Personal Assistant Systems
5 Ways Artificial Intelligence (AI) Will Transform Enterprise Learning [WHITEPAPER]
AI can significantly enhance the learning experience thanks to learning-specific algorithms, compared to those that we're already aware of, particularly those that power AI-enabled consumer products, such as smart home assistants (Google Home, Amazon Alexa) or social media platforms that use AI to turn text into emojis on your smartphone. In the context of learning, deploying AI requires algorithms powered by a fine-tuned combination of machine learning, deep learning and natural language processing. The benefits of AI will be felt in any number of ways in enterprise learning, but we've identified five that you should start to understand as soon as you can. Additionally, AI would help learners uncover resources by suggesting various learning assets, eliminating the time and effort it would take to do this task manually. AI-enabled systems "hear" and understand language as complete sentences and their connotations while a learner talks to the learning platform.
A Double Speech Lesson From Google's AI Robot
In a remarkable new app, Google has addressed one of the most pervasive grievances of our impersonal times: voicemail jail, or its technical name IVR (Interactive Voice Response). Although IVR's multiple menu options, long waits, and tinny music are a bother, they pale by comparison with the annoyance of the technology's characterless robotic voices. This is where a new feature of Google Assistant, called Google Duplex, a technology for automating for "real world" telephone tasks, has come to the rescue. And it does so by going against the grain by including the bane of all speakers, the dreaded "um" and "ah" words, also called filler words. Listen to the audio clip in this Google AI Blog post marked "Duplex calling a restaurant," where an automated male voice calls to make a reservation with a live receptionist. You'll hear him say "um" four times in 50 seconds.
Google's Home Hub is Missing a Camera. Here's Why That's a Smart Idea
At Tuesday's Google event, the company unveiled the extensively leaked Pixel 3 and 3 XL smartphones, in addition to both a new ChromeOS tablet, the Pixel Slate, and a new smart home assistant in the form of Google Home Hub. While Google's made smartphones and tablets in the past, the Home Hub is the first Google Assistant-powered device from the company that incorporates its "smart display" functionality, providing users with a touchscreen that lets users interact with their home in addition to using voice control. It's also one of the few smart home hubs with a display that's missing an integrated camera. Depending on who you ask, it's either a flaw or a feature. At first glance, the $149 Home Hub looks oddly traditional.
Listen to the Talking Tech podcast
Jefferson Graham offers tips on how to listen to the Talking Tech podcast via apps, speakers, TVs and the car. The Talking Tech podcast is available for you every day with a quick hit on the latest tech news, gadget reviews, opinion on tech trends and interviews with insiders. On this page, you'll find quick links to all of our shows. In October so far, we've covered everything from the latest on Google's new video speaker to Talking Tech's recent visit to Tokyo and all the cool tech gear we saw in Japan. Between the commuters is the giant Yodobashi-Akiba camera store.
Alexa, Should We Trust You?
To hear more feature stories, see our full list or get the Audm iPhone app. When I say "smart," I mean the speakers possess artificial intelligence, can conduct basic conversations, and are hooked up to the internet, which allows them to look stuff up and do things for you. And when I say "all," I know some readers will think, Speak for yourself! Friends my age--we're the last of the Baby Boomers--tell me they have no desire to talk to a computer or have a computer talk to them. Cynics of every age suspect their virtual assistants of eavesdropping, and not without reason.
Google's New Pixel 3 Phone Can Fight Robocalls With Roboreplies
Google is giving phone users the option to spam their spammers. The new Pixel 3 smartphone, which the company unveiled on Tuesday, features a virtual assistant that can help screen out robocalls by responding to the automated calls with its own automated messages. With the tap of a button, users will be able to send suspicious incoming calls to the assistant, which will tell the caller, "Hi, the person you're calling is using a screening service from Google, and will get a copy of this conversation. Go ahead and say your name, and why you're calling." Based on this response, the user can either accept the call, send a preset text, or report it as spam.
Google Home Hub: Top 5 features, and how it stacks up to Echo Show
Google keeps secrets when it wants to (e.g., the Google security flaw it discovered earlier this year), so all the "leaks" leading up to today's announcement of its new Google Home Hub smart display were likely engineered to dissuade people from pre-ordering Amazon's second-generation Echo Show, which goes on sale next week. We like the new Echo Show--a lot. We haven't laid hands on the Google Home Hub yet, but the following five features are the ones we find the most interesting. JBL is the biggest loser here, considering that it sells its 8-inch smart display, the JBL Link View, for $250. Lenovo's 8-inch Smart Display, meanwhile, is priced at $200, and its 10-inch model sells for $250.
Artificial Intelligence in the Biopharma and Healthcare Sector
Although the financial sector, the automotive industry and the marketing and retail branch are taking the lead in implementing the latest artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) technologies, today there is hardly any field that is not being touched by the progress that has been made since the term AI was first coined by John McCarthy in 1956. The biopharma and healthcare sectors are no exception and although acceptance and implementation of AI-driven technologies in these fields have been sluggish, more and more companies come to the realization that it is critical to embrace AI and related technologies to stay ahead of the competition or at least stay current. Progress in natural language processing (NLP) has led to sophisticated algorithms able to recognize spoken and written language which allows machines not only to recognize words and sentences, but as well to understand context and make connections between text in a variety of different formats from spoken words and written documents to scientific publications and electronic medical records (EMRs). Alexa, Cortana, Siri, and Google Assistant all are examples of powerful, AI-driven search engines made possible,in a large part,because of improvements in NLP. Without NLP the biopharma industry would not have seen today's advances in AI-assisted drug discovery, design of and decision making in clinical trialsand complex data mining and analysis of big data sets.
Google Duplex AI will mean Pixel phones will start calling restaurants and hair salons starting in November
Google's Rick Osterloh touted his company's combination of hardware, software and artificial intelligence technology at its Pixel 3 event. Google Duplex, technology to let human-sounding AI accomplish tasks by talking to people over the phone, will arrive in the real world starting in November on Google's Pixel phones. "Our new Google Assistant feature, powered by Duplex technology, is able to help users with real-world tasks over a phone, like calling a restaurant to book a table," said Brian Rakowski, a vice president of product management, at the Google Pixel 3 launch event Tuesday. "Pixel phones will be the first to get this feature when it rolls out, city by city, next month." That indicates the arrival will be gradual and won't reach the vast majority of people who don't have Google's own smartphones.
Google launches Pixel 3 smartphones and Pixel Slate tablet
Google's new Pixel 3 smartphones attempt to push the computational photography envelope, challenging Apple's new iPhone XS and Samsung's Galaxy S9. As with last year's Pixel 2, Google is further flexing its artificial-intelligence muscle, with more and more local AI-driven features across every facet of the device, from the camera and smart Gmail replies to battery life and device control. "We've been very thoughtful about how we design phones, thinking about their purpose for consumers," said Mario Queiroz, head of Google's Pixel. "We want to make sure we have a the right balance between being really helpful but not intrusive, being delightful but not controlling, simple but not cumbersome." The Pixel devices look familiar on the outside, with a two-tone back that is now all glass with two finishes – polished at the top and etched at the bottom.