Avsnitt
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This week on Cambridge Tech Podcast, we sit down with Dan Thorp, CEO of Cambridge Ahead, to dig into the freshly published Cambridge Economic Overview (CamEO) Report - and the picture is more complicated than the headlines suggest.
The positives are real: 281 equity deals between 2020–2024 (the highest of any UK location outside London), three of the five biggest UK biotech VC deals in Q1 2026 from Cambridge companies, and meaningful government commitments - the Development Corporation, and the AI Hardware plan featuring ARM and Common AI.
But the data has a sting. New company formation has dropped nearly 50% - from an average of 1,129 companies a year (2013–2019) to just 620 in 2024–2025. Knowledge-intensive employment recorded its first annual decline since Cambridge Ahead began tracking in 2011. And businesses are increasingly citing access to scaling capital - not just talent, housing, and transport - as a real constraint.
What makes the CamEO distinctive is its insistence that success shouldn't be measured in GDP alone. Housing access, employment pathways, and mental health support for young people matter too. Programmes like Form the Future and Included are doing important work - but need sustained, coordinated funding to deliver at scale.
Dan's bottom line? "There is no other place quite like Cambridge to innovate and to scale tech companies." The fundamentals hold.
🎧 Listen now on all major platforms.
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Produced by Cambridge TV
#CamTechPod
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What happens to your photos, videos, and digital memories when you die? If you're storing them with Apple, Google, or any of the major tech platforms, the answer may surprise, and disturb, you.
This week, Faye sits down with Charlotte Ridley, founder and CEO of Memorify Technologies, for one of the most personal and purpose-driven founder stories the Cambridge Tech Podcast has featured. It's a conversation about grief, parenthood, AI, wellbeing, and the very human need to feel connected to the moments that shape us.
Charlotte's story begins in 2021, when her father passed away unexpectedly while she was four months pregnant. In the time that followed, she found herself battling Apple and Google for access to his digital memories, and losing. The experience didn't just break her heart. It planted the seed for an entirely new category of technology.
Memorify is an AI-powered memory platform - "the home for your digital memories." The app monitors your camera roll with your permission, identifies meaningful photos and moments, curates the best of them, and writes rich narrative summaries of your experiences. Memories are then stored securely, with guaranteed access for up to 100 years after death. Memorify is private, intentional, and rooted in authenticity everything social media has moved away from.
Three failed Innovate UK grant applications before winning the fourth, for ethical and impactful novel AI. The pre-seed round was oversubscribed - raising over £420,000 against an initial target of £200,000 - backed by Sheffield Angels, Anglia Capital Group, and FundmyPitch. Memorify is also supported by the London Stock Exchange Group and Innovate UK's high-growth business programme. The seed round opens in early September 2026.
"Humanity has never documented so much of its life, yet never felt so disconnected from its memories."
Listen to the full episode on the Cambridge Tech Podcast and subscribe for weekly updates on the region's most exciting founders and innovations - available on all major platforms.
Headline sponsor Holden Polestar
Produced by Cambridge TV
#CamTechPod
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Saknas det avsnitt?
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Robin Sterling started his PhD 20 years ago when useful quantum computers were "at least 10 years away." He's seen the field go from academic curiosity to venture-backed race - with companies like Quantinuum and Riverlane demonstrating things that once felt like pipe dreams. But he's candid: today's systems are still orders of magnitude smaller than what's actually useful.
Right now, quantum systems are just small enough that engineers can manage complexity with Python scripts and intuition. Make them 100x bigger - which is what the industry needs - and that stops working entirely. Robin talks about how we’re at the same wall classical computing hit in the 1980s, when CPU design had to be automated.
Enter Coherence Engine: The company builds system-level simulation and validation software for quantum hardware. The goal: let quantum engineers design, simulate, and validate their next-generation systems before buying a single piece of hardware. Think of it as CAD tools for quantum computers.
Founded in August 2024, with pre-seed funding secured in January 2025, Coherence Engine was built with the support of Cambridge Future Tech (CFT) - the deep tech venture builder based at the Bradfield Centre. Robin credits CFT as instrumental in turning his idea into a fundable, scalable company, particularly as a solo founder coming off the back of a previous unsuccessful startup.
Tune in to hear this and more, and subscribe on all major podcast platforms. If you enjoyed this episode, a five-star review goes a long way - it helps more people discover the show.
Headline sponsor Holden Polestar
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#CamTechPod
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Prashant Shah co-hosts this week’s episode with Faye Holland talking all things CWOW - and it's going to be a big one.
CWOW runs from 11th–19th June 2026, bringing together the life sciences community across Oxford, London and Cambridge for a week packed with pitches, open days, panels, and networking.
Here's a snapshot of what we talked about:
🚀 Ventures Tours (Oxford → London → Cambridge) Kicking off on 11th June in Oxford, the Ventures Tour moves through London (12th) before landing in Cambridge for two full days (15th–16th). Investor showcases and networking sessions with the likes of Oxford Science Enterprises, KQ Labs at the Francis Crick Institute, Cambridge Innovation Capital, Amadeus Capital Partners, Cambridge Angels, and many more – all showcasing their most inspiring startups and entrepreneurs.
🏢 Cambridge Wide Open Day - 17th June The centrepiece of the week. Tours, company showcases, masterclasses, and a party - all in one day. A brilliant way to see the Cambridge life sciences ecosystem in action. If you want to be part of the car pool with #CamTechPod then let us know!
🧬 TechBio, Biotech & Pharma Day - 18th June BIA TechBio X at AstraZeneca's Discovery Centre, plus the AZ Exchange celebrating collaboration across the UK Life Sciences ecosystem.
Big shout out to Ajit Guller and Francois Meullenet and the o2h team, and sponsors Donna Ardeman, Mills & Reeve, Jonathan Goodacre, Keltie, and so many more sponsors, supporters and partners.
Tune in to hear the full conversation on the Cambridge Tech Podcast - available on all major platforms.
Headline sponsor Holden Polestar
Produced by Cambridge TV
#CamTechPod
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In this week's episode, hosts Faye Holland and James Parton dive deep into the region's thriving FinTech ecosystem with Tim Robinson, CEO of Tech East, and Antony Bellingall, co-founder of Norwich-based compliance software company Idenfo. What emerges is a compelling story about regional tech excellence, female founder leadership, and why London's dominance in FinTech might be masking some genuinely impressive talent elsewhere.
What makes this particularly interesting is that Norwich wasn't even mentioned in the government's 2021 Khalifa review of UK FinTech - despite financial services accounting for one of the highest proportions of GVA in the city's economy. The oversight was glaring.
But there's something special happening across the East of England:
Female founder leadership: Outside London, Norfolk has the highest proportion of female tech founders in the UKStrong role models: From university leadership to corporate executives, visible female pioneers are normalising entrepreneurshipSupportive ecosystem: Professional services, legal support, and university partnerships create a genuine communityThe Idenfo Story: Global Ambitions, Local Roots
Antony Bellingall's journey perfectly encapsulates why the region works. After stints in Japan and Singapore building compliance expertise, he returned to Norwich to launch Idenfo in 2019. Today, they have 2,000 customers across 15 countries.
The collaboration with the University of East Anglia on hologram detection systems for identity cards shows how academic partnerships can drive real product innovation.
What's Next?
Tech East has just launched FinTechEast.com and is planning a major push to connect FinTech businesses across the entire region - Cambridge, Norwich, Ipswich, and beyond. Rather than competing with London, the strategy is smarter: build a distributed network of smaller hubs that collectively punch well above their weight.
Tim Robinson will be speaking at London Tech Week 2026 on Regional Tech Ecosystems, bringing the East's story to the capital.
Listen to the full episode on the Cambridge Tech Podcast and discover why this region deserves a place on every tech investor's radar.
Headline sponsor Holden Polestar
#CamTechPod
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When Debbie Toms met Chad Edwards at a casual barbecue in early 2024, neither of them could have predicted what would unfold. Two years on, CuspAI has raised over $130 million, assembled a world-class team across Europe, and is tackling some of humanity's most pressing challenges through AI driven materials discovery. It's the kind of origin story that makes you question whether you've been to the right barbecues lately.
What makes Debs' journey particularly compelling is her transition from structured corporate roles. Nine years at Deloitte, eight at Marshall Aerospace, to the controlled chaos of an early-stage deep tech startup. Her insight?
"You have to get very comfortable very quickly with just not knowing all the answers."
The company itself represents a genuine breakthrough. CuspAI has built an agentic platform that models material properties with extraordinary speed. Where traditional materials discovery involves years of laboratory work with a mere 6% success rate, CuspAI can deliver equivalent results in 45 minutes with a projected 90% success rate.
Key Milestones in Two Years
· Company incorporated March 2024
· Seed round closed June 2024
· First platform version live January 2025
· Series A raised over $100 million
· Team grown to 55 employees with contracts signed for more across UK, Amsterdam, Berlin, and London
CuspAI isn't building technology for technology's sake. Their partnerships focus on genuinely transformative applications, for example:
· Carbon capture through direct air capture (DAC) projects with Meta
· Forever chemicals removal from water in partnership with Khmera, a NASDAQ-listed Finnish company
· Next-generation batteries and semiconductors addressing real infrastructure challenges
As Debs notes, there's genuine purpose embedded in the work: "The loveliest thing about that project is our lead chemist working on that project was pregnant at the time and is really aware that this is something that is impacting human life."
What's Next?
CuspAI is expanding aggressively into Asia-Pacific with a Singapore office and partnership already in motion. They're announcing new talent hires and partnership deals over the coming months, with an ambitious goal to deliver best-in-class materials by year-end.
For founders and investors, CuspAI's story offers several lessons: the importance of mission-driven teams, the power of combining deep technical expertise (Max Welling's world-leading AI research) with commercial acumen (Chad Edwards' background), and the value of building based on what customers actually need.
Listen to the full episode to hear Debs discuss the mental health implications of AI tools, why Cambridge needs to do more for AI talent, and how she maintains culture whilst scaling at breakneck speed.
Headline sponsor Holden Polestar
#CamTechPod
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In the latest episode of the Cambridge Tech Podcast, hosts James Parton and Faye Holland chat with Rafie Faruq, co-founder of Genie AI.
Genie AI is already backed by Google Ventures and Khosla Ventures, operates across 35+ countries, and serves everyone from SMEs to enterprises. But the real story? It's about reimagining an entire industry.
"We're democratizing expertise and what we're really selling is trust."
Genie AI's secret sauce is a patent-pending architecture called Eidetic Intelligence, which dramatically outperforms ChatGPT and Claude for legal tasks:
86% accuracy on benchmarks vs. GPT's 48% a significant leap in legal qualityHandles unlimited context length across 20-30+ documents simultaneouslyCreates a knowledge graph of company policies, templates, and negotiation behaviourMaintains legal quality through intelligent compression and gating mechanismsThis matters because most law firms operate on a template and tweak model, charging tens of thousands for slightly modified contracts. Genie flips the script entirely.
Perhaps most fascinating is Rafie's vision for the future of work itself. As AI agents handle more tasks autonomously, company structures are already shifting:
Rather than cross-functional teams slowing things down with collaboration, we're moving towards generalists managing multiple AI agents - essentially, one-person companies at scale.
Tune in to hear the full conversation on the Cambridge Tech Podcast - available on all major platforms.
Headline sponsor Holden Polestar
#CamTechPod
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This episode of the Cambridge Tech Podcast tackled one of the industry's most overlooked crises: electronic waste. We spoke with Sonia Lange Ramontja, founder of Retapp, about building a sustainable business that's as profitable as it is purposeful.
Here's a sobering statistic: e-waste constitutes 70% of all toxic waste globally, yet it remains largely invisible in mainstream conversations. Sonia recognised this gap and built Retapp to address it.
Retapp ran a successful pilot from July to September 2025, collecting 860 kilos of electronics across five pop-up events in collaboration with Cambridge City Council. The product is now live on both App Store and Google Play.
Retapp's platform combines consumer-friendly design with intelligent automation:
Users scan devices using the app (phones, laptops, toasters—anything with a plug or battery)AI identifies categories, estimates weight, and calculates resale value or eco-pointsUsers choose drop-off or collection optionsOptional data erasure certificates available for enhanced securitySustainability metrics track environmental impactRetapp also provides detailed device insights to refurbishers and recyclers through a web portal, helping them manage the deluge of electronics without overwhelming their operations.
Currently fundraising their pre-seed round, Retapp is seeking investors who understand the circular economy and recognise this as a genuine business opportunity. With EU circular economy regulations tightening and extended producer responsibility (EPR) becoming mandatory, the timing couldn't be better.
Listen to the full episode on the Cambridge Tech Podcast and subscribe for weekly updates on the region's most exciting founders and innovations.
Headline sponsor Holden Polestar
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Cambridge Tech Podcast latest episode is with Bill Yost talking cement, startups, and the differences in building businesses either side of the Atlantic.
Cement is the second most used material on Earth with 4 billion tonnes produced annually, and conventional cement production accounts for 7% of global CO2 emissions. If the cement industry were a country, it would rank behind only the US and China in carbon output. That's the scale of the opportunity.
Enter Reclinker, a Cambridge-based startup that converts reclaimed cement into clinker using electric arc furnaces already used in steel recycling. Rather than building expensive new infrastructure, they're partnering with existing steel manufacturers.
Bill talks about the funding journey, how to demonstrate the process at industrial scale, and how they have secured important supply chain agreements.
Whether you're fascinated by climate tech, curious about fundraising strategy, or interested in how to build in Cambridge's ecosystem, this episode delivers real insights from someone who's done it multiple times, on both continents.
Tune in on your preferred podcast platform and subscribe to join the weekly conversation.
Headline sponsor Holden Polestar
#CamTechPod
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This week we meet Rob Walden, co-founder of Euthasafe, and discuss his journey from aerospace engineering to the life-saving technology his team is developing right now.
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The latest episode of the Cambridge Tech Podcast features Tim Ansor, leader of the Intelligent Services Business Unit at Cambridge Consultants, discussing the rapidly evolving world of physical AI and robotics. If you're building in this space or investing in it, this conversation is essential listening.
What Is Physical AI, Anyway?
Tim cuts through the hype to define physical AI simply: AI that understands the physical world and its properties. Unlike ChatGPT or Claude which are trained on text and images, physical AI systems grasp that objects exist even when hidden, that some things are squishy and others hard, and that gravity works.
It's the missing piece that's making humanoid robots genuinely viable now, not just sci-fi fantasy.
What This Means for Your Team - New skills are coming. Future managers won't just lead people, they'll manage AI agents and robotic collaborators too. Education needs to evolve from "learn to code" to "be fluent with AI tools."
Listen now to learn more!
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Michael Meeks joins us the week to talk about competing with Microsoft, and why Open Source Wins. Some of the highlights of our conversation include:
On organic growth: "Unlike many VC-backed companies, we're organic, we're profitable and we have a mission which is to drive open source."The business model is counterintuitive but brilliant. By giving away free software, Collabora builds massive brand recognition and deployment. Users try it at home, fall in love with it, and when they need enterprise support, they know exactly who to call.On digital sovereignty: In an increasingly geopolitical world, Michael argues open source is the only path to true sovereignty. "The only way to have true digital sovereignty...is to use open source because then it is for the world. It is both local and a collaboration internationally."One of the most interesting technical insights: Collabora keeps documents on the server rather than downloading them to clients. This enables server-side policy enforcement - no copy-paste, no printing, no downloads, plus watermarking for traceability.Michael's remote-first approach is worth noting: rather than have some staff in an office and others remote (which creates two-tier communication), Collabora went fully distributed globally. They do maintain a Cambridge base with internships at Hills Road sixth form college, giving back to the community that shaped him.
Whether you're a founder wrestling with funding strategy, a VC evaluating open source investments, or simply curious about how to build a profitable, mission-driven company without VC pressure, this episode delivers real insights.
Ready to dive deeper? Download Collabora Office from your app store and listen to the full conversation on the Cambridge Tech Podcast. You'll leave thinking differently about competition, sovereignty, and what sustainable growth actually looks like.
Headline sponsor Holden Polestar
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Welcome to Cambridge Tech Week Kickstarter, the event that's putting Cambridge firmly on the global innovation map. This year's theme? How Deep Tech Changes the World. If you're a founder, investor, or tech enthusiast, tune in to find out more about the week, and to hear the panel discussion at the kickstarter event.
The episode starts with updates from Kathryn Chapman (Innovate Cambridge), Rob Bridge (Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Combined Authority), Mike Short and Michaela Eschbach (Cambridge Wireless).
We then cover the highlights of the panel discussion that asks “What Does a World-Class Deep Tech Ecosystem Actually Look Like?”
Kathryn Chapman hosts, with panelists Professor Sir John Aston (University of Cambridge), Jo Slota-Newson (Almanac Ventures) and Lucy Yu (CEO, Centre for Net Zero, Octopus Energy Group).
Cambridge isn't just another tech hub. It's a deliberate ecosystem where world-class research, creative thinking, and bold partnerships converge. The government is backing it. The talent is there. Will you be there to hear more during Cambridge Tech Week this September?
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The latest Cambridge Tech Podcast episode packed a punch with exciting announcements from the Cambridge ecosystem, followed by an in-depth conversation with Jean Michel Van, founder of Ryse Flow, a company building the next generation of AI-powered sales automation.
The real gem of this episode is Jean Michel's journey from corporate product management to founding Ryse Flow. His story is refreshingly honest about the fears and decision-making that come with entrepreneurship.
Jean Michel's background is unconventional. Born in Paris to parents who fled the Cambodian genocide, he spent 15 years in pharma and tech before making the leap to entrepreneurship. His early career in pharmaceutical finance eventually led him into tech through a pivotal acquisition role, where he discovered his passion for product management.
After 15 years climbing the corporate ladder, Jean Michel reached a turning point. Rather than waiting for the ‘perfect idea’. he decided to take the leap.
Ryse Flow's premise is compelling: AI won't simply be bolted onto existing software, it will fundamentally reshape how sales automation works.
"AI is going to disrupt most of the legacy players in the market in the same way cloud disrupted client-server implementations in the early 2000s."
Jean Michel's strategy is pragmatic:
· Currently leveraging 70% existing tools while building proprietary IP
· Only pursuing paid pilots - ensuring customer commitment and real feedback
· Maintaining a lean, self-funded team to preserve long-term decision-making autonomy
· Already profitable despite being early-stage
This episode captures the real tension between corporate comfort and entrepreneurial ambition. Jean Michel's willingness to discuss both his fears and his conviction offers genuine insight for founders considering the leap.
Tune in on your preferred podcast platform, and subscribe to join the weekly conversation.
Headline sponsor Holden Polestar
#CamTechPod
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Episode 182 features five of this year's #21toWatch winners - and if you're in the startup ecosystem, this one's unmissable.
For those unfamiliar, for the last eight years #21toWatch has been high on the regions innovation showcase, and the numbers speak for themselves. Over eight cohorts, 168 companies have landed on the list and collectively raised a staggering £721 million. This year marks a particularly poignant milestone: its Faye's final year running the programme after creating it back in 2018. But we think you’ll agree, she's gone out with a bang.
In this episode we talk to five of the winning companies:
Cyclana Bio is tackling drug discovery from first principles, focusing on the extracellular matrix (the "biological dark matter" comprising 90% of your tissue). Lea Wenger explains how their multidisciplinary approach spanning Cambridge and Manchester is already attracting serious attention, with £5 million raised so far.Obasense is developing ultra-sensitive gas sensors for indoor air quality monitoring -particularly timely given the UK's new mould regulations. Founder, Osarenkhoe Ogbeide, is also building African mythology comics on the side!Myonerv is creating wearable neurostimulators for stroke rehabilitation. Sam Kourali's personal story - inspired by his cousin's stroke - drives a compelling business model targeting the US market's $60 billion opportunity.NANOPLUME just announced £2.2 million in funding for their bio-based aerogel thermal insulation. Three times more insulating than conventional materials, 60% lighter, and fully circular. Co-founder Tara Love says they're eyeing product launch within 18 months.Polytecks is mapping bioelectricity through flexible electrode arrays - starting with veterinary cardiology (dog heart disease affects over 80% of dogs) before moving to human diagnostics. Ruben Ruiz-Mateos Serrano tells us more.This episode captures something essential about where UK deep tech innovation is heading. These aren't incremental improvements - they're fundamental reimagining’s of how we solve problems in healthcare, climate tech, and industrial systems.
Subscribe now and join the conversation. Because the next unicorn might just be one of these five.
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In this week’s episode, Nweike Onwuyali founder of Ziphii, suggests that technology companies are "fundamentally flawed" in their approach. They build tools for customers and their employees but often exclude the actual end-users who need to interact with the solution. Nweike proposes that most players either have advertising-centric DNA or remain stuck in the "tool mindset."
Nweike wants to do something different with Ziphii which launches this month. The product "Webb" offers a unified digital home for individuals, solopreneurs, and creators. It integrates four pillars:
1. Presence - your digital identity and portfolio
2. Experiences - booking, blogging, contact management
3. Commerce - built-in monetisation
4. Community - owned audience management
In addition to introducing “Webb”, the real heart of this episode is Nweike's journey and his vision for Ziphii. His story is compelling: from building websites in Nigeria in 2000 to scaling a 60-person enterprise software company, Nweike brings genuine perspective on how technology evolves.
Headline sponsor Holden Polestar
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This episode reveals why quantum computing's next big breakthrough might not be about building better qubits, it's about connecting them together.
NuQuantum's journey is a masterclass in pivoting based on market reality.
"Quantum computing is reassuringly hard," Ed explains. "Whatever technique you pursue, there are different limits of scale. But pretty much every modality hits a point where you can't physically assemble enough qubits in a monolithic machine to solve valuable problems."
The solution? Apply classic computing. Just as data centres rely on networking to make distributed computing work, quantum computers need interconnection to scale beyond their physical limits.
"No one company, probably no one country is going to dominate this. This is going to be a collective endeavour, woven together to make highly valuable, highly resilient solutions."
With Series A funding secured, NuQuantum is on an aggressive expansion trajectory.
Ready to dive deeper? Listen to the full episode on the Cambridge Tech Podcast to hear Ed's insights on scaling quantum systems, building diverse teams, and why decent coffee matters more than you'd think.
Headline sponsor Holden Polestar
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Episode 179 hosts Faye Holland and James Parton sit down with Irina Barbina (CEO) and Matthew Griffiths (CTO) to unpick how Concr is using predictive modelling and digital twins to transform cancer drug development.
Cancer data is fragmented. Clinical trials, pre-clinical research, and real-world patient data exist in silos. There's no unified way to predict how individual patients will respond to specific therapies, until now.
Concr's technology borrows from astrophysics, specifically, how scientists model dark matter using gravitational lensing. The parallel is striking: Astrophysicists can't directly observe dark matter, so they build complex simulations to infer its distribution. Concr can't directly know why a drug worked for a patient, so they build digital twin simulations to predict outcomes.
Key innovations:
· Bayesian inference at scale to handle messy, incomplete cancer data
· Hierarchical modelling that learns from shared biology across cancer types
· 94% prediction accuracy on retrospective clinical trial data
· Prospective validation underway with NHS partners and pharma companies
Concr dramatically reduces the cost and complexity of clinical trials. This episode brilliantly illustrates why Cambridge is a global innovation hub. It's not just about brilliant science, it's about brilliant people from different disciplines colliding, recognising patterns, and building companies that matter.
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The latest Cambridge Tech Podcast episode tackles one of the most pressing challenges facing the tech industry today: how do we prepare the next generation for a world fundamentally reshaped by artificial intelligence?
The Problem Is Real
The statistics are sobering. The UK has 700,000 unemployed graduates struggling to gain a foothold in the labour market. Young people aren't just worried about AI - they're confused and increasingly anxious about their futures.
What makes this episode essential listening is the nuanced, multi-stakeholder perspective it brings, including Liz Tolcher, Associate Partner, PA Consulting; Ayeisha Kone-Massouma, Degree Apprentice Project Manager, Bidwells; and those noted below.
The podcast brings together educators, employers, policymakers, and AI experts to explore three critical themes:
1. Self-Knowledge Over Specialisation
Anne Bailey, CEO & Co-Founder, Form the Future emphasises that young people's greatest asset is self-awareness:
"Your uniqueness, your humanity, your curiosity, your interest, your values - these are the things that should be the driving factors in thinking about what work you want to do in the future."
2. Foundational Skills Matter Most
Agnieszka Iwasiewicz-Wabnig FRSA, Director, Maxwell Centre, University of Cambridge, argues that critical thinking, ethical discernment, and mental agility are non-negotiable:
"Invest in foundational skills, invest in exercising your mental capabilities and you will be competitive against any AI."
Aga also raises an important tension: over-optimisation for productivity might actually stifle innovation. Without room for experimentation, there's no space for human creativity to thrive.
3. Responsible AI Development for Children
Maria Luciana Axente, Founder & CEO, Responsible Intelligence, highlights that most technology isn't built with young people in mind. The UK's "age-appropriate design" legislation represents a breakthrough, but urgent action is needed to prioritise children in AI policy and design.
Tune in on your chosen podcast platform to subscribe and listen.
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The Trinity Bradfield Prize is back, and this year's cohort of winners is nothing short of brilliant. If you're a founder, investor, or simply someone who gets excited about deep tech solving real problems, this episode is essential listening.
We’ll hear from this year's winners: GreenMixes, Maricene and Phase Shift. And also, from Pinepeak – a returning winner who this year won the Angel Prize.
This isn't a feel-good competition recap. It's a masterclass in how rigorous evaluation, technical depth, and genuine community support can nurture founders solving the world's hardest problems. You'll hear directly from founders grappling with real challenges - resource constraints, market uncertainty, and the pressure of scaling - with refreshing honesty.
The Trinity Bradfield Prize represents what's possible when universities, investors, and mentors work together to support deep tech innovation.
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- Visa fler