South America
Fifa 18: hands-on with the latest version of the football phenomenon
"To some, Fifa is life." This may sound like hyberbole from the game's creative director Matt Prior, but he has a point. Electronic Arts' football series operates on a scale beyond the dreams of most video game developers. Last year's entry achieved sales of 1.1m in its first week – 300,000 more copies than Adele's 25, the fastest-selling album of all time. For a sizeable number of those 1 million Fifa 17 customers, a big attraction of the game was The Journey, a Mass-Effect-style story mode with branching elements, putting you into the boots of a young pro, Alex Hunter, looking to make it in the Premier League. Unlike anything previously attempted by any football title, it was also successful – Prior says 30 million people worldwide have played it.
How AI is winning the war against fake news
In 2014, the term "fake news" hadn't yet become part of the American lexicon and the 2016 U.S. presidential race was only beginning to make headlines. But in California, a man named Jestin Coler was hard at work creating one of the most divisive media trends in modern history. Dubbed the godfather of the fake news industry, Coler's efforts began with publishing fabricated stories -- including an article about Colorado food stamp recipients using welfare benefits to buy marijuana -- that garnered enough traffic to generate tens of thousands of dollars a month in ad revenue. The idea quickly caught on. Competing sites sprang up around the world as other publishers raced to create fake news masterpieces of outrageous, conspiratorial, and highly partisan news ahead of the election.
How Feature Engineering Can Help You Do Well in a Kaggle Competition – Part I
It is midnight on January 18, 2017, and the Outbrain Click Prediction machine learning competition has just finished. It has been three and a half months of working late. As I scroll through the leaderboard page, I found my name in the 19th position, which was the top 2% from nearly 1,000 competitors. Not bad for the first Kaggle competition I had decided to put a real effort in! One of the reasons why I managed to score well was the fact that Google Cloud Platform (GCP) made my life easier and I could focus on the data.
Apple's challenge: We're stuck in an app rut
USA Today reporter Rachel Sandler asked people in San Francisco if apps are as popular as Apple says. Do people even care about apps anymore? Let's step back in time for a moment and imagine going back to using foldable maps or Web printouts for directions, hailing cabs (or even taking a bus!), and no social tools to share those daily self-portraits. Shazam is the most recent. Apple kicked off its big Worldwide Developers Conference in San Jose this week with a humorous video showing what that app-less world might be like.
Today's number is about… artificial intelligence - BBVA NEWS
Artificial intelligence could increase South America's gross domestic product (GDP) growth by at least one percentage point annually by 2035, according to Accenture Research's report How artificial intelligence can accelerate South America's growth. The report calls attention to this technology's potential to transform the region's labor market and create a new relationship between humans and computers. In Brazil, for example, the study noted that the so-called gross value added (GVA) could increase by a total of $432 billion in this 17.5 year period. In terms of banks, the study reports that seven in ten bank users trust the financial guidance provided by automated systems. Some 39% of users consider the use of robo advisor platforms an agile tool and 31% see it as a way to lower costs for both banks and their customers.
Hackers caught cloning activist Twitter accounts to spread fake news
Hackers are using a cunning new attack method to neutralise activists' Twitter accounts. It involves the hacker taking over an account, cloning it and completely changing the original. What's more, thanks to their knowledge of how Twitter's account recovery and recycling processes work, the hackers are managing to lock the victims out of their accounts and keep them out. The I.F.O. is fuelled by eight electric engines, which is able to push the flying object to an estimated top speed of about 120mph. The giant human-like robot bears a striking resemblance to the military robots starring in the movie'Avatar' and is claimed as a world first by its creators from a South Korean robotic company Waseda University's saxophonist robot WAS-5, developed by professor Atsuo Takanishi and Kaptain Rock playing one string light saber guitar perform jam session A man looks at an exhibit entitled'Mimus' a giant industrial robot which has been reprogrammed to interact with humans during a photocall at the new Design Museum in South Kensington, London Electrification Guru Dr. Wolfgang Ziebart talks about the electric Jaguar I-PACE concept SUV before it was unveiled before the Los Angeles Auto Show in Los Angeles, California, U.S The Jaguar I-PACE Concept car is the start of a new era for Jaguar.
Beyond the hype: The reality of what AI means for business - Watson
The adoption and application of Artificial Intelligence (AI) continues to accelerate at an exponential rate in modern businesses. As referenced in the 2017 Tech Trend Report, AI is nearing completion of the next layer in technological advancement, integrated into everything individuals and organizations do. This trajectory is predicted to drive cumulative worldwide spending of $40.6 billion on AI projects by 2024 – according to Raconteur. This is expected to create mass opportunity for the pioneering businesses currently investing in AI development. Moving beyond the hype in existing media coverage, this post will uncover the reality behind what AI means for businesses today, in the near future, and beyond 2017.
Comparing Brazilian and US university theses using natural language processing
People are more likely to consider a thesis that's written by a student at a top-ranked University as better than a thesis produced by a student at a University with low (or no) status. But in what way are the works different? What can the students from non-famous Universities do to produce better work and become more well-known? I was curious to answer these questions, so I decided to explore two things only: the themes of the works and their nature. Measuring the quality of a university is something very complex, and is not my goal here.
Rise of the technophobe - education key to tech adoption, says HSBC Announcement
The security of peoples' finances is as important as the protection of their personal data (87%) by their bank A lack of understanding and trust in technology is stalling mainstream adoption of innovative new services which could make millions of people's daily lives simpler and more secure, new HSBC research reveals. The HSBC research report, Trust in Technology, shows that technologies such as fingerprint recognition, voice recognition and robo-advice hold enormous potential for uses from bank security to mobile payments and investment advice, yet millions of people who could benefit do not trust them because they do not understand them well enough. HSBC has commissioned a study of more than 12,000 people in 11 countries and territories looking at their perceptions and use of technology. The study of more than 12,000 people in 11 countries reveals four in every five people (80%) believe that technology makes their lives easier but less than half (46%) trust fingerprint recognition to replace their password, despite it being recognised to be at least five1 times more secure and significantly more convenient than traditional passwords. Eighty-four per cent of respondents say they would share their personal data with their bank if it meant getting a better service, underlining the need to educate consumers about the specific benefits of new technologies.