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Could cures for cancer lie hidden in the cloud? - BBC News
When Hollywood actress Angelina Jolie found out she carried a faulty variant of the BRCA1 gene, her doctors told her she had an 87% chance of developing breast cancer. Armed with this knowledge, she chose to undergo a double mastectomy in 2013 to reduce the risk to around 5%. This kind of genetic testing can now be done much faster and at lower cost, giving clinicians the ability to target treatments more effectively. And combining this technological breakthrough with cloud computing and artificial intelligence is giving pharmaceutical companies the tools to develop drugs faster and with greater chance of success. One beneficiary of this new approach is Eric Dishman, founder of tech giant Intel's first health research and innovation laboratory in 1999 and a founding member of its digital health group in 2005.
The consumerisation of machine intelligence
In recent years, we've become used to the fact that retail PCs are cheaper, more functional, lighter and better looking than the ones most organisations provide for work. Many of us find it more productive to work at home or in a coffee shop, or anywhere there is Wi-Fi. Consumer email, instant messaging, file sharing and other free services are often demonstrably more capable and easier to use than the services that most large organisations provide. As long ago as April 2004, the Leading Edge Forum (LEF) coined the term consumerisation, and published a report on The Consumerization of Information Technology. The paper was our response to the intriguing developments popping up all around us.
This Computer Algorithm Predicted Who Will Die Next on Game of Thrones
Over the course of five seasons, Game of Thrones has killed off over 61 characters, including fan favorites such as Ned Stark, Oberyn Martell and (supposedly) Jon Snow. Now, a computer science class at Germany's Technical University of Munich has created a website dubbed "A Song of Ice and Data" to determine the fate of the HBO drama's remaining key players in the upcoming sixth season. Using a series of machine learning algorithms, the students have figured out the likelihood of each character meeting their end in the next 10 episodes. According to the site, Tommen Baratheon has the worst odds of survival--with a 97 percent chance of death--while Sansa Stark is the most likely to make it to next year at 3 percent. The group also applied the formula to both the show's previous seasons and George R.R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire series, and found it accurately predicted 74 percent of deaths.
US Senate passes bill that could pave the way for commercial drones
Legislation passed by the U.S. Senate could pave the way for the commercial deployment of drones in the national airspace, besides addressing safety issues by, for example, providing for a pilot that would find ways to lock down errant drones if they are close to airports. The new rules in the Federal Aviation Administration Reauthorization Act of 2016, passed Tuesday by a vote of 95-3, reflect the opportunities seen in the country for the use of drones both for commercial and other applications such as in emergencies. They also highlight privacy and safety concerns about the reckless use of consumer drones by hobbyists. Referring to an object, believed to be a drone, hitting a British Airways plane landing in Heathrow airport on Sunday, Senator Bill Nelson, a Democrat from Florida, said that if a drone is sucked into a jet engine, it could certainly render the engine inoperable and might start an explosion. The current bill proposes a pilot program to develop and test technologies to intercept or shut down drones when they are near airports.
America: closed for business?
Imagine yourself one hundred years from now. Yes, you're still alive, breathing through genetically engineered pig lungs, and having dinner at your favorite restaurant. A robot waiter rolls up to refill your glass of wine, which is equipped with a sensor that allows the restaurant to automatically deduct 10 from your Bitcoin account. Your companion, who doesn't actually speak the same language as you, is saying how much she loves her salad, which comes from a farm that uses precision agriculture techniques to boost productivity by effectively dividing fields into one-inch square plots that each receive customized fertilizer mixes based on their specific conditions. You understand her perfectly thanks to a small device in your ear that instantly translates her words and perfectly mimics her voice.
DIY Recommendation Engines for Mom and Pop Ecommerce Shops
Of course we have all heard about machine learning and recommendation engines in big business ecommerce. For quite some time, massive ecommerce businesses like Netflix, Amazon, and Ebay have been leveraging the power of data science to improve customer service and boost sales. Where once this technology was cost-prohibitive to all but the major players, recently things have changed. Thanks to multi-channel ecommerce platforms like Shopify, and the developers who are building custom machine learning add-ons, now mom and pop online businesses get the chance to infuse their operations with the power of data science. In this article I introduce how machine learning algorithms work to produce recommendation systems for small business ecommerce.
Hi, I'm a chatbot and I'm here to help - 80 Quartier
Unless you've been living under a rock, 'chatbots' have been all the rave in the retailing world. Well, before they became the now famously short-named'chatbots', they were known as Chatterbots. Coined by Michael Mauldin in 1994 to explain simply a programme that, for all intensive purpose, chats. Chatterbots are programmed to have conversations with another party in either text or audio. Basically, bots are artificial intelligence that do the most menial of tasks, like organising your calendar, reading emails and/or having a simple conversations to convey a programmed message.
MIT scientists have built an AI that can detect 85% of cyber attacks
Scientists at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) claim they have created an AI that can detect 85% of cyber attacks -- albeit with the help of humans. The "AI2" algorithm, developed by MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab (CSAIL) and machine learning startup PatternEx, can reportedly detect cyber attacks three times more effectively than today's current systems. AI2 has been tested on 3.6 billion pieces of data, known as "log lines," which were created over a three month period by millions of people. In order to predict attacks, AI2 scans sets of data and identifies suspicious activity. It does this by clustering the data into meaningful patterns using unsupervised machine-learning, according to MIT.
Intelligent machines: Making AI work in the real world - BBC News
As part of the BBC's Intelligent Machines season, Google's Eric Schmidt has penned an exclusive article on how he sees artificial intelligence developing, why it is experiencing such a renaissance and where it will go next. Until recently, AI seemed firmly stuck in the realm of science fiction. The term "artificial intelligence" was coined 60 years ago - on August 31 1955, John McCarthy proposed a "summer research project" to work out how to create thinking machines. It's turned out to take a bit longer than one summer. We're now entering the seventh decade, and just starting to see real progress.
What Artificial Intelligence Means for the Job Market - DZone Big Data
Even just a generation ago, the concept of a handheld device able to talk back to you was a fantasy, but it's now something that even toddlers are used to. Besides all the fanfare, there are some very real-world changes AIs are making, especially in the job market. While they offer us new opportunities for innovation, they take away some of our most grounded and trusted security nets.Is artificial intelligence a step in the right direction, or the beginning of a dystopia? Here are the pros and cons of AI's influence on the job market: While AIs take away some jobs, as we've all heard, they also create them in the process. With the creation of the self-driving car, the need for taxi drivers will decrease; however, the need for those who can design such cars, gather data on their effectiveness, and create interactive systems to customize the user's experience are suddenly in demand.