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Innovation Lab: Pregnancy Alarms, AI Composers and Booze Vision - Mobile Marketing

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At Mobile Marketing we're proud to help tech companies showcase their cutting-edge solutions, whether it's on our website, in our magazine or at our Mobile Marketing Summits. Giving a platform to companies that are breaking new ground in their market brings audiences one step closer to the ideas and developments that will shape tomorrow. In that spirit, our Innovation Lab feature takes a step beyond the world of apps, ads and handsets with slightly bigger screens, in order to share some of the tech world's innovative ideas. They might be interesting, disruptive or just outright strange, but these are the stories that have caught our eye over the past week. South Korean Trains Get Bluetooth Pregnancy Alarm Pregnant passengers on the Busan-Gimhae Light Rail service in Busan, South Korea can now use a Bluetooth system to alert other passengers, ensuring that they can get a seat during rush hour and other busy periods.


Robot fever

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The Henn Na hotel, or "Weird Hotel", has opened. The news is in all of around the world. It is the first establishment where robots attend to guests. It costs 66 euros to stay the night surrounded by androids who, although cannot make the bed, do not ask for a wage and can work without a break seven days a week, 24 hours a day. Henn Na is a good example of robot fever in Japan.


AI learns how to colorize photos, makes old Japan pictures look like they were taken today?Pics?

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And the process it uses to color them isn't what you might expect. We've seen before how artificial intelligence is already on its way to beating humans at playing Go and giving dating advice, but now it seems like there's another area that machines will soon take us over in: colorizing old photographs. Waseda University recently showed off some old Japanese photos that have been fully-colorized by AI that learned the colorization process through analyzing large data sets full of categorized photos. That's the really cool part: the AI is coloring photos based on previous photos that are similar to it. The AI will color it similarly to other birthday photos.


AI In Ads: 13 High-Momentum Companies Using Machine Learning In Marketing, Ads, And Sales

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Startups applying machine learning algorithms to advertising, sales, and marketing were highlighted this quarter by Oracle's acquisition of Tel Aviv-based cross-device advertising startup Crosswise for 50M. In fact, since January 2015, there have been 10 acquisitions in the space: Twitter acquired TellApart for more than 530M, Google acquired marketing-management startup Granata Decision Systems, and Israeli unicorn IronSource merged with in-app advertising startup Supersonic, to name a few. Just this year, private companies like Drawbridge, Persado, Lead Wizards, Kunlun AI, Mariana and Captiv8 raised equity funding rounds from investors including Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, Sequoia Capital, and Goldman Sachs for AI-powered marketing and advertising solutions. In this light, we identified 13 startups to watch in this space with the help of the CB Insights' Mosaic score, which uses public data and predictive algorithms to assess the health of private companies. Here's a detailed list 13 advertising, sales & marketing companies to watch in 2016, listed in alphabetical order (all of the companies below have raised an equity funding round after January 2015):


Honda to set up AI research base in Tokyo

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Honda Motor Co. said Thursday that subsidiary Honda R&D Co. plans to establish a research and development base specializing in artificial intelligence in the Akasaka district of Tokyo in September. The major automaker will consolidate almost all of its AI-related R&D activities in the nation into the new base, called Honda R&D Innovation Lab Tokyo.


Relaxation of the EM Algorithm via Quantum Annealing

arXiv.org Machine Learning

The EM algorithm is a novel numerical method to obtain maximum likelihood estimates and is often used for practical calculations. However, many of maximum likelihood estimation problems are nonconvex, and it is known that the EM algorithm fails to give the optimal estimate by being trapped by local optima. In order to deal with this difficulty, we propose a deterministic quantum annealing EM algorithm by introducing the mathematical mechanism of quantum fluctuations into the conventional EM algorithm because quantum fluctuations induce the tunnel effect and are expected to relax the difficulty of nonconvex optimization problems in the maximum likelihood estimation problems. We show a theorem that guarantees its convergence and give numerical experiments to verify its efficiency.


Artificial Intelligence Accelerator Opens in Mountain View

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A business incubator from Beijing will open an accelerator in Mountain View on Thursday for artificial intelligence startups. TechCode will select startups with existing AI prototypes to spend six months in the program, including two weeks in China meeting potential investing, manufacturing and distribution partners. The program will conclude with a demo day, said Luke Tang, general manager of TechCode's U.S. Accelerator. TechCode's international presence in China, South Korea and Germany will give the startups an opportunity to tap into global markets, he said. TechCode will target startups that want to expand globally.


Computer Defeats Human Go Champion

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Google engineers unveil their latest feat: their program, AlphaGo, which defeated South Korean Go champion Lee Sedol. Note that this is the first of five Go games to occur before a winner is crowned. The talking point is how remarkable it is to configure a program to play this game, let alone defeat a professional. This Chinese board game, as old as age itself, is known for its layers of complexity. Lee could have won, had he changed one or two early decisions in the game.


Artificial Intelligence News: Artificial Intelligence News Issue 46

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At any given moment, pharmaceutical firms have a massive library of compounds and no clue what to do with them. Tucked away in extensive collections of synthetic and theoretical drug banks lie hidden gems - drugs to treat perhaps even the most devastating diseases - but identifying them is a pain: testing can take years, even decades, and often researchers aren't even sure what they're looking for. Dan provides interesting guest commentary with Geekwire: In short, the biggest threat posed by AI is not the advent of autonomous machines, but of human beings losing their autonomy by being driven from the production process. We must confront the potential for serious social unrest, perhaps even revolt or revolution. More than a location tracker for dogs, Tracy alerts owners when it is time to run, play and go to the bathroom and is smart enough to learn on its own Stockholm, Sweden (PRWEB) May 24, 2016 Tracy is a dog tracker that can do more than simply locate a dog's position.


Google working on 'kill switch' to prevent Terminator-style robot apocalypse

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Fears about the power of maniacal machines have been growing in recent years. Google is working on a'kill switch' to stop intelligent robots turning on their human masters. Fears about the power of maniacal machines have been growing in recent years, with both tech pioneer Elon Musk and Professor Stephen Hawking warning of the dreadful possibility of a Terminator-style war between humanity and our super-smart silicon creations . Now the search engine giant has published a paper outlining the work its British artificial intelligence (AI) team Deep Mind team is doing to ensure humanity is not swept away by a metallic fist. Deep Mind develops algorithms to allow robots to learn for themselves directly from raw experience or data.