Media
The Robots We've Long Imagined Are Finally Here
They are wise-cracking companions, able to communicate in more than six million languages. Others are bent on enslaving or destroying humanity, deeming themselves better, more rational caretakers of the Earth in light of our irrational behaviors. Pilot or garbage man, soldier or slave, hero or villain--robots have played every role imaginable in popular science fiction for nearly a century. In the 21st century, real-life robots inspired by their fictional counterparts are beginning to take starring roles in everyday life. Several companies, Google among them, are testing autonomous cars (unfortunately, there is no indication that they will be able to travel into the past or future anytime soon).
How to make your own soundtrack in minutes, using AI
Want to make your own film soundtrack in minutes? Fancy creating a track to help you sleep? With the AI music maker, Jukedeck, this is all possible. Jukedeck allows anyone to make music. Simply select the genre, such as folk, rock or cinematic; the'mood', which can be uplifting or aggressive, and the length of time for the track.
Accelerating Innovation and Powering New Experiences with AI Facebook Newsroom
Facebook's long-term roadmap is focused on building foundational technologies in three areas: connectivity, artificial intelligence and virtual reality. We believe that major research and engineering breakthroughs in each of these areas will help us make more progress toward opening the world to everyone over the next decade. Our work in AI is helping us move all these projects forward. We're conducting industry-leading research to help drive advancements in AI disciplines like computer vision, language understanding and machine learning. We then use this research to build infrastructure that anyone at Facebook can use to build new products and services.
Raja Mandala: Artificial intelligence, real politics
Written by C. Raja Mohan Updated: November 8, 2016 12:21 am Media reports say an artificial intelligence (AI) system called MogIA, developed by Sanjiv Rai, an innovator based in Mumbai, has predicted that Donald Trump will win Tuesday's presidential elections in the United States. Unveiled in 2004, the system apparently got it right in the last three presidential elections. It also predicted that Trump and Hillary Clinton will be the nominees of the Republican and Democratic Parties respectively. Rai is quoted as saying that the algorithm got even better as it has "learnt" from the last few rounds. MogIA is named after Mowgli from The Jungle Book.
Machine Learning Already Changing the Entertainment Industry - Futurum
What better way to create a movie trailer about an artificially enhanced human than to use the reality behind the premise; artificial intelligence (AI). That's just what a partnership between IBM Research and 20th Century Fox recently set out to do, when they used machine learning techniques to produce what they described as the "first ever cognitive movie trailer." You'll have to judge the merits of the result yourself, but what is beyond doubt is this is just one example of the many ways AI and machine learning techniques are already changing the face of the entertainment industry. It's only makes sense that creative industries are leading the pack when it comes to the adoption of and experimentation with AI. Media, entertainment, and advertising are all the on the cutting edge when it comes to the adoption of AI and machine learning.
How artificial intelligence is transforming marketing
Will the technology be coming for your job next? The question of whether marketing is more science or art has never seemed more relevant now that highly sophisticated cognitive learning technology is able to assume many of the tasks involved in marketing -- in some cases, even doing them better than a human could. But visions of a completely automated campaign may be premature, according to executives from IBM and other companies at the forefront of AI who weighed in on the technology's impact during a panel discussion at ad:tech New York last week. In good news for creative directors, the experts said cognitive technology has the ability to free up marketers to spend more time tackling bigger picture responsibilities, such as finding the inspiration for the right voice and vision to make an emotional connection with consumers. By laying the groundwork for significantly more sophisticated one-to-one marketing, AI could even create a need to beef up analytics, content and other areas for businesses that are able to gain a competitive edge through customer-centric marketing.
Machine Learning Already Changing the Entertainment Industry - Futurum
What better way to create a movie trailer about an artificially enhanced human than to use the reality behind the premise; artificial intelligence (AI). That's just what a partnership between IBM Research and 20th Century Fox recently set out to do, when they used machine learning techniques to produce what they described as the "first ever cognitive movie trailer." You'll have to judge the merits of the result yourself, but what is beyond doubt is this is just one example of the many ways AI and machine learning techniques are already changing the face of the entertainment industry. It's only makes sense that creative industries are leading the pack when it comes to the adoption of and experimentation with AI. Media, entertainment, and advertising are all the on the cutting edge when it comes to the adoption of AI and machine learning.
Lauren Oldja, MSPH - Supervised Learning at the Movies
For those following along here or on my Twitter account it's no secret that I am currently enrolled at Metis in their 12-week data science bootcamp, which marries the structure of daily morning problem solving with highly self-guided and project-based afternoons/evenings/weekends. The expectations are high, and the deadlines are "intentionally unfair", giving the three months a hackathon-lite vibe. Some projects featured on this blog, this post included, accompany projects completed and presented for Metis. For this project I scraped Box Office Mojo in order to build a predictive linear regression model. At first blush, predicting domestic box office gross is hardly worthy of machine learning: instinctively we know it must be a function of increasing marketing and production budgets.
This Intelligent 3D Printer Is Building Big, Beautiful Structures
Imagine one day walking into a gorgeous structure--like LA's famous Walt Disney Concert Hall--only to discover it was designed by a computer system and constructed by automated robotic arms. Ai Build, a London-based startup, aims to pave the way to 3D printing on large scales. The company is equipping industrial-grade Kuka robotic arms with artificial intelligence and "3D printing guns" to 3D print large structures that focus on maximizing efficiency with labor and materials. Founder and CEO Daghan Cam dreamed up the technology while considering traditional commercial construction and wondering what a more efficient and automated process might look like. In October, the company partnered with engineering consulting firm Arup Engineers to debut the 3D printed "Daedalus Pavilion" at the GPU Technology Conference in Amsterdam.