Artificial intelligence is no longer a distant future — it is reshaping
    every industry, every job, and every community right now.

    Last week, at the All Things Open AI Conference in Durham, North
    Carolina’s tech leaders, civic innovators and business professionals came
    together to explore how our region can not only adapt to this revolution, but
    lead it.

    The momentum is clear: North Carolina is on the move to become an
    emerging AI hub, driving innovation, workforce growth and shared prosperity.

    North Carolina on
    the Move: An Emerging AI Hub

    Technology is reshaping every industry and community, and moments that
    bring leaders together to think boldly about the future matter more than ever.
    That is why attending the All Things Open AI Conference in Durham was both
    energizing and meaningful for me— not just as a former elected official and
    technology advocate, but as someone who believes public leadership must evolve
    alongside innovation.

    I want to especially thank Triangle AI leader Mark Hinkle for convening
    over 4,000 tech and civic stakeholders at the Carolina Theatre and Durham
    Convention Center. Conferences like this are not just about showcasing new
    tools; they shape the trajectory of a region.

    Mark opened the event with a reminder: every major technological
    revolution — from electricity to the internet — creates a divide between those
    who gain early access and those left behind, until access becomes universal. AI
    will be no different. Its impact will be faster, broader, and deeper than
    anything we’ve seen — redefining not just how we work, but the very nature of
    work itself. That’s why gatherings like this are essential: they foster
    understanding, collaboration, and opportunity, ensuring AI becomes a force for
    inclusion rather than disruption.

    Last year, I wrote about North Carolina’s opportunity to become an
    AI-emergent region — a place where workforce readiness, startup growth, and
    responsible innovation drive shared prosperity .  (https://www.wral.com/business/technology/rao-north-carolina-ai-emergent-state-march-2025/)   The All Things Open AI summit showcased this
    momentum, highlighting our progress in innovation and workforce development — a
    clear sign that the state is on the move as an emerging AI hub.

    Why Leadership
    Matters in the Age of AI

    The conference reinforced a simple but urgent truth: preparing our state
    for the AI economy is bigger than any election cycle, and the opportunity
    before North Carolina is extraordinary. But we must act now.

    Elected officials and policymakers need to start asking the hard
    questions:

    • How do we ensure AI creates opportunity rather than inequality?
    • How do we power the data infrastructure of the future responsibly?
    • How can we develop an AI-informed energy strategy that helps local
      governments approve data centers without overloading the grid or harming
      sustainability?
    • How do we help small businesses and rural communities participate in the
      innovation economy?

    North Carolina has the ingredients to lead: world-class universities, a
    growing entrepreneurial culture, and a diverse, talented workforce. What we
    need now is urgency, collaboration and sustained vision.

    Learning by Doing:
    Hands-On AI Training

    One of the most powerful parts of the conference was hands-on training
    for business professionals, learning to integrate tools like ChatGPT, Gemini and Claude into daily workflows. Watching Mark teach us to draft a newsletter
    in real time was a vivid reminder: the future of work is already here.
    Communities that invest in upskilling today will lead tomorrow.

    Local Leadership
    Driving Global Innovation

    Durham Mayor Leo Williams shared the city’s emerging AI strategy,
    covering startup support, public-private collaboration, and forward-thinking
    governance.

    These discussions proved that local leadership can shape global
    innovation trends — and that North Carolina has the potential to be a national
    model.

    Inspiration from AI
    Pioneers

    The closing fireside chat with Igor Jablokov, CEO of Pryon, was
    particularly inspiring. His early work at DARPA and as founder of Yap (acquired
    by Amazon) laid the foundation for voice assistants like Siri. Jablokov joked
    that “baby Siri and Alexa were born in RTP,” underscoring the Triangle’s
    emerging role in AI innovation. He reminded us of our region’s potential to
    birth game-changing technologies for the world.

    Igor also spoke candidly about the speed of technological change and the
    responsibility communities have to prepare workers and institutions for
    disruption. He illustrated this with a personal story: for his birthday, his
    mother unveiled a painting of his late pet — a reminder that while AI can give
    us what we want, only humans can give us what we truly need.   This
    truth extends to first responders, veterans, and law enforcement officers,
    whose courage and compassion can never be automated.  

    The Urgency of
    Inclusive AI

    The conference reinforced a simple but urgent truth: communities that
    prepare today will lead tomorrow. North Carolina must ensure AI creates
    opportunity rather than inequality, powers future data infrastructure
    responsibly, and helps small businesses and rural communities participate fully
    in the innovation economy.

    Building a Statewide
    AI Strategy

    The All Things Open AI summit was more than a gathering of tech leaders —
    it was a reminder that the future is being built right now, and that our state
    can be at the forefront if we act boldly. We need leaders who can bridge
    technology, workforce opportunity, and economic growth across every region —
    from urban innovation hubs to rural communities.

    We need more Mark Hinkles on the Governor’s AI Leadership Council to
    develop a North Carolina AI strategy that increases productivity, upskills our
    workforce, and addresses the energy challenges of data centers. Wake County can
    take similar steps: establishing an AI Task Force to work with the Governor’s
    AI Leadership Council, and replicating the AI Accelerator model championed by
    Deputy Secretary of AI Isa Isieh, offering a platform for local governments and
    companies to showcase technologies and solutions. (More on this topic next
    week)

    Leading the AI
    Revolution

    All of us must remain committed to shaping this strategy and our AI
    future. North Carolina cannot simply adapt to the AI revolution — we must lead
    it. The decisions we make today will determine whether our region and state
    become a national model for inclusive innovation.

    The time to act is now. Let’s get to work.

    Steve S. Rao is a former council member for the town of Morrisville and an opinion writer for WRAL Techwire.

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