Inaugural AI Tennessee Summit has been postponed due to weather concerns
The conference was going to take place from Wednesday, January 28, to Thursday, January 29, at the Country Music Hall of Fame in Nashville, Tennessee. It has been postponed to a later date, due to weather concerns.
NOTE: This event has been rescheduled due to weather concerns.
AI fluency is quickly becoming the new baseline skill that will separate competitive regions from those left behind.
For Tennessee, the stakes are high. Artificial intelligence is reshaping every sector of the economy, from education to manufacturing. Moreover, it is impacting virtually every industry in between. The states that move quickly to build talent pipelines and modernize infrastructure will benefit. Furthermore, those who create responsible deployment strategies will be the ones who win jobs, investment, and long-term prosperity.
That sense of urgency is the driving force behind the inaugural AI Tennessee Summit later this month in Nashville. It is a new statewide gathering. The event will convene senior federal and state officials, university leaders, and top industry executives. Additionally, they will explore how Tennessee is translating national AI priorities into concrete action.
The Summit brings together a broad coalition that includes the University of Tennessee, the Tennessee AI Advisory Council, SCORE, Vanderbilt University, the University of Memphis, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, and the Tennessee Board of Regents.
Recent White House actions have outlined national objectives for expanding the AI workforce, accelerating innovation, and strengthening U.S. competitiveness. At the Summit, state leaders will examine how those high-level goals are being implemented in Tennessee. This will happen through coordinated programs, partnerships, and targeted investments.
When and where?
The conference will take place from Wednesday, January 28, to Thursday, January 29, at the Country Music Hall of Fame in Nashville, Tennessee.
The Lineup
- Lynne Parker, Former Principal Deputy Director in the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy
- Donde Plowman, Chancellor, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
- Vasileios Maroulas, Associate Vice Chancellor for Research at UT Knoxville and Director of AI Tennessee
- Jim Bryson and Kristin Darby, Co-Chairs, Tennessee AI Advisory Council
- Senator Bo Watson, Tennessee General Assembly
- Susan Hubbard, Deputy Director for Science and Technology, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
- Keith Strier, Senior Vice President for Global AI Markets, AMD
- Brent Mayo, Senior Manager for Site Builds and Infrastructure, xAI
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