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In a world where AI can generate code, automate tasks, and accelerate innovation, what skills still set great technologists apart?
In this episode of The Pluralsight Podcast, Dr. Lyron Andrews shares his unconventional path into technology — from working before finishing high school to building a career through certifications, teaching, and eventually earning his doctorate at 49. Along the way, he explains why resistance, trial and error, and even failure aren't liabilities — they're signals of growth.
We explore how simplifying complexity unlocks deeper understanding, from quantum computing and cryptography to Zero Trust architecture. Lyron breaks down intimidating concepts with practical analogies and challenges technologists to focus less on the "kitchen" (the tools) and more on the "meal" (business outcomes).
The conversation also dives into AI governance, ISO 42001, and why organizations risk accelerating the wrong results if they don't build security and guardrails into their AI strategies from the start.
Chapters:
02:37 Lyron's Unconventional Path Into Tech
05:59 Learning How to Learn
08:21 What Makes Someone Employable in Tech
12:57 The Superpower of Children
18:33 Babe Ruth, Failure, and Experimentation
24:16 Why Shared Definitions Matter
26:44 Simplify the Complex
30:16 AI Governance and ISO 42001
36:14 Skills AI Can't Replace
39:52 AI Bias and the Dutch Tax Fraud Case
43:06 Zero Trust and Federal Security Challenges
48:02 The "Frankenstein Tech Stack" Problem
50:17 Outcomes Before Tools
55:04 Stackable Credentials and Career Agility
59:21 How to Choose Skills to Learn
1:06:20 Increase Your Value, Understand the Business
Want more insights on Security, Cloud, and AI? Subscribe to our newsletters: https://plrsg.ht/3MZ78ya Follow Pluralsight on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/pluralsight/ Connect with Dr. Lyron Andrews on LinkedIn Questions or comments? [email protected] www.pluralsight.com
By Josh BurkheadIn a world where AI can generate code, automate tasks, and accelerate innovation, what skills still set great technologists apart?
In this episode of The Pluralsight Podcast, Dr. Lyron Andrews shares his unconventional path into technology — from working before finishing high school to building a career through certifications, teaching, and eventually earning his doctorate at 49. Along the way, he explains why resistance, trial and error, and even failure aren't liabilities — they're signals of growth.
We explore how simplifying complexity unlocks deeper understanding, from quantum computing and cryptography to Zero Trust architecture. Lyron breaks down intimidating concepts with practical analogies and challenges technologists to focus less on the "kitchen" (the tools) and more on the "meal" (business outcomes).
The conversation also dives into AI governance, ISO 42001, and why organizations risk accelerating the wrong results if they don't build security and guardrails into their AI strategies from the start.
Chapters:
02:37 Lyron's Unconventional Path Into Tech
05:59 Learning How to Learn
08:21 What Makes Someone Employable in Tech
12:57 The Superpower of Children
18:33 Babe Ruth, Failure, and Experimentation
24:16 Why Shared Definitions Matter
26:44 Simplify the Complex
30:16 AI Governance and ISO 42001
36:14 Skills AI Can't Replace
39:52 AI Bias and the Dutch Tax Fraud Case
43:06 Zero Trust and Federal Security Challenges
48:02 The "Frankenstein Tech Stack" Problem
50:17 Outcomes Before Tools
55:04 Stackable Credentials and Career Agility
59:21 How to Choose Skills to Learn
1:06:20 Increase Your Value, Understand the Business
Want more insights on Security, Cloud, and AI? Subscribe to our newsletters: https://plrsg.ht/3MZ78ya Follow Pluralsight on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/pluralsight/ Connect with Dr. Lyron Andrews on LinkedIn Questions or comments? [email protected] www.pluralsight.com