Close Menu
TechTost
  • AI
  • Apps
  • Crypto
  • Fintech
  • Hardware
  • Media & Entertainment
  • Security
  • Startups
  • Transportation
  • Venture
  • Recommended Essentials
What's Hot

US surveillance law to expire for first time after lawmakers rejected Trump’s controversial pick to lead spy agency

SpaceX IPO: Live updates on everything you need to know

Andrew Yang believes that the next big startup opportunity is the lowering of the cost of living

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
TechTost
Subscribe Now
  • AI

    Andrew Yang believes that the next big startup opportunity is the lowering of the cost of living

    13 June 2026

    SpaceX IPO: Everything You Need To Know

    12 June 2026

    Theker just raised $85 million to build factory robot that specializes in nothing

    12 June 2026

    DoorDash’s new AI chatbot lets you order with prompts and photos

    11 June 2026

    Opendoor’s exit from India fuels a larger conversation about AI and outsourcing

    11 June 2026
  • Apps

    Meta’s Edits app is getting an AI assistant and a desktop version

    13 June 2026

    Equal AI raises $30 million to screen calls so Indians don’t have to

    12 June 2026

    Bluesky launches group chats as company shifts focus to community features

    12 June 2026

    Pool’s new app turns your screenshots into something useful

    11 June 2026

    Pinterest bets on creators with Amazon Storefront integration

    11 June 2026
  • Crypto

    Startup Battlefield 200 applications close today

    27 May 2026

    5 days left: Save up to $410 on Disrupt 2026 passes

    25 May 2026

    As crypto cools, a16z crypto raises $2.2 billion in capital

    6 May 2026

    Coinbase to lay off 14% of staff as part of broader restructuring

    5 May 2026

    British cryptographer Adam Back denies NYT report that he is Bitcoin creator Satoshi Nakamoto

    9 April 2026
  • Fintech

    Ramp raises $750M at $44B valuation as investors thirst for fintechs with AI history

    5 June 2026

    Last 24 hours to save up to $410 on your Disrupt 2026 ticket

    29 May 2026

    2 days left: Lock in up to $410 in ticket savings for Disrupt 2026

    28 May 2026

    Robinhood now allows your AI agents to trade stocks

    28 May 2026

    Disrupt 2026 Early Bird ticket savings expire in 3 days

    27 May 2026
  • Hardware

    Jeff Bezos’ Prometheus Raises $12 Billion to Build an ‘Artificial General Engineer’ for the Natural World

    12 June 2026

    WWDC 2026: What to expect, from Siri’s long-awaited revamp to Apple Intelligence and iOS 27

    9 June 2026

    What to expect from WWDC 2026: The long-awaited Siri refresh and Apple Intelligence updates

    7 June 2026

    What to expect from WWDC 2026: The long-awaited Siri refresh and Apple Intelligence updates

    5 June 2026

    Oura Ring 5 review: Thinner, lighter, better

    4 June 2026
  • Media & Entertainment

    Deezer’s new tool can recognize AI music from Spotify, Apple Music and more

    11 June 2026

    Netflix expands revamped mobile app across Asia and doubles down on games for kids

    10 June 2026

    Plex adds new social features ahead of major price hike for its lifetime pass

    6 June 2026

    Startup Battlefield 200 applications officially close in 3 days

    5 June 2026

    Founders Fund Launches Series of Games Starring Sam Altman, Palmer Luckey and Other Tech Elites

    5 June 2026
  • Security

    US surveillance law to expire for first time after lawmakers rejected Trump’s controversial pick to lead spy agency

    13 June 2026

    Chinese cybercrime operation that used artificial intelligence to scam ‘hundreds of thousands of victims’ sued by Google

    12 June 2026

    ServiceNow is telling customers that a bug left some of their data exposed online

    12 June 2026

    Oracle warns of security flaw that hackers abused to breach 100+ companies

    11 June 2026

    Cybersecurity researchers not happy with guardrails in Anthropic’s Fable

    11 June 2026
  • Startups

    Jedify Raises $24M To Help Companies Arm AI Agents With Their Business Context

    12 June 2026

    Military SPAC Quantum Space is trying to catch SpaceX’s IPO wave

    12 June 2026

    Microsoft is using Alt Carbon as a sign of India’s growing role in carbon removal

    11 June 2026

    Warner Music acquires artificial intelligence performance startup Sureel AI

    11 June 2026

    Datadog veterans launch AI coding startup Niteshift in a bet against Big AI lock-in

    10 June 2026
  • Transportation

    SpaceX IPO: Live updates on everything you need to know

    13 June 2026

    Elon Musk becomes the world’s first trillionaire after SpaceX’s historic IPO

    12 June 2026

    Decart’s new global model can simulate hours of photorealistic driving — with some caveats

    12 June 2026

    Waymo is launching a rewards program with 10% cash back and free cancellations

    11 June 2026

    Everyone wants a piece of Tesla’s batteries

    11 June 2026
  • Venture

    Why business AI will be the focus of VivaTech 2026

    10 June 2026

    How Justin Ernest invested nearly $500 million in hot startups without a traditional VC fund

    10 June 2026

    Mercor’s Brendan Foody calls out Sequoia, accusing it of “double pricing” valuation tricks.

    9 June 2026

    Founders share VC horror stories and some name names

    6 June 2026

    Defense technology, artificial intelligence and fundraising take center stage at StrictlyVC Los Angeles

    5 June 2026
  • Recommended Essentials
TechTost
You are at:Home»AI»Amazon CEO Werner Vogels for LLM in Cultural Knowledge, Developer Productivity and FemTech
AI

Amazon CEO Werner Vogels for LLM in Cultural Knowledge, Developer Productivity and FemTech

techtost.comBy techtost.com4 December 202306 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Amazon Ceo Werner Vogels For Llm In Cultural Knowledge, Developer
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

As is tradition, Amazon CTO Werner Vogels closes the AWS re:Invent conference with his keynote on the final day. A more recent tradition is that he also uses that day to publish his predictions for next year. This time, I sat down with Vogels for a wide-ranging interview ahead of his keynote to dig a little deeper into the trends he sees and expects to accelerate in the coming year.

This year in 2023, many of our discussions have focused on genetic artificial intelligence, of course. But Dutch-born and based Vogels has an interesting perspective here—and one that’s still often missing from many discussions surrounding genetic AI. His first prediction is that genetic AI will become culturally aware, meaning the models will gain a better understanding of different cultural traditions.

“You start to realize that most of these machines are trained Shared detection, which is English, very American and Western European,” he said. “And it’s not just a matter of language – although language often incorporates cultural kinds of things – but it’s much more the data they’ve been trained on.”

He noted that if companies want to deploy these genAI tools around the world, they need to start thinking about how to make their models more culturally aware. “If we don’t solve it, it’s going to be a huge barrier to the development of this technology worldwide because it’s not just about language, it’s about all the cultural aspects that are meaningful to us as humans,” he said.

He noted that he believes there are technologies available today that can solve this, including having multiple agents talk to and test each other, for example.

Being at a developer event, we also touched on what this new world of large language models (LLM) means for developers. Vogels, like many in our industry, believes that genetic AI will greatly enhance developer productivity. The tools available a few years ago, he noted, were useful for a certain kind of developer, but today’s code integration and production services take on a very different quality.

AWS logo. Image Credits: TechCrunch

“I think the tools at the time were at the level where they really supported the ‘copy and paste’ kind of developer, the person who would normally go to Stack Overflow, post the question, wait for a hundred upvotes and think: this must be the right answer Vogels said.

That work back then, he believes, focused mostly on efficiency. “I think what’s changed is that the tools now can take a broader view of things,” he said. He likened this new generation of development tools to pair programming, where the AI ​​model is more like a very senior developer next to you who knows everything about a given code base.

Like many of his peers, Vogels also strongly believes that genetic AI will relieve developers of a lot of the work of writing tests, refactoring code, and writing boilerplate. And while some technologists worry that using these tools will actually prevent junior developers from honing their craft, Vogels doesn’t think that’s the case. “There is a ton of learning on the job. This has always happened. I expect with the newer tools that training will go faster, but there’s always a lot of training on the job.”

He also noted that the ever-increasing pace of technological development means it is now more important than ever for colleges and universities not only to teach students raw skills but also how to learn. “There is great value in what universities teach you: they teach you how to learn. They teach you how to see the bigger picture. They teach you how to analyze. They teach all these brain things that you’re going to need on the job,” Vogels said — though he didn’t want to get into a discussion about the current state of humanities programs in the United States.

However, Vogel’s predictions don’t just focus on artificial intelligence. She also believes that women’s health technology will finally take off, in part because there is less stigma now surrounding the discussion of women’s health. “It’s a social change. The stigma is changing. Men are talking about menopause these days because their wives or girlfriends or girlfriends or daughters are going through it and seeing it. If you go back 20 years, women wouldn’t even discuss it with each other,” she said. And with that, venture capital is also starting to flow into this market.

Vogels believes that because the medical establishment has often dismissed women’s health concerns or privileged men’s health, we may be reaching an interesting moment now with the advent of personalized precision medicine, where women’s health care will jump right into these most modern techniques.

“I see this in femtech, where the change is immediate: let’s take it a step further—let’s make sure we can actually do precision healthcare,” he said.

In many ways, Vogels is optimistic about technology and its potential to do good. “I have solved so many problems in my life. I am optimistic; Yes, I do – because we want to make this work,” he said. He also added that while the US startup scene may be consumed with the idea of ​​creating unicorns, in the rest of the world, people often just want to build a sustainable business.

However, he noted that one issue facing the tech industry is that it’s moving at such a fast clip right now that it’s hard for people to keep up. “The challenge we have, I think, today is that our technology adoption cycles have been compressed so much that it’s hard to train people up front — before the technology is out there. I think that’s one of the challenges. Maybe not even for business, but if you release consumer technology out in the open without any training, people will be confused. You get a knee-jerk reaction. I think with good will we will fix these things. But we also have to make sure that we don’t underestimate that we have to continue to educate people about the new technologies that we offer.”

However, there is one thing that makes him happy about this fast cycle. “The good thing is: I don’t have to talk to my clients about blockchain anymore,” he said with a smile.

Read more about AWS re:Invent 2023 on TechCrunch

Amazon AWS Reinvent 2023 CEO Cultural Developer FemTech Knowledge llm predictions Productivity Vogels Werner Werner Vogels women's health
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleX CEO Linda Yaccarino publicly backs Musk after telling advertisers to ‘fuck you’
Next Article Doubtnut, once offered a $150 million deal by Byju’s, sells for $10 million
bhanuprakash.cg
techtost.com
  • Website

Related Posts

Andrew Yang believes that the next big startup opportunity is the lowering of the cost of living

13 June 2026

SpaceX IPO: Everything You Need To Know

12 June 2026

Theker just raised $85 million to build factory robot that specializes in nothing

12 June 2026
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss

US surveillance law to expire for first time after lawmakers rejected Trump’s controversial pick to lead spy agency

13 June 2026

SpaceX IPO: Live updates on everything you need to know

13 June 2026

Andrew Yang believes that the next big startup opportunity is the lowering of the cost of living

13 June 2026
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • WhatsApp
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
Fintech

Ramp raises $750M at $44B valuation as investors thirst for fintechs with AI history

5 June 2026

Last 24 hours to save up to $410 on your Disrupt 2026 ticket

29 May 2026

2 days left: Lock in up to $410 in ticket savings for Disrupt 2026

28 May 2026
Startups

Jedify Raises $24M To Help Companies Arm AI Agents With Their Business Context

Military SPAC Quantum Space is trying to catch SpaceX’s IPO wave

Microsoft is using Alt Carbon as a sign of India’s growing role in carbon removal

© 2026 TechTost. All Rights Reserved
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.