Medical technology pioneer Stan recounts building two multi-billion dollar diagnostic empires—Cytyc (sold for $6.2B) and Exact Sciences (sold for $21B)—by applying engineering solutions to clinically important but scientifically overlooked cancer detection problems
Stanford professor Patrick Brown traces his journey from pioneering HIV research and inventing DNA microarray technology to founding Impossible Foods, arguing that biotechnology must dismantle the $3 trillion animal agriculture industry to prevent ecological collapse.
Internet pioneer Judy Estrin contrasts the evolutionary, hype-free development of early networking infrastructure with today's AI boom, arguing that sustainable innovation requires balancing five core values while resisting premature scaling pressures and valuation-focused metrics that stifle long-term value creation.
Harold Hamm, founder of Continental Resources, traces his journey from sharecropper's son to energy billionaire by pioneering horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing techniques that unlocked America's shale oil reserves, transforming the Bakken formation from an uneconomical resource into a world-class oil field.
Nobel laureate Thomas Südhof discusses how AI is revolutionizing biology while warning that poor data quality and industry 'AI washing' hinder progress, emphasizing that true innovation requires both rigorous data standards and protected freedoms for scientific inquiry.