Local & Community
Palm Springs NExT Summit Bridges Future Tech and Regional Infrastructure Controversies
PALM SPRINGS, Calif. — The future of technology and the physical infrastructure required to power it took center stage in the desert on Monday. The inaugural day of the Palm Springs NExT Summit transformed the Palm Springs Convention Center into a bustling hub of innovation, bringing tech industry pioneers, local institutional leaders, and Coachella Valley residents together under one roof. NBC Palm Springs reporter Alondra Campos provided a firsthand look at the event, which successfully balanced awe-inspiring tech demonstrations with serious, high-stakes conversations about how artificial intelligence will reshape local communities.
From a high-tech robot dog named Bacchus roaming the convention floor to advanced drones buzzing overhead, the summit provided a highly interactive look at tools rapidly altering daily life. Major regional organizations like College of the Desert and Eisenhower Health joined specialized tech firms to showcase how they are integrating automated systems into public health, education, and municipal infrastructure. One of the standout local exhibits came from Base Studio, a Palm Springs-based company dedicated to reimagining the ubiquitous urban streetlight through artificial intelligence. Their smart streetlights represent a major leap forward for green infrastructure by incorporating integrated solar panels to generate renewable energy on-site, internal battery storage to keep lights functional during blackouts, public WiFi mesh networks to expand digital access, and built-in electric vehicle charging stations to provide accessible curbside options for local drivers.
The conversation also drifted into the creative arts, where independent creators are aggressively adapting to algorithmic tools. A prominent presentation featured insights from the film industry, including independent filmmaker Mint Doe, cofounder of Machine Cinema, who utilizes bleeding-edge AI architecture to bring complex visual storytelling to life. Rather than viewing the rapid march of generative technology as a threat, Doe urged attendees to approach AI as a collaborative canvas, prompting a deeper philosophical look at its deployment. Doe noted that society should focus less on whether the technology is inevitable and more on what problems human beings actually want it to solve to change daily lives for the better.
Local attendees echoed this sentiment, emphasizing that innovation must coexist with human ingenuity. Palm Springs resident Arthur, who attended the summit alongside his mechanical canine companion, Bacchus, noted that tech has evolved almost on a weekly basis over the last three years, adding that innovation is a collaborative tool meant to aid rather than replace critical thinking.
While the promise of AI-driven tools excited many on the floor, the summit did not shy away from the growing logistical friction facing the region. As artificial intelligence models scale exponentially, the demand for massive, energy-intensive data centers has skyrocketed, sparking fierce political and environmental controversy across the Coachella Valley. Because these facilities require immense volumes of water for cooling and unprecedented electrical draws from the local grid, neighborhood groups and conservationists have raised significant resource concerns. Tech leaders at the summit acknowledged these friction points, concluding that the industry must strike a careful equilibrium and pivot toward technologies that give more back to communities than they extract. The Palm Springs NExT Summit will continue its programming through Tuesday afternoon at the convention center.
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By: NBC Palm Springs
June 22, 2026


