Goto

Collaborating Authors

 Case Based Reasoning


Cloud Machine Learning Wars: Amazon vs IBM Watson vs Microsoft Azure

#artificialintelligence

Amazon recently announced Amazon Machine Learning, a cloud machine learning solution for Amazon Web Services. Able to pull data effortlessly from RDS, S3 and Redshift, the product could pose a significant threat to Microsoft Azure ML and IBM Watson Analytics. Upon selecting a model, the service asks whether the user would like to holdout data for validation from the training set or to provide holdout data from a different source. Once these selections are made, Amazon ML trains the model on the given dataset. Using the sample dataset of dummy bank customers (5MB in size), training takes roughly 10 minutes. When evaluating the evaluation metric for a binary classification task, Amazon ML reports the area under the ROC curve (AUC).


IBM Watson: Artificial Intelligence as a Platform

#artificialintelligence

Looking at the performance of IBM shares over the past five years, it is clear that a change in strategy is needed. IBM's share price is down approximately 9% since 2011 compared to a 54% gain in the S&P 500. The goal of this article is to develop a strategy for IBM to leverage the power of IBM Watson artificial intelligence to stage a comeback. The proliferation of cloud, social and mobile technologies have led to the most successful and innovative companies becoming increasingly concerned with the ability to successfully build a digital platform. Apple, Google, Facebook and Amazon each created platforms that co-create value by connecting to other business who can build products and services on their platforms.


The road to tech evangelism - IBM Watson

#artificialintelligence

When you think about it, the tech world has a lot in common with old-time religion. There are impassioned camps -- think Android vs. iOS or Mac vs. Windows -- devoted to a particular software or hardware platform. And tech conferences that attract the faithful often embrace the fevered intensity of a tent revival. This isn't a bad thing, of course, as a little enthusiasm never hurt anybody. And it makes sense that major companies, including IBM, hire charismatic, persuasive individuals as evangelists to spread the word about their products and services.


Opentopic is using Taxonomy and News APIs to solve the digital marketing problem - IBM Watson

#artificialintelligence

Every 60 seconds, Facebook users share 2,460,000 pieces of content and Yelp receives 26,380 reviews. Then there's the 2 million blog posts created each day and the 1 billion websites available for us to peruse. With all of this content floating around the internet, marketers struggle to truly engage and convert an increasingly fragmented online audience. Using Watson services, Opentopic helps clients solve that problem in a 2-step process. First, they help the client discover and analyze target audiences.


Watch IBM's Watson-powered robot bust a move -- and sing

#artificialintelligence

IBM's Watson just gave doing the robot a whole new twist. While dancing has never been a forte of machines, IBM's artificial intelligence system is proving that robots really can have fun (even if it has to be programmed in). In a demo presented during Nvidia's GTU technology conference, IBM Watson's chief technology officer, Rob High, showed off a concierge robot named Watson Nao, whose many talents include singing and dancing -- all in an attempt to humanize these humanoids. The multi-lingual robot is powered by IBM Watson, and the AI has come a long way since winning Jeopardy back in 2011. Now, Watson is on a mission to show that it's more than just a super impressive brain -- it's kinda like you and me, too!


IBM Watson CTO on What's Ahead for Cognitive Computing

#artificialintelligence

After close to twenty years at IBM, where he began as an IBM Fellow and Chief Architect for the SOA Foundation, Rob High has developed a number of core technologies that back Big Blue's enterprise systems, including the suite of tools behind IBM WebSphere, and more recently, those that support the wide-ranging ambitions of the Watson cognitive computing platform. Although High gave the second day keynote this afternoon at the GPU Technology Conference, there was no mention of accelerated computing. Interestingly, while the talk was about software, specifically the machine learning behind Watson, there was also very little about the software underpinnings. Disappointing as this might have been for the hardware-oriented folks in the crowd hoping to understand how OpenPower Foundation-spurred efforts using GPU-backed, Power-based systems make Watson's gears turn (we can fairly assume that is the case), High did provide a summary of Watson's evolution since 2011 as well as a look ahead at what the Watson research teams are looking to next. High says he is frequently asked what about the differences between AI and cognitive computing, noting that while they aren't much different conceptually, the goal of the Watson team is far more about making humans better at what they do than recreating the human brain in machine form.


IBM Watson wants to understand why Italians live so long (Wired UK)

#artificialintelligence

WIRED Health 2016 takes place on 29 April in London. IBM's Watson supercomputer is perhaps best known for winning the gameshow Jeopardy, but its expertise is now being applied to healthcare Kyu Rhee will be speaking at WIRED Health 2016 on 29 April in London. From helping humans live longer to understanding the brain, WIRED Health will hear from the innovators transforming this critical sector. You might know IBM's Watson best for its victory on US game show Jeopardy!, or perhaps for its cookery prowess, or even the campaign to elect it to the US presidency. But IBM hopes that its supercomputer can also change the way doctors diagnose their patients, putting vast quantities of data at a physician's fingertips.


IBM Watson wants to understand why Italians live so long (Wired UK)

#artificialintelligence

WIRED Health 2016 takes place on 29 April in London. IBM's Watson supercomputer is perhaps best known for winning the gameshow Jeopardy, but its expertise is now being applied to healthcare Kyu Rhee will be speaking at WIRED Health 2016 on 29 April in London. From helping humans live longer to understanding the brain, WIRED Health will hear from the innovators transforming this critical sector. You might know IBM's Watson best for its victory on US game show Jeopardy!, or perhaps for its cookery prowess, or even the campaign to elect it to the US presidency. But IBM hopes that its supercomputer can also change the way doctors diagnose their patients, putting vast quantities of data at a physician's fingertips.


Review: IBM Watson lowers the bar to machine learning

#artificialintelligence

The IBM Watson AI system drew the world's attention by winning at "Jeopardy" in February 2011 against two of the game's all-time champions, and IBM has strived to apply the Watson system to more interesting problems than a trivia quiz ever since. IBM has also extended Watson's capabilities to developers, data scientists, and even ordinary business users. Along with IBM's SPSS predictive analytics software, Watson forms the foundation of IBM's cloud offerings in machine learning and advanced analytics. IBM breaks the Watson system into five parts: machine learning, question analysis, natural language processing, feature engineering, and ontology analysis. From these parts, IBM has built out a suite of composable cloud services from which you can make your own mini-Watson for a solution to your problem.


IBM Watson is Working to Bring AI to the Blockchain - CoinDesk

#artificialintelligence

IBM is currently attempting to merge artificial intelligence and the blockchain into a single, powerful prototype. With blockchain tech's promise of near-frictionless value exchange and artificial intelligence's ability to accelerate the analysis of massive amounts of data, the joining of the two could mark the beginning of an entirely new paradigm. Over the past three months, IBM's chief architect in charge of Internet of Things security Tim Hahn has focused specifically on introducing the blockchain to his company's artificially intelligent computer named Watson. "What we're doing with blockchain and devices is enabling the information those devices supply to effect the blockchain…You begin to approach the kind of things we see in movies." Potential applications include using distributed ledgers to let devices perform tasks like running self-diagnoses at set times and more advanced services that may someday let regulators virtually go back in time to the point where a device failed and "to identify exactly what went wrong," Hahn said.