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120 AI Predictions For 2020
Me: "Alexa, tell me what will happen in 2020." Amazon AI: "Here's what I found on Wikipedia: The 2020 UEFA European Football Championship…[continues to read from Wikipedia]" Me: "Alexa, give me a prediction for 2020." Amazon AI: "The universe has not revealed the answer to me." Well, some slight improvement over last year's responses, when Alexa's answer to the first question was "Do you want to open'this day in history'?" As for the universe, it is an open book for the 120 senior executives featured here, all involved with AI, delivering 2020 predictions for a wide range of topics: Autonomous vehicles, deepfakes, small data, voice and natural language processing, human and augmented intelligence, bias and explainability, edge and IoT processing, and many promising applications of artificial intelligence and machine learning technologies and tools. And there will be even more 2020 AI predictions, in a second installment to be posted here later this month. "Vehicle AI is going to be ...
How machine learning can speed up "annoyingly hard" medical research
If you want them to do something, you need to give them extremely specific instructions. Imagine learning to kick a football. You could probably learn this by seeing a few examples of how your friends do it. If you want a computer to do this, you would need to tell it exactly how to move every single muscle fiber. Instead of doing this, we just give the computer lots of examples, and tell it to figure it out itself.
This Year's AI (Artificial Intelligence) Breakthroughs
When it comes to AI (Artificial Intelligence), VCs (venture capitalists) continue to be aggressive with their fundings. During the third quarter, 965 AI-related companies in the US raised a total of $13.5 billion. In fact, this year should see a record in total fundings (last year's total came to $16.8 billion). Some of the deals have been, well, staggering. Just look at the $1 billion that Microsoft shelled out for an equity stake in OpenAI (the company is one of the few that is pursuing Strong AI). So what has been the result of all this activity? What have been the breakthroughs for AI this year?
Artificial Intelligence Isn't an Arms Race
At the last Democratic presidential debate, the technologist candidate Andrew Yang emphatically declared that "we're in the process of potentially losing the AI arms race to China right now." As evidence, he cited Beijing's access to vast amounts of data and its substantial investment in research and development for artificial intelligence. Yang and others--most notably the National Security Commission on Artificial Intelligence, which released its interim report to Congress last month--are right about China's current strengths in developing AI and the serious concerns this should raise in the United States. But framing advances in the field as an "arms race" is both wrong and counterproductive. Instead, while being clear-eyed about China's aggressive pursuit of AI for military use and human rights-abusing technological surveillance, the United States and China must find their way to dialogue and cooperation on AI.
Putting The Art In Artificial Intelligence: A Conversation With Sougwen Chung
Sougwen Chung is an internationally renowned multi-disciplinary artist and researcher, who uses hand-drawn and technologically-reproduced marks to address the closeness between person-to-person and person-to-machine communication. She is a former research fellow at the M.I.T. Media Lab and current Artist in Residence at Bell Labs and New Museum of Contemporary Art in New York. For the uninitiated, what is human-machine collaboration? Sougwen Chung: Human-machine collaboration is a perspective of technology not as a tool, but as a collaborator. It stems from an understanding that the relationship between humans and their tools have changed.
News Roundup, December 6, 2019: What's Happening in AIOps, ITOps, and IT Monitoring
While moldering pumpkins, denuded mum plants, and lawns strewn with leaves can be hidden by a heavy blanket of snow, neglecting to keep up on tech will surely secure a place for you on the naughty list. Not worth the risk when you can easily catch up on the latest goings-on in ITOps, AIOPs, and IT monitoring with our blog. According to a recent article in BizTech Magazine, Forrester predicts over half of surveyed enterprises are expected to adopt AI in the next four years, while recent data from AIOps Exchange agrees with a prediction of 68 percent. This adoption is continuing to be driven by the ever-increasing volume, variety, and velocity of data generated by IT. It's not news that technical complexity is increasing, nor that digital transformation and AIOps adoption are becoming critical to effective data analysis.
DIY AI: One mom's quest to use machine learning to help others detect a rare fetal condition
Melissa Mulholland was 16 weeks pregnant with her second child when her doctor noticed something unusual in an ultrasound scan. It was a rare fetal condition called posterior urethral valves, PUV, and it meant her son wouldn't survive the womb without medical intervention. She was fortunate to have a doctor skilled in detecting the condition and intervening to address it, and the good news is that her son, Conor, is now 5 years old. But the experience left Mulholland thinking about the families who aren't so lucky to have such expert health care. She wondered if technology could be a solution. She's not an engineer, and doesn't have a technical background, but she works at Microsoft, so she's familiar with the latest technologies in her role working with the company's cloud customers and partners. She asked a question that not a lot of people would ask: could artificial intelligence help?
Son of former Dutch POW retraces dad's steps in Yokohama in first trip to Japan
After adjusting your search parameters, press Enter on your keyboard or click on the red magnifying glass to run your query again. Murdoch plan to reunite Fox with News Corp. finds few fans Several analysts said the potential recombination is unlikely to solve one of the key problems facing Fox and News Corp. -- low valuations relative to their peers. Norah O'Donnell will become anchor and managing editor of the CBS Evening News and Gayle King is getting two new morning show co-hosts as CBS News seeks to boost the programs' ratings and put a tumultuous, scandal-scarred period behind it. In February, the YourNewsWire page on Facebook was at its peak popularity, boosted by its salacious post claiming that Justin Trudeau, the Canadian prime minister, was Fidel Castro's love child. Brian Ross, the veteran ABC News investigative correspondent who embarrassed the network late last year with an on-air report suggesting former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn had been told by President Donald Trump to make contact with Russian officials during the 2016 campaign for the Oval...
Observe.AI Raises $26 Million to Digitally Transform the $300 Billion Voice Customer Service Market with Artificial Intelligence
Observe.AI, the leader in AI-powered agent enablement for voice customer service, today announced a $26 million Series A financing led by Scale Venture Partners, with participation from Nexus Venture Partners, Steadview Capital, 01 Advisors, and Emergent Ventures. This funding allows Observe.AI to expand its US-India team globally and accelerate product development. In conjunction with the funding, Andy Vitus, partner at Scale, will be joining Observe.AI's board. This brings the company's total funding to $34 million. "Legacy speech analytics systems are simply not meeting the needs of the world's top brands," said Swapnil Jain, CEO and co-founder of Observe.AI.