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Cost of Patent Attorney for Drafting and Filing Patent Application
The overall cost to obtain a utility patent for an invention is generally $8000 to $18000, depending upon the country where patent filing is desired. A utility patent application includes patent claims, drawings and description of the invention. The patent application cost in India covers the official filing fee and the patent attorney charges for drafting a patent application. The cost of patent application in India may also include charges for conducting a patent prior art search. The results of patent search are used to perform a patentability analysis.
Artificial Intelligence Patents
The artificial intelligence patent landscape shows disruption across the entire technology ecosystem. At present, the USPTO is looking for data on computerized reasoning Artificial Intelligence (AI) Inventions. In spite of the fact that the concentration here is AI development, the important hidden string is corporate invention. For AI Inventions the person who conceives the training program of that AI is the inventor as well. Distinguishing the new unobvious arrangement would establish a discovery, since AI isn't aware, the individual who initially recognizes it makes the discovery.
A Chatbot Story - How We Built a Comprehensive Onboarding Assistant for a Leading Research University Fingent Blog
Conversational interfaces have gone mainstream. The technology behind keeps crossing new milestones, the result of which chatbots have transformed from simple Q&A systems to intelligent personal assistants. As a result, bots found widespread application in diverse areas, most recently in education. Although education stayed backward in terms of technology adoption, lately it took on a renewed quest to incorporate it. Educators are on the lookout for innovative ed-tech systems for efficient tutoring and students increasingly prefer personalized learning environments.
Docebo Successfully Completes IPO - Learning News
TORONTO, Thursday, Oct. 10, 2019 - Docebo Inc. (TSX:DCBO) ("Docebo" or the "Company"), has successfully launched its IPO on the Toronto Stock Exchange, marking a milestone moment and a significant achievement for the SaaS e-Learning platform. Docebo, developer of a leading AI-powered learning platform, has seen significant growth thanks to its dedication to its customers' success and consistent string of innovation, from launching its social learning functionality in 2016 to the implementation of in-house build learning specific artificial intelligence algorithms in 2018. Docebo has since become a truly international company with offices in Toronto, Milan, London, Atlanta, and Dubai. With over 2/3s of its revenue based in North America, Docebo's headquarters in Canada has been the hub for the company's international expansion and growth. "Completing this IPO is an exciting achievement for the organization and comes as a result of the talent and dedication of our team and support from our global base of customers and partners," said Claudio Erba, CEO of Docebo.
Ground Control to Major Growth in Hospital Command Centers
Top photos are courtesy of Tampa General Hospital in Tampa, Florida, and feature Andy Day, GE Healthcare's Chief Tile Designer of Clinical Command Centers. Bottom photo is courtesy of Humber River Hospital, Toronto, Canada, a leading partner in command center innovation. When the world rallied around the celebration of the Apollo 11 anniversary this past July, another moonshot was unfolding to somewhat less fanfare not far from where NASA launched Apollo at the Kennedy Space Center โ a medical moonshot. Two Florida hospitals, Tampa General Hospital and AdventHealth Orlando, launched mission control-like centers to serve as the nerve-center of their hospitals. Surrounded by big screens, monitors and flashing lights โ all meant to help staff across the hospital coordinate care, drive efficiency and improve the way patients move around the hospital โ those who were there could be forgiven for thinking they had stepped into a NASA control center.
Magid: Tech companies cause, but could help cure, Bay Area traffic woes
Anyone who has recently driven on any portion of Highway 101 between San Jose and San Francisco knows that our roads are increasingly crowded, largely because of the enormous number of people working for Silicon Valley tech companies. Apple, Google, Facebook and Cisco account for about 80,000 local workers, according to Silicon Valley Business Journal, and that doesn't count the thousands more people who work at Microsoft, Tesla, Linked-In, Oracle and other large companies plus the many local startups. And, with a significant number of tech workers choosing to live in San Francisco and the South Bay, traffic flows in both directions. Plus, the Bay Area's staggering home prices have forced many workers, especially those who don't earn six-figure salaries, to live in outlying communities as far away as Modesto where 7.3 percent of workers travel at least 3 hours a day to get to and from work โ many to Silicon Valley. Stockton is even higher at 10 percent, according to a 2019 Apartment List study.
Faking the News with Natural Language Processing and GPT-2
GPT-2 generates text that is far more realistic than any text generation system before it. OpenAI was so shocked by the quality of the output that they decided that the full GPT-2 model was too dangerous to release because it could be used to create endless amounts of fake news that could fool the public or clog up search engines like Google. How easy it is for an average person to generate fake news that could trick a real person and how good are the results? Let's explore how a system like this could work and how much of a threat it is. Let's try to build a newspaper populated with fake, computer generated news: To populate News You Can't Use, we'll create a Python script that can'clone' a news site like the New York Times and generate artificial news stories on the same topics.
Bayer chooses UK for its AI-focused R&D hub -
Bayer has continued its policy of setting up R&D hubs to get closer to innovative companies with a UK site that will focus on applying artificial intelligence to drug discovery and disease diagnosis. The cluster โ based at Reading's Green Park โ is the seventh in the German company's LifeHub network, located at R&D hot spots around the globe, and is further evidence of the UK's leading position in AI technology. According to the Tech Nation 2019 report, the UK is today the world's third biggest market for AI investment after the US and China with funding rising six-fold since 2014. Bayer already has one company getting ready to set up a unit at LifeHub UK. Sensyne Health, which started working with the German group earlier this year, will base a project focusing on applying AI to automate image evaluation in radiology at the site.
Four-legged lunar rover unveiled in London
LONDON โ A lunar rover that will explore the moon on foot in 2021 was unveiled in London on Thursday. The new concept, with four legs rather than wheels, will send data back to a larger mother ship, which will transmit it back to Earth. U.K. startup Spacebit signed a contract with U.S. space robotics company Astrobotic to get the rover on board their Peregrine lander, which will carry 14 NASA instruments to the moon. Once the lander reaches the moon's surface, the rover will drop from beneath it to the surface and attempt to explore a lava tube. "It's very important to explore the lunar tubes to know the environment that we have there so potentially humans can live in those lunar tubes when they go back to the moon," SpaceBit founder and CEO Pavlo Tanasyuk said.
Machine learning data & creativity - Think with Google
Are machine learning and creativity at odds? And don't just take it from us. We sat down with Justin Billingsley, CEO at Publicis Emil; Dawn Winchester, chief digital officer at Publicis North America; Andrew Shebbeare, co-founder and chairman of Essence; and Vijay Sharma, FlipKart's head of digital media and brand marketing. They explain how creativity is being empowered by the most recent advances in technology, and why great creatives love data and automation.