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Ablow: Got kids? Apologize

FOX News

Nearly 50 million students are now returning to classrooms--from kindergarten through 12th grade. They will spend approximately eight hours a day at school and additional hours doing homework. They will be educated, in public schools alone, by the equivalent of over 3 million full-time teachers. And they will, with rare exception, learn a dismal fraction of what they ought to be learning to be creative, confident and critical thinkers about themselves and the world around them. As a parent myself, I literally apologized to each of my children--and not just once--for the fact that so much of their time as grade school and junior high school and high school students (even at private school) was being spent on memorization, regurgitation and rote learning that amounted to busy work and the warehousing of them, physically and mentally.


IBM's Watson Is Playing at This Year's US Open

#artificialintelligence

There are few jobs that IBM's Watson won't do. The supercomputer has created movie trailers, written musical scores, and even goofed around with Pokémon Go. Now, its newest task is running one of the biggest events in tennis: this month's US Open championships. Every year, hundreds of thousands of people gather at New York's Arthur Ashe Stadium to watch tennis' biggest names compete for the prestigious title. But coordinating an event of that size takes a lot of work, which is why IBM and the United States Tennis Association, the organization that runs the tournament, asked Watson to do a lot of the heavy lifting.


Machine Learning Applied to the Contact Center

#artificialintelligence

Predictive analysis: Predictive analytics is the branch of the advanced analytics which is used to make predictions about unknown future events. Predictive analytics uses many techniques from data mining, statistics, modeling, machine learning, and artificial intelligence to analyze current data to make predictions about future. I am pretty sure I know what you are thinking: the above sounds somewhat Orwellian. However, what those of us adhering to the principles of data analysis are really striving for is simple: information that will assist management in increasing employee satisfaction. Use Case: Based on reports from the nGAGEMENT contact center solution - or for that matter IBM/Watson for customer service - a contact center manager finds out when specific members of his team are performing at their best.


Condé Nast Has Started Using IBM's Watson To Find Influencers For Brands

#artificialintelligence

Condé Nast is now tapping into Watson, IBM's supercomputer, to help build and strategize social influencer campaigns for brands. Through a new partnership announced today with IBM and the influence platform Influential, brands advertising with the media company's properties--publications such as Vogue, Vanity Fair and The New Yorker--will be able to use big data to know […] Continue reading Condé Nast Has Started Using IBM's Watson To Find Influencers For Brands


IBM Watson becomes the first AI to cut a movie trailer with horror flick 'Morgan'

#artificialintelligence

IBM's artificial intelligence programme obviously reached the pinnacle when it guest-edited an issue of the The Drum magazine but now it has also conceived the world's first ever movie trailer composed by an AI (trailer above - behind the scenes follows). Watson was fed the trailers of more than 100 horror films to help it identify the normative structure and path in the horror genre. It embarked on a visual, audio, and composition analysis of these clips, categorising the variables and generating the movie using probabilities once it gained an understanding of the genre. The tricky part was teaching the machine the tropes involved in cutting the trailers, from moments of terror, suspense and more using sequential clips from the movie, making the most of audio and visual cues. John R Smith of IBM said: "There are patterns and types of emotions in horror movies that resonate differently with each viewer, and the intricacies and interrelation of these are what an AI system would have to identify and understand in order to create a compelling movie trailer. "Our team was faced with the challenge of not only teaching a system to understand, 'what is scary', but then to create a trailer that would be considered'frightening and suspenseful' by a majority of viewers.


Next Big Future: IBM Watson Artificial Intelligence XPRIZE -Using AI in new ways to solve the World's biggest problems #Gsummit

#artificialintelligence

IBM Watson Artificial Intelligence XPRIZE -Using AI in new ways to solve the World's biggest problems #Gsummit At the Singularity University Global Summit 2016, Nextbigfuture interviewed Amir Banifatemi who is managing the IBM Watson AI XPRIZE. Amir Banifatemi is a founder and managing partner at K5 Ventures. He focuses on working with startups and growth-oriented companies on products and initiatives that could trigger significant breakthrough with strong economic and societal impact. He has a special emphasis on machine learning and predictive systems, IoT, knowledge sharing and crowdsourcing, Education, and digital health. The IBM Watson AI XPRIZE is a 5 million AI and cognitive computing competition challenging teams globally to develop and demonstrate how humans can collaborate with powerful AI technologies to tackle the world's grand challenges.


Next Big Future: IBM Watson Artificial Intelligence Xprize -Using AI in new ways to solve the World's biggest problems #Gsummit

#artificialintelligence

IBM Watson Artificial Intelligence Xprize -Using AI in new ways to solve the World's biggest problems #Gsummit At the Singularity University Global Summit 2016, Nextbigfuture interviewed Amir Banifatemi who is managing the IBM Watson AI XPrize. Amir Banifatemi is a founder and managing partner at K5 Ventures. He focuses on working with startups and growth-oriented companies on products and initiatives that could trigger significant breakthrough with strong economic and societal impact. He has a special emphasis on machine learning and predictive systems, IoT, knowledge sharing and crowdsourcing, Education, and digital health. The IBM Watson AI XPRIZE is a 5 million AI and cognitive computing competition challenging teams globally to develop and demonstrate how humans can collaborate with powerful AI technologies to tackle he world's grand challenges.


IBM Watson creates first movie trailer (and it creeps me out) - Bluemix Blog

#artificialintelligence

Read more in IBM Research Takes Watson to Hollywood with the First "Cognitive Movie Trailer". How the team at our Toronto Garage w/ @TajyMany designed an app that helps prevent false ID: bit.ly/2cstmlX pic.twitter.com/jtm0… RT @IBMWatson The power of Visual Recognition: How to use Watson to identify a hand of cards ibm.co/2bEMLVw #IBMWatson pic.twitter.com/GVjR… Watch: Use #WatsonIoT Platform and @NodeRED to bring a dinosaur to life: bit.ly/2cqb2da For those who want to adopt cloud but are constrained by certain external factors… try Bluemix Local.


Condé Nast Has Started Using IBM's Watson to Find Influencers for Brands

#artificialintelligence

Condé Nast is partnering with Watson to find the right influencers for campaigns. Condé Nast is now tapping into Watson, IBM's super computer, to help build and strategize social influencer campaigns for brands. Through a new partnership announced today with IBM and the influencer platform Influential, brands advertising with the media company's properties--publications such as Vogue, Vanity Fair and The New Yorker--will be able to use big data to better know which social media celebrities might make for a good match for any given campaign. Using software built by IBM and Influential, Condé Nast's clients will be able to know which influencer's demographics, personality traits and more best align with a marketer and the audience it's targeting. "Within the dating sense of the word, we are matching people based on different data points," said Influential CEO Ryan Detert.


IBM's Watson AI creates trailer for AI movie 'Morgan'

#artificialintelligence

If you haven't heard about it yet, there's a new sci-fi thriller movie coming called Morgan, which focuses on a robot with advanced artificial intelligence (AI) that -- to no surprise -- rebels against its human creators. Appropriately, movie studio 20th Century Fox turned to IBM's Watson, a supercomputer AI capable of analyzing human personalities and emotions, researching cancer, and powering self-driving busses, to create its own version of the film's trailer. While the AI in Morgan quickly learns new abilities to use against human and subsequently goes out of control, IBM researchers first needed to teach Watson about movie trailers. They did this by feeding it over 100 horror movie trailers that were cut into different scenes and moments, and then allowing Watson to perform analyses on aspects such as visuals, sound, and composition in order to understand what makes up a trailer and what viewers find scary. After this, Watson was given the full movie Morgan to dissect, and managed to come up with six minutes of video featuring 10 scenes.