and semiconductor strategy, and explains why inference may become the industrial foundation of the AI era. Opening Voices is also available on all streaming platforms:
Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations. | |||
| Benjamin Bayart raconte les débuts d’Internet… en cuisinant un bœuf bourguignon | LBCN - Partie 1 | 11 Mar 2026 | 01:45:43 | |
Dans Les Bonnes Choses du Numérique, on parle d’infrastructure, d’Internet, de cloud et de souveraineté… mais pas dans un studio. On en parle dans une cuisine. Pour ce premier épisode, Quentin Adam reçoit Benjamin Bayart, pionnier français d’Internet, ancien président de FDN (French Data Network) et figure historique du logiciel libre. Pendant qu’ils préparent un bœuf bourguignon — avec la recette de Benjamin Bayart lui-même —, la discussion remonte aux débuts d’Internet en France : les premiers modems, les nuits passées à comprendre comment fonctionnent les réseaux, et l’apparition des premiers fournisseurs d’accès. C’est aussi l’histoire d’une autre manière de construire Internet : FDN, un fournisseur d’accès associatif, né pour défendre un réseau ouvert et maîtrisé par ses utilisateurs. Dans cette première partie, la conversation dérive naturellement autour de :
Bref : comment Internet s’est construit, avant de devenir l’infrastructure critique qu’il est aujourd’hui. Les Bonnes Choses du Numérique est une série de conversations informelles animée par Quentin Adam autour d’un principe simple : prendre le temps de discuter des sujets qui comptent vraiment dans le numérique : Internet, cloud, open source, infrastructures, souveraineté technologique. Le tout autour d’un repas. — LinkedIn : https://www.linkedin.com/in/waxzce/ Bluesky : https://bsky.app/profile/waxzce.org TikTok : https://www.tiktok.com/@waxzce Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations. | |||
| Benjamin Bayart : comment la neutralité du net a été défendue en Europe | LBCN - Partie 2 | 18 Mar 2026 | 01:11:20 | |
Dans Les Bonnes Choses du Numérique, on parle d’infrastructure, d’Internet, de cloud et de souveraineté… mais pas dans un studio. On en parle dans une cuisine. Pour ce premier épisode, Quentin Adam reçoit Benjamin Bayart, pionnier français d’Internet, ancien président de FDN (French Data Network) et figure historique du logiciel libre. Pendant que le bœuf bourguignon continue de mijoter et que les pommes de terre sont épluchées, la conversation quitte les débuts d’Internet pour s’attaquer à un autre sujet devenu central dans l’histoire du réseau : la neutralité du net. Car si Internet est souvent présenté comme un espace ouvert par nature, cette ouverture a en réalité fait l’objet de batailles politiques très concrètes, notamment en Europe. Dans cette deuxième partie, la conversation dérive naturellement autour de :
Bref : comment l’architecture d’Internet est devenue un sujet politique majeur. Les Bonnes Choses du Numérique est une série de conversations informelles animée par Quentin Adam autour d’un principe simple : prendre le temps de discuter des sujets qui comptent vraiment dans le numérique : Internet, cloud, open source, infrastructures, souveraineté technologique. Le tout autour d’un repas. — LinkedIn : https://www.linkedin.com/in/waxzce/ Bluesky : https://bsky.app/profile/waxzce.org TikTok : https://www.tiktok.com/@waxzce Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations. | |||
| Benjamin Bayart : les plateformes menacent-elles l’Internet ouvert ? | LBCN - Partie 3 | 25 Mar 2026 | 00:53:33 | |
Dans Les Bonnes Choses du Numérique, on parle d’infrastructure, d’Internet, de cloud et de souveraineté… mais pas dans un studio. On en parle dans une cuisine. Pour ce premier épisode, Quentin Adam reçoit Benjamin Bayart, pionnier français d’Internet, ancien président de FDN (French Data Network) et figure historique du logiciel libre. Le bœuf bourguignon est prêt, les assiettes arrivent sur la table… et la conversation continue. Après les débuts d’Internet et la bataille pour la neutralité du net, la discussion s’oriente vers une autre transformation majeure du Web : la montée en puissance des plateformes. Peu à peu, Internet est passé d’un réseau où chacun pouvait publier, héberger ses services et créer ses propres outils… à un environnement dominé par quelques grandes plateformes. Dans cette troisième partie, la conversation dérive naturellement autour de :
Bref : comment l’architecture d’Internet peut progressivement déplacer le pouvoir, des utilisateurs vers les plateformes. Les Bonnes Choses du Numérique est une série de conversations informelles animée par Quentin Adam autour d’un principe simple : prendre le temps de discuter des sujets qui comptent vraiment dans le numérique : Internet, cloud, open source, infrastructures, souveraineté technologique. Le tout autour d’un repas. — LinkedIn : https://www.linkedin.com/in/waxzce/ Bluesky : https://bsky.app/profile/waxzce.org TikTok : https://www.tiktok.com/@waxzce Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations. | |||
| Benjamin Bayart : Internet peut-il rester un espace libre ? | LBCN - Partie 4 | 02 Apr 2026 | 01:09:46 | |
Dans Les Bonnes Choses du Numérique, on parle d’infrastructure, d’Internet, de cloud et de souveraineté… mais pas dans un studio. On en parle dans une cuisine. Pour ce premier épisode, Quentin Adam reçoit Benjamin Bayart, pionnier français d’Internet, ancien président de FDN (French Data Network) et figure historique du logiciel libre. Le repas touche à sa fin, mais la discussion continue. Après avoir parlé des débuts d’Internet, de la neutralité du net et du pouvoir des plateformes, la conversation s’oriente vers une question plus large : quel avenir voulons-nous pour Internet ? Car derrière les débats techniques sur les réseaux, les plateformes ou les infrastructures se cache une question plus fondamentale : qui contrôle les outils numériques que nous utilisons tous les jours ? Dans cette dernière partie, la conversation dérive naturellement autour de :
Bref : comment défendre l’esprit original d’Internet dans un environnement technologique et économique qui a profondément changé. Les Bonnes Choses du Numérique est une série de conversations informelles animée par Quentin Adam autour d’un principe simple : prendre le temps de discuter des sujets qui comptent vraiment dans le numérique : Internet, cloud, open source, infrastructures, souveraineté technologique. Le tout autour d’un repas. — LinkedIn : https://www.linkedin.com/in/waxzce/ Bluesky : https://bsky.app/profile/waxzce.org TikTok : https://www.tiktok.com/@waxzce Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations. | |||