Is this email difficult to read? View it in a web browser. ›

The Wall Street Journal. The Wall Street Journal.

Sponsored by
Deloitte logo.

The Morning Download: Learning Beats Knowing in the Age of AI

By Steven Rosenbush

 

What's up: Highlights from WSJ Tech Live California; IBM to lay off thousands of employees; Aaron Paul of “Breaking Bad” is a fan of less tech.

Assaf Rappaport, co-founder and CEO at Wiz, right, speaks with Ben Ashwell at The Wall Street Journal Tech Live in Napa Valley, Calif., Nov. 4, 2025. Nikki Ritcher for WSJ

Good morning. Business is changing at a furious pace, given the pressure of AI. Roles, process, business models, customer experience and more are evolving faster than leaders can keep up. What are they supposed to do?

Don’t fake it. Admit what you don’t know and your teams will be okay with it. That principle came up repeatedly last night as the WSJ Tech Live California got underway last night in Napa Valley.

Assaf Rappaport said he learned that lesson about 10 years ago from Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella. Microsoft had just acquired cybersecurity startup Adallom from Rappaport and his co-founders for $320 million. Rappaport didn’t expect to stay long, even agreeing to a lower price to maintain more flexibility, he said during a panel discussion with the WSJ Leadership Institute’s Ben Ashwell.

Rappaport went into his first meeting with Nadella and he said, “I fell in love.”

Nadella told him “‘I want to be very clear. I’m here to set the rules. You’re here to break the rules.’ And I’m like ‘whoa,’” Rappaport recalled.

He was impressed with the learning culture that Nadella instilled. “From ‘we know it all’ to ‘we learn it all’, it’s something that I'm trying to implement every day at Wiz,” Rappaport said. He left Microsoft after five years to co-found Wiz, which Google is in the process of acquiring for $32 billion.

Brené Brown, research professor and author, left, and Kate Johnson, CEO at Lumen Technologies, right, speak with Alan Murray at The Wall Street Journal Tech Live in Napa Valley, Calif., Nov. 4, 2025. Nikki Ritcher for WSJ

Lumen Technologies CEO Kate Johnson embraced a similar emphasis on learning when she joined the company three years ago and implemented a turnaround at the global telecommunications services provider. “Your learning skills that are directly applicable to being successful in life, that builds a following of people,” she said.

The company restructured borrowings and landed billions in contracts for AI-related services.

She brought in author and researcher Brené Brown to help her rebuild the company’s culture. Brown and Johnson spoke about the experience last night during a conversation with WSJ Leadership Institute President Alan Murray.

“We're trying to help people understand that if your success depends on certainty, you lose,” Brown said. “Lumen is winning right now … because there was a critical shift of top leaders who understood that the value was no longer in being a knower,  but being a learner. No longer was there value in having the right answers, but in asking exquisite questions,” Brown said.

More Tuesday highlights from WSJ Tech Live California below.

 
Content from our sponsor: Deloitte
AI Is Dominating Digital Budgets. Is Your Tech Portfolio at Risk?

To avoid AI overreach and sustain resilience, leaders should align digital budgets to match ambition and measure value beyond ROI. Read More

More articles for CIOs from Deloitte
 
Share this email with a friend.
Forward ›
Forwarded this email by a friend?
Sign Up Here ›
 

Hollywood, D.C. converge on Napa Valley

Nikki Ritcher for WSJ

Aaron Paul, who played Jesse in the series “Breaking Bad”, is a fan of the minimalistic Light Phone, a simplified device which doesn’t support social media apps, web browsers or streaming services.

“I’m not anti-tech. It’s just beautiful to know that there’s options out there,” he said. 

 

Nikki Ritcher for WSJ

Michael Kratsios, director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, is focused on a regulatory system that fosters discovery and deployment. “We have the best chips, best algorithms and the best applications,” said Kratsios. “The question is how do we get that into as many hands as possible around the world.”

See below for one answer to that question. 

 

Nvidia, Deutsche Telekom to build AI factory in Europe

Nvidia and Deutsche Telekom’s joint artificial-intelligence factory is a boost for the European Union as it tries to catch up with the U.S.’s AI capabilities. Lisi Niesner/Reuters

The WSJ reports that Nvidia and Deutsche Telekom plan to renovate an existing data center in Munich, powering it with some 10,000 Nvidia Blackwell GPUs, as part of a $1.15 billion partnership. 

Deutsche Telekom said the facility would bolster AI computing power in Germany by around 50%.

Separately the European Union last month outlined two AI strategies aimed in part at weaning the bloc off of its dependence on foreign technologies and know-how: An Apply AI Strategy that sets out how to speed up the use of AI in key European industries and the public sector, and an AI in Science Strategy aimed at boosting AI-driven research.

 

Outside Napa Valley, ongoing talk of bubbles of the AI variety

Michael Burry  Astrid Stawiarz/Getty Images

Mr. “Big Short” enters the chat.  With Palantir shares sliding Tuesday morning, despite reporting record revenue, Chief Executive Alex Karp took to CNBC Tuesday to rail against short sellers. He also criticized hedge funder Michael Burry of Scion Asset Management, who he said is betting against both Palantir and Nvidia.

“The idea that chips and ontology is what you want to short is bats--- crazy,” Karp said.

Burry, made famous in the book and film “Big Short” as one of the investors who bet against the U.S. housing market, declined to comment, according to CNBC. 

The FT reports that Burry has disclosed a $912 million position against Palantir and a bet against Nvidia.

 

Reading List

IBM employed about 270,000 globally at the end of last year. David Paul Morris/Bloomberg News

International Business Machines is cutting thousands of jobs this quarter, the latest company to shed workers as it seeks to reposition its business in the age of artificial intelligence, WSJ reports.

IBM in October posted higher revenue in the third quarter, boosted by higher-than-expected growth in its consulting business, results the company linked to customers starting to scale AI. 

 

AMD on Tuesday posted a profit of $1.96 billion, compared with $1.5 billion a year earlier, WSJ reports. Data center revenue rose 22% to $4.3 billion. Investors had been expecting better from the chip maker which wants to be a major player in the AI race.

Data center operating income was $1.07 billion, or 14% lower than what analysts estimated. Data center profit margins fell to 25%, from 29% in the year-earlier quarter.

 

Sequoia Capital leader Roelof Botha was asked to step aside after some partners raised concerns about his leadership style, WSJ reports. In a letter posted online Tuesday, Botha said he was handing the reins to longtime Sequoia investors Alfred Lin and Pat Grady. Since Botha took over in 2022, the firm lost its China arm and had to apologize for an investment in FTX. More recently, Botha has faced questions about a partner's political commentary. 

 

Everything Else You Need to Know

Zohran Mamdani won New York City’s mayoral race, cementing the Democratic socialist’s meteoric rise in the epicenter of global capitalism and making him the first Muslim to lead America's most populous city. (WSJ)

California voters approved Proposition 50, a measure that temporarily redraws the state’s congressional maps to put Democrats in a position to flip several seats in the 2026 midterm election. (WSJ)

Republican and Democratic senators signaled optimism about reaching a bipartisan deal to end the government shutdown, while striking cautionary notes about how quickly lawmakers could resolve the impasse. (WSJ)

The Supreme Court on Wednesday will weigh whether the president lawfully invoked his authority under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act to levy global tariffs without Congress's approval. (WSJ)

Content From Our Sponsor: DELOITTE
Gen AI in IT Operations
Generative AI is reshaping IT operations, enabling CIOs to drive smarter automation, stronger resilience, and greater strategic value. Deloitte’s latest insights guide leaders in leveraging GenAI for measurable impact across the enterprise. Read more.
 

About Us

The WSJ CIO Journal Team is Steven Rosenbush, Isabelle Bousquette and Belle Lin.

The editor, Tom Loftus, can be reached at thomas.loftus@wsj.com.

 
Desktop, tablet and mobile. Desktop, tablet and mobile.
Access WSJ‌.com and our mobile apps. Subscribe
Apple app store icon. Google app store icon.
Unsubscribe   |    Newsletters & Alerts   |    Contact Us   |    Privacy Policy   |    Cookie Policy
Dow Jones & Company, Inc. 4300 U.S. Ro‌ute 1 No‌rth Monm‌outh Junc‌tion, N‌J 088‌52
You are currently subscribed as [email address suppressed]. For further assistance, please contact Customer Service at sup‌port@wsj.com or 1-80‌0-JOURNAL.
Copyright 2025 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.   |   All Rights Reserved.
Unsubscribe