Oceania
PwCs Anand Rao: We Are Only In 1984 In Terms Of The Evolution Of AI
AI will augment people's capabilities but won't take all jobs. However, there will be socioeconomic upheaval, warns PwC's authority on AI, Anand Rao. Anand Rao is PwC global leader for artificial intelligence (AI) and is the consulting giant's innovation lead for the US analytics practice. Rao has 24 years of industry and consulting experience, helping senior executives to structure, solve and manage critical issues facing their organisations. He has worked extensively on business, technology and analytics issues across a wide range of industry sectors including financial services, healthcare, telecommunications, aerospace and defence, across US, Europe, Asia and Australia.
Watch a swarm of underwater drones hunt and surround a boat
The swarm consists of SwarmDivers, small rocket-shaped vehicles, that can work cooperatively to carry out impossible feats for single robot submarines, as shown in a new video. The SwarmDiver drones were unveiled last week by Aquabotix, a firm based in Australia. While many autonomous underwater vehicles are already in use, Aquabotix says their SwarmDivers can work as a group, with one operator controlling the entire swarm via a simple interface.
Machine learning is the 'new normal'
We are surrounded by machine learning, it is "under the hood" of systems we use everyday, says Olivier Klein, head of emerging technologies for Asia Pacific at Amazon Web Services. These systems can range in the spam filter for emails, to the facial recognition systems used at airports. "Cloud is normal, machine learning is the new normal," says Klein. Klein says machine learning helps organisations create new and seamless experiences for customers, or citizens, in the case of government agencies. This can be through the use of a natural interface such as voice or facial recognition to create a frictionless experience for users.
Machine learning is the 'new normal'
We are surrounded by machine learning, it is "under the hood" of systems we use everyday, says Olivier Klein, head of emerging technologies for Asia Pacific at Amazon Web Services. These systems can range in the spam filter for emails, to the facial recognition systems used at airports. "Cloud is normal, machine learning is the new normal," says Klein. Klein says machine learning helps organisations create new and seamless experiences for customers, or citizens, in the case of government agencies. This can be through the use of a natural interface such as voice or facial recognition to create a frictionless experience for users.
What machine learning has done for the Virgin Velocity program
Applying machine learning to the Virgin Velocity Frequent Flyers program has already seen communication effectiveness increase by 10 per cent and given teams the ability to apply advanced analytics at 10 times the pace, its data analytics chief says. Virgin embarked on a data transformation program a little over 12 months ago, work that's running alongside a wider digital transformation program across the organisation. The emphasis is twofold: Enhance customer experiences across the Velocity customer loyalty member base by improving redemption offers that are personalised and relevant; and lift the team's ability to understand and attribute what communications and digital activities are supporting this quest. As part of this overhaul, the data analytics team adopted DataRobot's machine learning platform to bolster predictive modelling capability. Oliver Rees, general manager of Torque Data, the data analytics arm of Virgin Australia, told CMO the group's application of machine learning is about driving personalised customer experiences, and at pace, by being able to run data analytics and modelling more accurately and faster.
Machine learning is the 'new normal'
We are surrounded by machine learning, it is "under the hood" of systems we use everyday, says Olivier Klein, head of emerging technologies for Asia Pacific at Amazon Web Services. These systems can range in the spam filter for emails, to the facial recognition systems used at airports. "Cloud is normal, machine learning is the new normal," says Klein. Klein says machine learning helps organisations create new and seamless experiences for customers, or citizens, in the case of government agencies. This can be through the use of a natural interface such as voice or facial recognition to create a frictionless experience for users.
Winetitles Media
Advanced machine learning and high-resolution satellite images are set to revolutionise the Australian grape and wine community's regional mapping and vineyard insights. World leading agricultural artificial intelligence software, GAIA (Geospatial Artificial Intelligence for Agriculture), has been developed by Consilium Technology, in partnership with DigitalGlobe and Wine Australia. The software provides groundbreaking insight into the health and quantity of all vineyards across Australia โ effortlessly and in real-time. The partnership's initial co-investment will see GAIA deployed in Australia's wine regions to prove that the technology can deliver accurate, timely and cost-effective information about Australia's winegrape vineyards. DigitalGlobe is the world's leading provider of high-resolution Earth imagery.
Korea steps back from 'killer robot' lab after threatened boycott TheINQUIRER
THE PLANNED boycott of the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) over its research into military robots has been cancelled after the lab agreed to step back from the brink of madness. The state-run lab known as Research Centre for the Convergence of National Defence and Artificial Intelligence (RCCNDAI, presumably) was working in partnership with defence company Hanwa, a company which develops so-called'cluster munitions' which are banned in over 100 countries and a completely autonomous sentry robot called SGR-A1 - echoes of ED-209 anyone? Toby Walsh, Scientia Professor of Artificial Intelligence at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, who initiated the action, praised KAIST for the rapid response. "I was very pleased that the president of KAIST has agreed not to develop lethal autonomous weapons, and to follow international norms by ensuring meaningful human control of any AI-based weapon that will be developed," he said. "I applaud KAIST for doing the right thing, and I'll be happy to work with KAIST in the future. "It goes to show the power of the scientific community when we choose to speak out - our action was an overnight success," he added. "We initially sought assurances in private from the university more than month ago about the goals of their new lab.
We should be pleased that robots are taking over some of our old jobs
Mark Carney knows how to illustrate economic trends through the use of creative language. And when he talks, people tend to listen. "The massacre of the Dilberts" was how the governor of the Bank of England encapsulated the fear that middle-management jobs would be wiped out by automation โ for people unfamiliar with American cartoon strips, Dilbert is a white collar office worker and the strip mocks the absurdities of office life. In his native Canada this week, Carney made a number of points in a speech on automation. Most obviously, many office jobs done by people would be done by computers, a process that was already well advanced. "When I look back 30 years ago, what I used to do in the City of London when I worked at an investment bank, probably about three-quarters of what I did is now done by machine," he said.
Scientists use machine learning to speed discovery of metallic glass
IMAGE: Fang Ren, who developed algorithms to analyze data on the fly while a postdoctoral scholar at SLAC, at a Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource beamline where the system has been put... view more Blend two or three metals together and you get an alloy that usually looks and acts like a metal, with its atoms arranged in rigid geometric patterns. But once in a while, under just the right conditions, you get something entirely new: a futuristic alloy called metallic glass that's amorphous, with its atoms arranged every which way, much like the atoms of the glass in a window. Its glassy nature makes it stronger and lighter than today's best steel, plus it stands up better to corrosion and wear. Even though metallic glass shows a lot of promise as a protective coating and alternative to steel, only a few thousand of the millions of possible combinations of ingredients have been evaluated over the past 50 years, and only a handful developed to the point that they may become useful. Now a group led by scientists at the Department of Energy's SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and Northwestern University has reported a shortcut for discovering and improving metallic glass -- and, by extension, other elusive materials -- at a fraction of the time and cost.