London Tech Week day one: AI talk has come back down to earth
AI conversations are no longer about possibility, but infrastructure, writes Russ Shaw in day one of his London Tech Week diary
The opening day of London Tech Week 2026 reflected a UK technology sector entering a new phase.
For the past few years, much of the conversation around artificial intelligence has focused on possibility. This year, the discussion has shifted towards deployment and adoption. The question is no longer whether AI will transform the economy, but how quickly countries, businesses and institutions can put it to work.
That theme ran throughout the opening day. The Prime Minister set the tone by outlining a vision for inclusive growth built around technology and innovation, with a clear emphasis on ensuring AI works for everyone. The ambition was not simply to develop world-leading technology, but to create the conditions for widespread adoption across the economy.
AMD’s announcement of further investment into the UK highlighted one of the defining themes of this year’s event: infrastructure. As AI capabilities continue to advance, attention is turning towards the compute power, data centres and digital infrastructure required to support the next stage of growth.
The race for AI leadership is increasingly a race for capacity. As AMD chair and CEO Lisa Su observed, technology is only as useful as the problems it solves. That perspective was reflected across multiple sessions. Whether discussing healthcare, energy, public services or business productivity, the emphasis was on practical application rather than technological novelty.
Alongside this optimism was a healthy recognition that the UK remains at an early stage of adoption. Many organisations and individuals are only now beginning to understand how AI may affect their working lives. Several speakers returned to the importance of helping people navigate that change.
Baroness Martha Lane Fox made a compelling case for bringing people along the journey, ensuring that businesses, employees and communities have the confidence and understanding needed to engage with emerging technologies. Building technological capability and building public confidence are closely connected challenges.
London itself featured prominently throughout the day’s discussions. The Mayor’s message was straightforward: London remains one of the best places in the world to build a technology company. Few cities combine world-class technology expertise, financial capital and political influence within a single ecosystem. That concentration continues to attract founders, investors and innovators from around the world.
Walking around Olympia, the international character of London Tech Week was impossible to miss. Delegations from across Europe, Asia and the Middle East were present throughout the day, including a significant Turkish delegation exploring opportunities for collaboration with the UK technology sector.
Afternoon discussions at the Asia Summit fringe event reinforced the same theme. Investment, innovation and technology partnerships increasingly operate across borders, and London continues to occupy a unique position as a meeting point between global markets, talent and capital.
One of the more interesting themes that dominated day one was centred on technology sovereignty.
As governments seek greater resilience in areas such as AI and advanced computing, sovereignty is becoming a more prominent part of the technology conversation. Yet sovereignty should not be confused with self-sufficiency. The challenge is not to do everything alone. It is to build enough domestic capability to remain resilient while maintaining strong international partnerships. In a world where supply chains, infrastructure and geopolitical relationships can change rapidly, balance becomes increasingly important.
The UK already has world-class research and entrepreneurial talent. The next chapter will be defined by how effectively those strengths are translated into economic growth.
Day one suggested that conversation is well underway.
Russ Shaw is a founding partner of London Tech Week