Case Based Reasoning
IBM gives its Watson IoT headquarters a 200 million boost
IBM is betting big on internet of things and setting aside 200 million for its Watson IoT division's headquarters in Munich. The company says this investment, one of the biggest it's ever made in Europe, is a response to the growing demand for AI technologies and the capability to connect everything to the internet. Part of the money will go to setting up hands-on labs where its clients can work with a thousand researchers, engineers, developers and business experts in the city. In fact, the tech corp has already secured new partnerships with German automotive parts supplier Schaeffler, Netherlands-based dronemaker Aerialtronics and three facilities at the Thomas Jefferson University Hospitals in Philadelphia. Schaeffler will use the Watson-powered IoT platform to give the various products it manufactures for the wind turbine, train, auto and other industries a way to monitor their own conditions.
Fight against Cancer: IBM's Watson plays doctor at Manipal Hospitals
Cancer is fast turning into an epidemic in India.According to a study by The National Cancer Institute (NCI), every 13th new cancer patient in the world is an Indian. In 2016, the total number of new cancer cases is anticipated to be around 14.5 lakh and that figure is likely to reach nearly 17.3 lakh in 2020, as per a study by The Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR). Such numbers exacerbate the magnitude of healthcare issues in the country. The first step towards addressing this mammoth task is access to healthcare. The country also needs to integrate technology into the healthcare system.
IBM Watson's new job: third grade math teacher advisor โข LiketheFuture
IBM's famous AI system has accomplished many, many things these past years, from making movie trailers to saving a person's life. Now, it's also helping teachers make lesson plans by powering Teacher Advisor, a program IBM developed with the American Federation of Teachers. If you're thinking "How hard could a grade school lesson plan be?" Well, have you seen Common Core mathematics? It's not the same math from back in the day, and teachers who didn't grow up with it might have a tough time conjuring up a way to make it more understandable.
RBS is launching an A.I. chatbot called 'Luvo' to help customers
Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) is launching a new online "chatbot" that will answer customers' questions online and help direct them to the right places. The new online tool, dubbed "Luvo," will begin helping 10% of the bank's customers online from December, according to an emailed statement sent to Business Insider. It will be a web chat tool: as you're browsing, a little chat window will likely pop up and ask if you need any help. The rollout follows a 2-month trial of the tool with the 1,200 RBS staff handling small business inquiries. These staff could direct the SMEs to Luvo to help them with things like lost pins or corporate cards.
IBM Watson Parks its AI Tank on Legal Compliance Lawn in New Venture
World-leading tech company IBM is to acquire risk and compliance business Promontory and combine it with its AI division Watson to form a new offering to the corporate sector via Watson Financial Services. US company Promontory has around 600 staff and advises companies on compliance and risk, much as many large UK and US law firms already do. The combination with Watson and its AI capabilities will allow IBM to provide clients with a more automated approach to risk and compliance review, just as some legal AI companies have already been helping some law firms to develop similar capabilities to provide to their clients. Although the company is not branding this as a move into law firm territory, undoubtedly it will have some impact given the increasing focus from lawyers on helping their clients with risk and regulatory compliance. Moreover, since the financial crisis of 2008 the level of investment from large corporates and banks in risk and compliance has growth massively, something that lawyers were quick to target.
IBM and MIT team on cognitive computing, machine vision, artificial intelligence for healthcare
IBM Research and the Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have joined forces to further develop the scientific field of machine vision โ a core aspect of artificial intelligence. Big Blue and MIT will build the IBM-MIT Laboratory for Brain-inspired Multimedia Machine Comprehension, or BM3C, in Cambridge, Mass. Together they plan to develop cognitive computing systems that mimic the human ability to understand and integrate input from multiple sources for use in a variety of computer applications in industries such as healthcare, education, and entertainment. MIT researchers will collaborate with IBM scientists and engineers who will provide technology expertise and advances from the IBM Watson platform. The BM3C will address technical challenges around both pattern recognition and prediction methods in the field of machine vision that are currently impossible for machines alone to accomplish.
How to build a future-proof business: 4 real-world applications of cognitive solutions - IBM Watson
Over the last decade, the "data revolution" has touched every aspect of our work and personal lives. Today's business challenges have never been more complex, and the critical insights that can address these challenges are often buried in an avalanche of data. In today's marketplace, the business that wins, is the business that "thinks." The viability of a company in the marketplace now depends on its ability to use data and analytics to fuel a thinking business. Companies in industries as diverse as healthcare, retail, banking and manufacturing are already using cognitive technologies to reshape business and do things faster and more efficiently than ever before.
IBM Watson's new job: third grade math teacher
IBM's famous supercomputer has accomplished many, many things these past years, from making movie trailers to saving a person's life. Now, it's also helping teachers make lesson plans by powering Teacher Advisor, a program IBM developed with the American Federation of Teachers. If you're thinking "How hard could a grade school lesson plan be?" Well, have you seen Common Core mathematics? It's not the same math from back in the day, and teachers who didn't grow up with it might have a tough time conjuring up a way to make it more understandable.
Imagining about IBM Watson at Work
IBM Watson is a Cognitive Computer that has opened up new avenues of human - computer collaboration. IBM Watson has a lot of human language processing capabilities and extreme scale information retrieval. It has found a lot of applications in the areas of Healthcare, Banking, Consumer Retail and Lifestyle, thanks to the ability to understand complex information architectures and human life scenarios. Its ability to make continuous inferences based on repeated question - answering problems is amazing. It is a continuously learning machine with cognitive information processing abilities.
IBM Watson and The Weather Company Are Ready to Launch Their First Cogntive Ads
The Weather Company is getting ready to roll out its first ad campaign since being acquired by IBM earlier this year. Next week, IBM will begin showing display ads for Campbell's on The Weather Company's website with personalized recipes created by Watson and based on a user's location, what the weather is in the area and which ingredients they want to cook with. Using a series of application program interfaces, or APIs--Speak and text, 'Chef Watson' API and a natural language classifier--Watson is able to ingest client data and then develop an experience based on a particular brand. According to Jeremy Steinberg, IBM's global head of sales for The Weather Company, Watson wasn't initially built for advertising. However, he said, Watson has the potential to create one-to-one experiences for brands and consumers.