Country
Read My Honor 10 Long Term Review - Fabulous AI
I had more than a month to try out the new Honor 10 and here is my honest review on what I think of the phone. Hint โ AI camera is awesome! I got the chance to review the Honor 10 over the period of more than a month recently and there are tons of stuffs that I like about it. Of course there are some misses along the way but I feel those are forgivable. But when it comes to AI features in the camera, the Honor 10 scores high in my books.
It's complicated: AI experts examine our relationship with intelligent machines - SiliconANGLE
Despite the growing use of artificial-intelligence tools on a global basis, there is no universal code of ethics to govern its use. This is a key question the technology industry is beginning to wrestle with as the use of AI generates results both positive and negative. The technology has already been used for positive outcomes in a number of areas, including improving Australia's beaches, delivering reliable weather forecasts, and detecting human disease more accurately. There is also the other side of the coin, where AI has come under fire for injecting racial bias into criminal sentencing decisions and reinforcing gender discrimination. AI-powered facial recognition tools have been subjected to especially harsh criticism by privacy and human rights organizations.
AlphaGalileo Item Display
In today's factories and warehouses, it's not uncommon to see robots whizzing about, shuttling items or tools from one station to another. For the most part, robots navigate pretty easily across open layouts. But they have a much harder time winding through narrow spaces to carry out tasks such as reaching for a product at the back of a cluttered shelf, or snaking around a car's engine parts to unscrew an oil cap. Now MIT engineers have developed a robot designed to extend a chain-like appendage flexible enough to twist and turn in any necessary configuration, yet rigid enough to support heavy loads or apply torque to assemble parts in tight spaces. When the task is complete, the robot can retract the appendage and extend it again, at a different length and shape, to suit the next task.
AI Accurately Detects Key Findings in Chest X-Rays in 10 Seconds
An artificial intelligence (AI) system accurately identified key findings in chest X-rays of patients in the emergency department suspected of having pneumonia in just 10 seconds, researchers from Intermountain Healthcare and Stanford University reported at the European Respiratory Society's International Congress 2019. Traditionally, it takes physicians 20 minutes or more to identify pneumonia from chest X-rays. "In this initial study, we've demonstrated the algorithm's potential by validating it on patients in the emergency departments at Intermountain Healthcare," said Jeremy Irvin, a Ph.D. student at Stanford. "Our hope is that the algorithm can improve the quality of pneumonia care at Intermountain, from improving diagnostic accuracy to reducing time to diagnosis." Early diagnosis could lead to treatment starting earlier, which is vital for severely ill patients, the researchers noted.
Understanding the Elements of Artificial Intelligence
Artificial Intelligence is here to stay. The development of AI is speeding up on a daily basis. Only recently, Google's DeepMind created the AI AlphaStar that secured a decisive victory against two grandmaster players of the game of StarCraft II. In a series of test matches they played, the algorithm won 5-0. This victory is a decisive moment for artificial intelligence, as the game of StarCraft II is fundamentally more difficult than the other games where Deepmind's algorithm already claimed victory.
Senior Software Engineer, Machine Learning Infrastructure
Netflix is driven by data and algorithms (along with tons of great TV shows and movies). If you are in the engineering, data, and / or machine learning fields, this is an amazing place to be.About usWe're a small team of engineers who envision, develop, and manage the systems and workflows that enable a diverse group of users at Netflix to apply machine learning to a wide range of business problems. To make this possible, we need to address questions like these:* What's the best way to take a prototype in R or Python and move it into ongoing production use at scale?* How can we help data scientists reproduce their research and be more collaborative?* How do we build flexible pipelines that can rapidly evolve to handle new technologies and modeling approaches?* How can we make various types of data, such as natural language, video assets, and tabular data easily available for machine learning pipelines?We don't think these questions are just technical challenges - they are also a product challenge: How can we provide the most delightful and empowering user experience for the users of our platform.
The Rainforest Is Teeming with Consciousness - Issue 78: Atmospheres
Since 1980, the temperature of the planet has risen by 0.8 degrees Celsius, resulting in unprecedented melting of the Greenland ice sheet and the acidification of oceans. In 2015, 175 million more people were exposed to heat waves compared with the average for 1986 to 2008, and the number of weather-related disasters from 2007 to 2016 was up by 46 percent compared with the average from 1990 to 1999. This is nothing in comparison to the horrors that await us as temperatures continue to rise. According to recent projections, global temperatures are set to increase by 3.2 degrees by the end of century. This will lock in sea level rises that will mean that the cities, towns, and villages currently occupied by 175 million people--including Hong Kong and Miami--will eventually be underwater. There is overwhelming scientific evidence that warming is largely caused by the actions of human beings.
Google wants 'more work' with Defense Department, top exec says
Fox News Flash top headlines for Nov. 7 are here. Check out what's clicking on Foxnews.com Google has no intention of leaving the national security business, despite perceptions in some quarters that the tech giant is against working with the Defense Department. The search giant's senior vice president for global affairs said Tuesday that the firm currently has contracts with the Pentagon to work on cybersecurity, business automation and deepfake detection, and would like to have more, reports DefenseOne. "It's been frustrating," Kent Walker said at the National Security Commission on Artificial Intelligence Conference in reference to perceptions that the company is against working on these issues.
Travel influencer says hacker stole his Instagram account and demanded ransom
Fox News Flash top entertainment and celebrity headlines for Nov. 7 are here. Check out what's clicking today in entertainment. A travel influencer says his Instagram page was recently hacked and held for ransom and wants his story to be a cautionary tale to others. Claudio Copiano Jr., with his account globalvagabonds, shares his travel experiences around the world with his more than 28,000 followers. The San Diego resident has traveled throughout the United States and 30 other countries so far, according to KGTV.
Google's Teachable Machine 2.0 elucidates the basics of machine learning
Google two years ago launched Teachable Machine, a web experiment intended to elucidate machine learning concepts. It let any user with a webcam train an AI model to output specific media -- an image, sound, speech, or GIF -- corresponding with a hand gesture, object, or activity. Now Teachable Machine is expanding to incorporate inputs beyond those it initially supported, including audio. Additionally, it will allow folks to export their trained models to websites, apps, devices, and more. Google says it worked with people across industries with different needs -- like architect Steve Saling, who has amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) -- to test and shape the new Teachable Machine.