
Show overview
The ITPro Podcast has been publishing since 2019, and across the 7 years since has built a catalogue of 372 episodes, alongside 2 trailers or bonus episodes. That works out to roughly 180 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a weekly cadence.
Episodes typically run twenty to thirty-five minutes — most land between 25 min and 33 min — and the run-time is fairly consistent across the catalogue. None of the episodes are flagged explicit by the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-language Technology show.
The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed 3 days ago, with 33 episodes already out so far this year. Published by ITPro.
From the publisher
The ITPro Podcast is a weekly show for technology professionals and business leaders. Each week hosts Rory Bathgate and Jane McCallion are joined by an expert guest to take a deep dive into the most important issues for the IT community. New episodes premiere every Friday. Visit itpro.com/uk/the-it-pro-podcast for more information, or follow ITPro on LinkedIn for regular updates.
Latest Episodes
View all 372 episodesDo we have enough talent and power for the future of AI?
HPE Discover and Pure Accelerate 2026
The AI pricing time bomb
Why mobile connectivity still matters for business
SPECIAL EDITION: Security at the speed of AI
The future of employment and gentlemanly hackers
SPECIAL EDITION: What Would a Mythos-Resilient SOC Look Like?
Dell Technologies World 2026: agents, hardware, and tokenomics
How AI code is changing software development
SPECIAL EDITION: Why cyber resilience is business critical
Managing tech costs in a volatile market
April rundown: OpenAI hesitations and Apple's new CEO
Google Cloud Next 2026: Scaling AI agents
The race to become quantum-safe
Can Europe achieve AI sovereignty?

Ep 345How AI is transforming enterprise data
It’s long been said that good data is necessary before you can have good AI. But to an increasing degree, AI is also helping businesses manage, analyze, and generate their data too.With AI code generation already well understood, businesses are also leaning on natural language processing and agentic AI to help their experts such as data engineers and data scientists automate their work more effectively.What does all this mean for businesses looking to adopt AI? And how is the UK AI market maturing?In this episode, recorded on the ground at Databricks AI Days London 2026, Rory speaks to Michael Green, UK&I managing director at Databricks and Richard Shaw, AVP Field Engineering at Databricks, to better understand how data and AI are converging.Read more:What is natural language processing?‘A true vote of confidence’: Databricks announces $850m UK investment as firm looks to quadruple London office footprint"We want AI to work for Britain": The UK government wants to upskill 10 million Brits in AI by 2030 – and the courses are free to accessThe UK’s AI ambitions depend on channel partnersMicrosoft says fear of falling behind is driving an AI arms race among UK businesses – and it's fueling record adoption ratesDatabricks wants to train 100,000 people in AI across the UK and Ireland – here's how to get involved

Ep 344March rundown: RSAC warnings and Arm's AGI CPU
In March the clocks change, Spring begins to show its face, and many companies enter their next financial quarter. But in cybersecurity, no such rays of sunshine are to be found.In the past week, speakers from across the cybersecurity industry came together at RSAC Conference to warn about the latest threats facing businesses. Some warned that just as AI agents are becoming an opportunity for leaders, they’re also becoming a potential threat vector.Also this month, Arm has unveiled its first in-house chip, the Arm AGI CPU. What does it mean, and is this a win for UK tech?In this episode Jane and Rory welcome back Ross Kelly, ITPro’s news and analysis editor, to unpack some of the biggest news items from throughout March.Read more:Safe AI adoption rests on cybersecurity professionals, says RSAC chairmanEnterprises need to think of agents as ‘digital co-workers’ – and that means implementing the same security safeguardsObservability will be key to agentic AI safety, says Microsoft Security execThe key risks security teams face in 2026Tenable co-CEO Stephen Vintz says enterprises need to get serious about tackling the AI “responsibility gap”Systems are deterministic, people are probabilistic – AI is both, and that's a headache for cyber teams

Ep 343Has Apple stolen the budget laptop market?
Apple made waves at the start of March with the launch of the MacBook Neo, its first budget laptop. As RAM prices skyrocket, businesses are under pressure to make device purchases that count and that will future-proof their workers for years to come. Both Apple and manufactures in the Windows ecosystem are vying for enterprise money in the budget and pro segments – even as it becomes more expensive than ever to spec devices to 16GB of memory and beyond.Where does the latest Apple release fit into the wider business laptop ecosystem?This week, Rory speaks to Bobby Hellard, ITPro’s reviews editor, to unpack all things MacBook Neo, Windows laptops, and the future of business hardware.Read more:MacBook Neo: everything you need to know about Apple's £599 laptopThe MacBook Neo is another Apple master stroke, and it couldn’t have come at a better timeLow-budget devices are the biggest casualty of the RAM crisisGive businesses more practical AI services and some return on investment before you go selling 6GLenovo wows at MWC with concepts for a modular ThinkBook and desktop AI-devicesAMD thinks ‘AI on the PC has crossed an important line’ – the rise of ‘Agent Computers’ will be the next big breakthroughAre AI PCs becoming the norm?Nobody asked for AI PCs, but they’ve been thrust upon us – at least Dell realizes it’s probably made a mistake

Ep 342SPECIAL EDITION: How AI is changing education
One of the most commonly-touted benefits of AI is its ability to cut down toil and give workers more time to focus on valuable tasks.Few professionals could arguably benefit from this more than teachers, who spend many of their evenings and weekend hours completing paperwork and carrying out marking.How is AI already being used to free up time for teachers, and what can we learn from exemplar organizations leading the way on this path?In this special edition of the ITPro Podcast, in association with AWS, Jane and Rory are joined by Scott Hayden, head of teaching, learning and digital at Basingstoke College of Technology, to explore how the college has deployed AI to support its teaching staff.Read more:Basingstoke College of TechnologyPerform PartnersHelping BCoT Secure $25K Credits to Accelerate AI Growth: How OGVA Enables Innovation in Further Education

Ep 341Tomorrow's fraud techniques
Fraud has evolved leaps and bounds in the past few years, with new technology and more digitally-native businesses than ever providing the ideal attack surface for fraudsters.As attackers look to lure in business professionals with new tech such as deepfakes and AI scams, enterprise cybersecurity teams and cybersecurity vendors are faced with the task of combatting cyber fraud more effectively.How can we combat this new frontier of cyber fraud?In this episode, Jane is joined by Paul Weathersby, chief product officer, Identity, Fraud & Financial Crime Compliance at Experian, to explore the increasing sophistication of cyber crime and fraud campaigns.