The Responsible Revolution with TCS Expert Kiran Gupta

This episode of FOBtv, features podcast host Kevin Benedict, and guest Kiran Gupta, Global Head of Sustainability Services for TCS.  In this forward-thinking discussion we dive into the critical intersection of technology and ecological responsibility. We explore how cutting-edge technologies like AI, digital twins, and sensors can revolutionize ecological system management and enhance long-term sustainability planning.


TCS Digital Twindex Sustainability Report: https://tinyurl.com/3tha7p58 

*I use AI in all my work.
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Kevin Benedict
Futurist, Lecturer and Humorist at TCS
View my profile on LinkedIn
Follow me on Twitter @krbenedict
Join the Linkedin Group Digital Intelligence

***Full Disclosure: These are my personal opinions. No company is silly enough to claim them. I work with and have worked with many of the companies mentioned in my articles.

The Future of Sustainability with TCS Futurist David Kish

 In this episode of FOBtv, our guest is TCS futurist and thought leader David Kish.  We dig deep into the "Future of Sustainability", and the concepts of regeneration, circular economies, coexistence, interdependencies and more. This episode introduces listeners to a new era where both the problems and solutions can be found in the convergence of domains such as science, technology, societal, geopolitical, economic, philosophical, and environmental.  This is the future of life on earth folks!  I learned a great deal.


GenAI: Getting Personal and Productive with Expert Ken Hubbell

In an era where every company is trying to navigate the complex world of generative AI, many leaders are still searching for the practical, day-to-day applications that truly move the needle. This is not another episode about the future potential of AI. This is a look at its practical present. Join us as we sit down with Ken Hubbell, a pioneering author and AI expert who has been at the forefront of the generative AI revolution since its early days. Ken pulls back the curtain on his career-long journey, sharing candid insights from his experiments, high-stakes projects, and the surprising ways he uses AI tools every day.

Why Polyintelligence Matters, #3

In April 2010, a volcano under Iceland’s Eyjafjallajökull glacier erupted, releasing a vast ash cloud into European airspace. Within hours, 100,000 flights were grounded. Millions were stranded. Global supply chains faltered.

Some organizations froze, paralyzed by the unexpected. Others instantly rerouted cargo through sea and rail, shifted production across borders, and reallocated staff in real time. Same event, different outcomes. The difference? Some companies could sense across domains, interpret the signals, and respond before the chaos became catastrophe. That’s practiced polyintelligence in motion.

Polyintelligence: A Leadership Imperative

Polyintelligence isn’t just a clever buzzword or a luxury—it’s the new operating system for leadership in the Sixth Great Transition. It is the fused capacity to sense, decide, and act across three synergistic domains:

Human Intelligence: Context, ethics, imagination, intuition. The ability to interpret complexity, weigh meaning, and lead with conscience.
Machine Intelligence: Pattern recognition, automation, scale, simulation. The capacity to sift signal from noise and act at speed.
Ecological Intelligence: Systems awareness, interdependence, constraint recognition. The wisdom to live within planetary limits and anticipate feedback loops.

Futurist Frank Diana once put it simply: “The future belongs to those who connect dots across domains before others even see them.” Polyintelligence is dot-connecting in a world of entangled systems, relentless acceleration, and high stake consequence.

Complexity, Optimism and the Sixth Great Transition, #2

“You can’t manage your way through a great transition with a spreadsheet.”

Yet that’s exactly what many leaders are trying to do—optimize their way through systemic collapse using 20th-century tools and yesterday’s assumptions. What we’re facing isn’t just disruption. It’s a full-blown operating system upgrade for civilization. And it requires a whole new kind of leadership.

If you’re feeling overwhelmed, disoriented, and vaguely betrayed by the promises of progress, congratulations—you’re alive during a Great Transition. Not a blip. Not a market correction. A full-system transformation of how humans live, work, relate, think, and survive.

The last few times this happened, it gave us steam engines, global supply chains, electric lights, indoor plumbing, and middle-class dreams. This time, the outcome is still undecided.

For thousands of years, humanity has lived in the shadow of a wall. It was the wall of complexity—the place where our imagination outpaced our ability to calculate, predict, or control. We could see just high enough to glimpse possibilities, but not high enough to map them. Sailors hugged the shoreline because oceans were too complex to navigate. Doctors bled patients because the body’s mysteries remained opaque. Economies rose and collapsed because no one could model the system they were part of.

Even games reminded us of our limits. For millennia, the board game Go was considered unassailable by machines. Its possibilities may even outnumber the atoms in the universe. Human players mastered it not through brute force, but by intuition, creativity, and pattern recognition. Complexity was our fortress.

Then, in 2016, a machine climbed the wall. Google’s AlphaGo didn’t just defeat the best human Go player—it overwhelmed him by seeing thousands of futures in advance. Not by being cleverer, but by being able to contemplate what we could not. The wall of complexity cracked.

Polyintelligence and the Sixth Great Transition, #1

History follows you everywhere — it trails behind like an unshakable shadow, reminding you of debts, traditions, and unfinished business. The future, though, doesn’t wait outside. It kicks in your door, uninvited and unpredictable, carrying a mixed bag of opportunities and crises. Leaders don’t get to choose whether it shows up. The only choice is how prepared they are when it does. And if you want to see how intelligence survives such intrusions, don’t start in a boardroom. Start in an anthill, where survival depends not on hierarchy but on coherence, connection, and the ability to adapt together.

Ants don’t follow blueprints. No single ant knows how to build a ventilation shaft or coordinate a food convoy. But collectively, they do. One ant finds sugar, lays a trail, and thousands follow. They aren’t smart because they think; they’re smart because they’re connected. This is ecological intelligence in action: simple parts forming a coherent whole through optimized information flow. Every signal matters. Timing is everything.

Now jump to New York City in the 1990s. Crime was spiking. The subway system looked like a rolling mural of despair. The social fabric frayed. But instead of collapsing, the city pivoted. Not with brute force, but with a strategy. Police adopted CompStat, a software solution that enabled near real-time crime mapping across the city.

When Speed Becomes the System

Speed is no longer an attribute. It is the architecture of our reality.

We once built systems that moved at the pace of human time—defined by breath, dialogue, daylight, and deliberation. But we now inhabit a world animated by digital time, where light-speed communication and machine reflexes shape the tempo of everything from stock markets to supply chains to social movements.

As speed increases, it doesn't merely accelerate outcomes—it alters the structure of experience. Jobs evolve not because their tasks have changed, but because the tempo of the environment has. Organizations flatten not from ideology, but from necessity—hierarchies simply can't keep up. Governance strains, not because we lack laws, but because legislative cycles lag behind technological cycles. Warfare becomes unrecognizable not due to new weapons alone, but because the window for response has collapsed.

Speed transforms not just what we do, but who we are allowed to be in systems that no longer pause.

This is where polyintelligence offers a path forward—not as a philosophy, but as a design requirement. It recognizes what the human nervous system alone cannot bear: that in a world of instantaneous interactions and exponential complexity, no single form of intelligence is sufficient.

We must now orchestrate a symphony of intelligences:

Cognitive intelligence (human insight and intuition) provides ethics, meaning, and emotional discernment.

Computational intelligence (AI, automation, algorithms) offers the reflexes we no longer possess.

Ecological intelligence (nature’s cycles and systems thinking) reminds us that not everything should be fast—that resilience lives in rhythms, not just reactions.

Ethical intelligence provides the guardrails—the boundary conditions of responsibility in a world of instantaneous capability.

Relational intelligence—our capacity for trust, dialogue, and interdependence—enables us to collaborate across human and machine networks alike.

Speed breaks what is linear. Polyintelligence restores what is coherent.

It enables a new form of human-AI teaming—not one where machines replace humans, but where machines extend humans into domains where we were never designed to operate at pace. When algorithms decide in milliseconds, and humans consider in minutes, it is no longer a matter of speed alone—it is a matter of orchestration. The challenge is not just to go faster, but to go together, at the right tempo, in the right domain, for the right reason.

In the 20th century, strategy was about position and force. In the 21st, strategy is about tempo and alignment.

The future belongs to those who can synchronize across time dimensions—human time, digital time, and future time—while weaving together intelligence across every available form.

Speed may change everything. But polyintelligence is how we change with it—without losing ourselves.

*I use AI in all my work.
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Kevin Benedict
Futurist, Lecturer and Humorist at TCS
View my profile on LinkedIn
Follow me on Twitter @krbenedict
Join the Linkedin Group Digital Intelligence

***Full Disclosure: These are my personal opinions. No company is silly enough to claim them. I work with and have worked with many of the companies mentioned in my articles.

The Echoes of Many Minds

“To understand the future, we must learn from those who saw the world whole.”
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Throughout history, there have been people who seemed to live with many minds in one body—individuals who refused to confine their thinking to a single discipline. They painted, invented, dissected, wrote, calculated, experimented, and prayed—all in the pursuit of deeper understanding. These were the polymaths: those who “learned much,” as the original Greek term polymathēs describes—not just in quantity, but in connection.

While the word “polymath” didn’t enter the English language until the 17th century, the idea behind it is ancient. The Greeks associated it with the soul’s desire to “attain and keep knowledge,” even naming one of their Muses, Polymatheia, after this impulse. From Aristotle’s vast studies in logic, biology, and ethics, to Hildegard of Bingen’s prophetic music, herbal medicine, and theological vision, polymathy has long been a quiet force shaping civilizations.

Preparing for the Future: Operating in Three Time Dimensions

“The better we are at understanding the future, the more value can be harvested from it today.” ~ Kevin Benedict

In an era defined by speed, saturation, and simulation, leading organizations are discovering that strategic advantage is increasingly a matter of temporal architecture. That is, the ability to operate, align, and orchestrate across multiple dimensions of time—human-time, digital-time, and future-time.

This article introduces a tri-temporal framework that helps leaders design systems and cultures capable of thriving across diverse speeds and temporal demands. It builds upon the foresight principles in the preceding pages and sets the stage for the operational imperatives explored in Chapter 9.

Polyintelligence: A New Operating System for Leadership

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We are living through the early stages of what might be called the Sixth Great Transition following:
  1. Hunter to farmer
  2. Farmer to the axial consciousness
  3. Axial to Renaissance/Scientific Revolution
  4. Renaissance to Industrialization/Capitalism
  5. Industrialization to Digital/Global
This is a moment in history marked by the convergence of machine intelligence, global crises, exponential technologies, ecological boundaries, and social upheaval. It’s not merely a time of change; it’s a time of entanglement, where systems collide, timelines compress, and traditional models of leadership are stretched to the breaking point.

In this age, polyintelligence emerges as an essential framework for leadership—not as a single skill or solution, but as a dynamic, systemic way of navigating complexity, velocity, and uncertainty.

The American Dream - Opportunities for Some

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The United States has long been viewed as a land of opportunity—a place where dreams could be realized, and fortunes made. But what lies at the heart of this “American Entrepreneurial Exceptionalism”? It is not merely the existence of capitalism, nor simply the size of the American market, but a unique cultural alchemy forged from the interplay of capitalism, democratic ideals, American religious theology, and the boundless promise of the frontier. This blend has made the U.S. uniquely innovative, aspirational, and entrepreneurial—but it has also produced deep contradictions and persistent injustices that must be acknowledged and addressed.

The Foundations: Democracy, Freedom, and Individual Agency

The founding of the United States was itself a revolutionary act of imagination—a bold declaration that all men are created equal, endowed with unalienable rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Though this promise was initially extended only to a privileged subset of the population, it planted the seeds of a cultural narrative that prized individual freedom and self-determination.

Democracy, though limited in its original inclusivity, provided a framework of self-governance and ownership over one’s future. It legitimized the idea that ordinary citizens had a right—and even a duty—to shape the world around them. This encouraged ambition, initiative, and the pursuit of personal projects that would, over time, evolve into thriving enterprises.

Tariffs, Wild Supply Chains & Advice from Expert Joe Carson

In my latest podcast episode, our guest is procurement and supply chain expert, Joe Carson. Joe provides candid insights, and a comprehensive overview of critical challenges, from geopolitical shifts, navigating tariffs, fostering supply chain resilience, and embracing the transformative potential of artificial intelligence. Enjoy!



*I use AI in all my work.
************************************************************************
Kevin Benedict
Futurist, Lecturer and Humorist at TCS
View my profile on LinkedIn
Follow me on Twitter @krbenedict
Join the Linkedin Group Digital Intelligence

***Full Disclosure: These are my personal opinions. No company is silly enough to claim them. I work with and have worked with many of the companies mentioned in my articles.

Leading at Speed Through Complexity

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In the past, leadership was about vision, experience, and strategic execution within reasonably predictable systems. Today, that world is gone. The leaders of tomorrow are not navigating calm waters—they are piloting high-speed vessels through swirling storms of convergence.

Across every area—business, military, governance, healthcare, education—leaders are struggling to operate effectively in environments where speed compresses time, networks collapse distance, and complexity multiplies unseen connections. The result is a deep and growing tension between the demands of the external environment and the internal limitations of the human mind.

Cloud Architectures for Enterprise AI with IDC Expert Rob Tiffany

In this episode of FOBtv, our guest is Rob Tiffany, a distinguished IDC Research Director, submariner, author and inventor.  We explore the many different kinds of cloud architectures designed to support Enterprise AI and Private AI applications.




*I use AI in all my work.
************************************************************************
Kevin Benedict
Futurist, Lecturer and Humorist at TCS
View my profile on LinkedIn
Follow me on Twitter @krbenedict
Join the Linkedin Group Digital Intelligence

***Full Disclosure: These are my personal opinions. No company is silly enough to claim them. I work with and have worked with many of the companies mentioned in my articles.

Flourishing in the Age of Acceleration

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In the age of acceleration, our most pressing question is no longer "what is possible" but rather, "what is aligned with our purpose?" We are hurtling into the future—fueled by AI with superintelligent algorithms, real-time data streams, autonomous machines, and digital ecosystems—without a clearly defined destination. As a futurist, I believe the central crisis of our era is not technological—it is philosophical. We lack a shared vision of human flourishing. And without that vision, we risk optimizing ourselves into obsolescence.

The Future’s Broken Navigation System

When I drive my Jeep into the mountains, I set a destination and follow the best route. But the future doesn’t work that way. Its navigation system takes in innovations from science and technology, mixes them with geopolitical shifts, economic trends, social turbulence, environmental calamities, philosophies and consumer whims—then throws in a few historical earthquakes like pandemics, wars, and financial crises. It outputs… what, exactly?

That’s the problem. We’ve built a machine for moving faster, but not for choosing where to go. Our maps are precise. Our routes are efficient. But the destination field is empty.

This absence of direction has consequences. We increasingly treat the future as something to "react" to, rather than "design". But the future is not a land to be discovered—it is a construct to be authored. And if we don’t input human flourishing into the system, the default settings—profit, speed, efficiency—will drive us toward outcomes we never intended.

A Unified Framework for Leading Through Convergence

Speed, Complexity, and Strategic Foresight

We are living through a historic moment where velocity, convergence, and disruption accurately describe our era. Certainty has collapsed, and our environment is accelerating beyond the decision cycles of humans and legacy systems. In this new era, organizations are not merely navigating change—they are caught in a whirlwind of recursive transformation loops where survival and success depend on the speed and coherence of strategic cognition. 

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This article proposes a framework —a synthesis of foundational philosophies and thinkers such as Paul Virilio, John Boyd, Frank Diana, Christian Brose, and myself. These ideas and frameworks presented here are designed to help leaders quantify transformation capacity, structure intelligent decision-making loops, and operate effectively in 'future time.' It is intended as a practical-operational and cognitive-strategic guide for leaders of organizations, ecosystems, and institutions. 
This is not about predicting the future. It is about building architectures—of systems, decisions, action, speed, ethics, and cognition—aligned with accelerating change.

Manufacturing Strategies of the Future with Siemens’ Zvi Feuer

In this engaging FOBTV episode, I have the opportunity to interview Zvi Feuer, CEO Siemens Industry Software Israel, about the transformative power of AI and digital technologies in manufacturing. Zvi shares how Siemens leverages generative AI for software development and to create intelligent tools for customers. He delves into the evolution of AI in manufacturing, the exciting potential of digital twins for "what-if" analysis, and the critical role of technologies like robotics and vision systems in enhancing automation, quality, and preventing production disruptions. Zvi also addresses the challenges of change management and extending digital twins across complex supply chains, ultimately painting a compelling vision of a future where increased throughput and reduced operational expenses drive significant net profit for manufacturers willing to embrace these advancements.


*I use AI in all my work.
************************************************************************
Kevin Benedict
Futurist, Lecturer and Humorist at TCS
View my profile on LinkedIn
Follow me on Twitter @krbenedict
Join the Linkedin Group Digital Intelligence

***Full Disclosure: These are my personal opinions. No company is silly enough to claim them. I work with and have worked with many of the companies mentioned in my articles.

Finland's Blueprint for Happiness - Now and in the Future

This article is a comprehensive exploration of Finland’s extraordinary achievement in becoming the world's happiest country, not once, but consistently for eight consecutive years. Finland’s success is not an accident, but the outcome of a century-long commitment to collective well-being, strategic foresight, purposefulness, resilience, and cultural wisdom. By examining Finland’s history, geography, governance, culture, and emerging challenges, this article provides valuable insights into how happiness can be intentionally cultivated and sustained.

Drawing upon interviews with leading Finnish futurists—Dr. Sirkka Heinonen, Hanna Lakkala, Amos Taylor, Dr. Juha Mattsson, and Timo Savolainen—along with extensive research into Finland’s societal structures and historical evolution, this work aims to serve not only as a case study but also as a source of inspiration and guidance for societies worldwide. Finland offers a powerful blueprint for designing resilient, equitable, and future-ready communities where well-being is not left to chance but is built thoughtfully and purposefully.

Introduction

Finland’s distinction as the world’s happiest country, according to the UN’s World Happiness Report, is no coincidence. It is the outcome of a century-long commitment to strategic governance, cultural development, societal foresight, resilience, and a deep respect for nature and human dignity. Finland’s model stands as a testament that happiness can be cultivated through intentional design, cultural integrity, and a future-oriented national ethos.

How AI is Influencing Manufacturing with Schneider Electric Expert Helenio Gilabert

In my latest podcast, we take a deep dive into the future of manufacturing.  Join us as Helenio Gilabert of Schneider Electric reveals how AI, automation, robotics and digital twins are converging to move us closer to the fully autonomous factory of tomorrow.  Explore the impact of predictive analytics, edge computing, and robotics on real-time decision-making and competitive advantages. Enjoy!


*I use AI in all my work.
************************************************************************
Kevin Benedict
Futurist, Lecturer and Humorist at TCS
View my profile on LinkedIn
Follow me on Twitter @krbenedict
Join the Linkedin Group Digital Intelligence

***Full Disclosure: These are my personal opinions. No company is silly enough to claim them. I work with and have worked with many of the companies mentioned in my articles.

The Future of Happiness, The Finland Formula, with Dr. Sirkka Heinonen

For the eighth year running, Finland has again reached the top spot as the world’s happiest nation. But what’s behind this consistent success? In this episode, Dr. Sirkka Heinonen, renowned futurist and Professor Emerita at the Finland Futures Research Centre, joins us to share what truly makes a society thrive. We learn about the historic roots of Finland's happiness evolution, uncover the pillars of Finnish well-being, and learn about their long term commitment to social equity, sustainability, and future-focused thinking.


*I use AI in all my work.
************************************************************************
Kevin Benedict
Futurist, Lecturer and Humorist at TCS
View my profile on LinkedIn
Follow me on Twitter @krbenedict
Join the Linkedin Group Digital Intelligence

***Full Disclosure: These are my personal opinions. No company is silly enough to claim them. I work with and have worked with many of the companies mentioned in my articles.

The Future of Happiness with Futurist Hanna Lakkala

In this episode, futurist Hanna Lakkala, joins us to share her Nordic views on happiness, and what motivated her to return to the North of Finland after spending years working around the world.  I found her views on the value of integrating foresight with positive psychology, coaching and systems thinking fascinating. Drawing from her global experiences, we explore how happiness can be nurtured—even in a future shaped by AI, automation, robotics and disinformation. It’s a warm, thoughtful, and eye-opening conversation you won’t want to miss.


*I use AI in all my work.
************************************************************************
Kevin Benedict
Futurist, Lecturer and Humorist at TCS
View my profile on LinkedIn
Follow me on Twitter @krbenedict
Join the Linkedin Group Digital Intelligence

***Full Disclosure: These are my personal opinions. No company is silly enough to claim them. I work with and have worked with many of the companies mentioned in my articles.

Humans, AI and Machines: It's Complicated!

In this episode, our guest is TCS manufacturing expert Michael Deittrick.  We dive into the synergistic world of IoT, AI, autonomous systems, factories, robotics and digital twins – exploring how these all come together to create a manufacturing environment that's not just connected, but capable of optimizing itself in real-time. We'll explore the "how" and "why" behind this transformation, and what it means for the future of manufacturing.

Don't forget to subscribe!


*I use AI in all my work.
************************************************************************
Kevin Benedict
Futurist, Lecturer and Humorist at TCS
View my profile on LinkedIn
Follow me on Twitter @krbenedict
Join the Linkedin Group Digital Intelligence

***Full Disclosure: These are my personal opinions. No company is silly enough to claim them. I work with and have worked with many of the companies mentioned in my articles.

Can AI Promote Happiness? Our Guest is AI Strategist Timo Savolainen

What happens when the world’s happiest country (Finland) is also home to very forward-thinking AI strategists? In this episode, we talk with Timo Savolainen to explore the intersection of national well-being, technological transformation, and future vision. Finland was recently named the happiest country in the world, for the eighth consecutive year. We dig into the choices and cultural traits that have made this possible, and whether Finland’s happiness can be taught, exported, and enhanced with AI. We then dive into AI and its rapidly growing role in reshaping Finnish society. Timo introduces us to the concept of Artificial Capable Intelligence (ACI), outlines how AI will disrupt work, education, and governance in the next 4–5 years, and shares a powerful vision for how Finland can lead the EU in AI adoption by 2030. the EU in AI adoption by 2030.

*I use AI in all my work.
************************************************************************
Kevin Benedict
Futurist, Lecturer and Humorist at TCS
View my profile on LinkedIn
Follow me on Twitter @krbenedict
Join the Linkedin Group Digital Intelligence

***Full Disclosure: These are my personal opinions. No company is silly enough to claim them. I work with and have worked with many of the companies mentioned in my articles.

Manufacturing's AI Revolution with TCS Expert Subhash Sakorikar

This podcast episode explores the transformative impact of Artificial Intelligence (AI) on the manufacturing industry. From fully autonomous factories to predictive maintenance and mass customization, our experts discuss the convergence of AI, automation, and digital twins, examining the challenges, opportunities, and strategic implications for business leaders. Will AI reshape global manufacturing hubs and drive entirely new business models? Tune in to find out.


*I use AI in all my work.
************************************************************************
Kevin Benedict
Futurist, Lecturer and Humorist at TCS
View my profile on LinkedIn
Follow me on Twitter @krbenedict
Join the Linkedin Group Digital Intelligence

***Full Disclosure: These are my personal opinions. No company is silly enough to claim them. I work with and have worked with many of the companies mentioned in my articles.

Reasoning and Logic

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*I use AI in all my work.
************************************************************************
Kevin Benedict
Futurist, Lecturer and Humorist at TCS
View my profile on LinkedIn
Follow me on Twitter @krbenedict
Join the Linkedin Group Digital Intelligence

***Full Disclosure: These are my personal opinions. No company is silly enough to claim them. I work with and have worked with many of the companies mentioned in my articles.

Interviews with Kevin Benedict