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Google CEO: Open to returning to China

USATODAY - Tech Top Stories

"If we can do it in the right and thoughtful way we are always open to it," said Pichai at the Code conference here. "I care about serving consumers everywhere." Google pulled out of mainland China and moved its Chinese-language search engine to Hong Kong in 2010 after a series of cyber attacks on Google originated in the country. Google also said it would stop censoring search results in China. The controversial move cut Google off from the fast-growing Chinese market, one that's been courted by rival Facebook and constitutes the second-biggest market for Apple.


Why Should We Ban Autonomous Weapons? To Survive.

IEEE Spectrum Robotics

This is a guest post. The views expressed here are solely those of the author and do not represent positions of IEEE Spectrum or the IEEE. Killer robots pose a threat to all of us. In the movies, this threat is usually personified as an evil machine bent on destroying humanity for reasons of its own. In reality, the threat comes from within us.


Five in-home robots that could change your life

The Guardian

In-home robots to help with everything from cooking and cleaning to childcare and companionship have been the stuff of sci-fi for decades. But, with the unveiling this week of the Wall-E-like Asus Zenbo, this is the year that science-fiction could turn into science-fact, introducing home assistants that can talk to you, control your electronics and help out with the chores. Here are five that could be knocking at your door in the near future. The latest robot to offer help around the home is Asus's Zenbo, which, at 599 ( 410), costs about the same as a smartphone. Designed to be a do-it-all smarthome assistant, Zenbo can drive itself around your place, using various cameras to keep it from bumping into the walls.


'Warcraft' Could Be China's Biggest-Ever Hollywood Import And A Key Win In Wanda-Disney Rivalry

International Business Times

"Warcraft," a fantasy epic based on the popular video game series, is opening in China next weekend, and it may already spell "game over" for any movie that dares to compete with it. The little-hyped movie, produced by Legendary Entertainment and distributed by Universal Pictures, may not even clear 100 million in the U.S. And yet, based on the reliable proxy of internet presales, it is on pace to top "Furious 7" as the highest-grossing Hollywood film ever in China. Either way, it will be a nice win for Legendary's parent company -- the Chinese conglomerate Dalian Wanda Group -- in its burgeoning rivalry with the Walt Disney Company, whose movies have dominated Middle Kingdom multiplexes for months. Chinese film fans love Disney's animated fare and its Marvel superhero movies, but based on presale numbers for "Warcraft," they might love video games more. Despite being released in just 20 countries so far -- mostly in Europe -- "Warcraft has already reeled in about 31.6 million, according to comScore.


Apple edits same-sex parents from Mother's Day ads in France, Germany and other countries

The Independent - Tech

Nasa has announced that it has found evidence of flowing water on Mars. Scientists have long speculated that Recurring Slope Lineae -- or dark patches -- on Mars were made up of briny water but the new findings prove that those patches are caused by liquid water, which it has established by finding hydrated salts. Several hundred camped outside the London store in Covent Garden. The 6s will have new features like a vastly improved camera and a pressure-sensitive "3D Touch" display


Report: Alphabet may sell robotics firm to Toyota

USATODAY - Tech Top Stories

Alphabet's Boston Dynamics has produced some of the coolest (and scariest) robotics advances in recent years, and now may soon be looking for a new home. According to Nikkei Asian Review, Toyota is in "final talks" to acquire two robotics divisions from Google-parent Alphabet, Boston Dynamics and Schaft, a company created by two former Tokyo University professors. Both divisions were acquired by Google in 2013. The move will allow Toyota to strengthen its artificial intelligence division, the Toyota Research Institute, that the automaker created in January. The institute currently has offices in Palo Alto, Calif., and Cambridge, Mass., not far from Boston Dynamics main headquarters in Waltham.


Analyzing Employee Turnover - Predictive Methods

#artificialintelligence

At first glance, 'intent to leave' seems like it should be pretty good predictor of turnover. If a coworker told me that they were going to quit, I feel like I'd have a pretty good sense of how likely they were to leave. However, many researchers have developed constructs to measure this intention and the results are surprising. For example, there was a meta-analytic study (i.e., study of studies) in 2000 by Rodger Griffeth and Peter Hom on turnover that found the construct'intent to leave' had a shared variance with actually leaving of 12% across all studies (explains roughly 12% of why people leave). That's pretty good for a study on human behavior, but it does leave a reader wondering what is going on.


Toyota said to be in talks to acquire two Google robotics companies

PCWorld

Toyota is close to acquiring two robotics companies from Google, according to a report in Wednesday's Nikkei newspaper. The newspaper said the two companies are in final talks, but details are yet to be discussed so the deal could still fall through. The deal would see Boston Dynamics, a developer of advanced two- and four-legged robots for the U.S. military, and Schaft, a Tokyo-based developer of humanoid robots, transferred to the Toyota Research Institute. The unit is a recently launched billion-dollar research arm based in Silicon Valley. Google acquired Boston Dynamics and Schaft several years ago as part of a push into robotics, but that hasn't gone anywhere since robotics head Andy Rubin left the company in late 2014.


This is the dark side of China's growing robotics sector

#artificialintelligence

A rough estimate would show that thousands of Chinese robotics companies may have recorded, on average, annual sales of less than 100,000 yuan each. Mainland media reported that low-end robots have been installed on the assembly line of known labour-intensive factories as a showcase for local government subsidies and left unused. "There remains a big shortage of specialists who can assess the true situation in the country's robotics industry and determine arbitrary decision–making by local governments in granting subsidies," Wang said. His urgent call for a sweeping audit of subsidies to the domestic robotics industry followed a recent nationwide investigation launched by the Ministry of Finance on so-called "new energy vehicle" makers. The agency is targeting electric car manufacturers suspected of fraudulently obtaining subsidies from the government in 2013 and 2014, as well as those firms that applied last year.


Clever banking with artificial intelligence » Banking Technology

#artificialintelligence

As banks, financial services providers and brands predict and plan for the way consumers will manage their money in the future, artificial intelligence (AI) is high on the business development strategy for 2016 and beyond. Gideon Hyde, co-founder of Market Gravity, explains how and why artificial intelligence (AI) could hold the key to standing out in banking and financial services. AI is already around us and used everyday within payments, money management and for robo-advice, particularly in the area of intelligent digital assistants that handle regular customer service enquiries and tasks. It can process "big data" far more efficiently than humans and can recognise speech, images, text, patterns of online behaviour, for example to detect fraud as well as appropriate advertisements for upselling. Smart machines and technology can turn data into customer insights and enhance service provisions, bringing the digital experience closer to the human interaction for consumers.