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In this episode of the Data Center Frontier Show, DCF Editor in Chief Matt Vincent sits down with Data Center Frontier Contributing Editor Bill Kleyman, CEO and co-founder of Apolo, to preview the Data Center Frontier Trends Summit 2026, taking place August 4–6 in Reston, Virginia.
This year’s Summit arrives at a defining moment for the data center industry. After two years of massive AI infrastructure announcements, the conversation has shifted from projection to execution. The question is no longer whether AI will reshape digital infrastructure. It is whether the industry can actually build, power, cool, finance, commission, and operate the capacity now being promised.
Kleyman frames the moment around one of the key realities shaping the market: announced megawatts are not the same as energized megawatts. As power constraints, utility delays, supply chain friction, capital risk, rack density, liquid cooling, permitting, and community opposition converge, the winners will be the companies that convert intent into operational capacity.
The conversation previews major themes across the 2026 Trends Summit agenda, including the new geography of AI development, power-first site selection, the rise of the AI factory, high-density design, liquid cooling, behind-the-meter generation, supply chain execution, investment discipline, and the growing importance of earning social license with communities.
Highlights include a look ahead to the opening keynote fireside chat featuring Data Center Frontier founder Rich Miller and EdgeCore Digital Infrastructure CEO Lee Kestler; the Day Two keynote on scaling the AI factory with leaders from NVIDIA, Meta, and the Open Compute Project; sessions on AI power architecture, density, cooling, site selection, supply chain risk, and the final bottlenecks before go-live; and the closing keynote on stewardship, sustainability, and community acceptance.
As Kleyman notes, the AI infrastructure race is moving from announcements to accountability. The industry does not need more theoretical capacity. It needs energized, commissioned, operational capacity.
Listen now for a preview of the conversations shaping Data Center Frontier Trends Summit 2026—and join us in Reston this August for the full discussion.
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In this episode of the Data Center Frontier Show, DCF Editor in Chief Matt Vincent sits down with Data Center Frontier Contributing Editor Bill Kleyman, CEO and co-founder of Apolo, to preview the Data Center Frontier Trends Summit 2026, taking place August 4–6 in Reston, Virginia.
This year’s Summit arrives at a defining moment for the data center industry. After two years of massive AI infrastructure announcements, the conversation has shifted from projection to execution. The question is no longer whether AI will reshape digital infrastructure. It is whether the industry can actually build, power, cool, finance, commission, and operate the capacity now being promised.
Kleyman frames the moment around one of the key realities shaping the market: announced megawatts are not the same as energized megawatts. As power constraints, utility delays, supply chain friction, capital risk, rack density, liquid cooling, permitting, and community opposition converge, the winners will be the companies that convert intent into operational capacity.
The conversation previews major themes across the 2026 Trends Summit agenda, including the new geography of AI development, power-first site selection, the rise of the AI factory, high-density design, liquid cooling, behind-the-meter generation, supply chain execution, investment discipline, and the growing importance of earning social license with communities.
Highlights include a look ahead to the opening keynote fireside chat featuring Data Center Frontier founder Rich Miller and EdgeCore Digital Infrastructure CEO Lee Kestler; the Day Two keynote on scaling the AI factory with leaders from NVIDIA, Meta, and the Open Compute Project; sessions on AI power architecture, density, cooling, site selection, supply chain risk, and the final bottlenecks before go-live; and the closing keynote on stewardship, sustainability, and community acceptance.
As Kleyman notes, the AI infrastructure race is moving from announcements to accountability. The industry does not need more theoretical capacity. It needs energized, commissioned, operational capacity.
Listen now for a preview of the conversations shaping Data Center Frontier Trends Summit 2026—and join us in Reston this August for the full discussion.

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