Ashok Krish, Global Head of AI, TCS, speaking at the ThinkEdu Conclave  Photo | P Jawahar
ThinkEdu

ThinkEdu 2026: AI agents to power India’s next technology leap: Ashok Krish

Krish opened his session, titled “From Classrooms to Creators: Building India’s AI-Ready Talent at Scale”, on a tongue-in-cheek note.

Soham Mitra

CHENNAI: Artificial intelligence will define India’s next technological leap, and building a scalable ecosystem of AI agents is key to that transformation, said Ashok Krish, Global Head – Advisory and Consulting, AI Cloud, Tata Consultancy Services, at ThinkEdu Conclave 2026 on Monday.

Krish opened his session, titled “From Classrooms to Creators: Building India’s AI-Ready Talent at Scale”, on a tongue-in-cheek note.

“How many of you know me through Instagram and YouTube? And how many of you know me as the Head of AI Practice at TCS?” he asked, drawing an immediate contrast between his online persona and his corporate role.

Reflecting on the current phase of AI development, he said the world is living through a rare and transformative technological moment. His presentation featured around 20 AI agents capable of conducting research, reading scientific papers, performing fact-checking and carrying out analytics, among other tasks.

These tools, he explained, help him manage time more effectively within a demanding corporate schedule. In one demonstration, an AI agent placed a phone call to a restaurant owner to verify an address and other details. The system, he noted, had been built within 48 hours by a 21-year-old TCS employee.

Krish argued that major technological innovations over the past 500 years have consistently expanded human capability. The printing press made knowledge widely accessible, electricity reduced dependence on physical labour, and the internet connected the world. In his view, AI represents the next stage in that trajectory, democratising access to technical knowledge.

He described AI as a system that reasons and acts, serving as an amplifier of both human ability and human ignorance. AI, he suggested, occupies a space somewhere between humans and traditional technology and cannot be used in the same way as conventional software.

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