aipoly
Data Empowering Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning Contexti
Digital transformation through Artificial Intelligence has led to more agile, productive and smarter businesses. Automation and machine learning are helping companies save time and money, personalise customer service and detect fraud while also improving work processes and expanding top-line growth. "Artificial Intelligence or AI, has become pervasive in business in every industry where decision making is being fundamentally transformed by Thinking Machines. The need for faster and smarter decisions and the management of Big Data that can make the difference is what is driving this trend." "Machine Learning is a current application of AI based around the idea that we should really just be able to give machines access to data and let them learn for themselves."
Your Smartphone Is Becoming An AI Supercomputer
IPhone owners will get an upgrade on September 13 that allows them to find a picture of nearly anyone or anything, anywhere and from any time. Neural network artificial intelligence in the new iOS 10 performs 11 billion calculations in a tenth of a second on each photo snapped to figure out who people are and even what mood they're in. Aipoly, an app released in January, recognizes objects and speaks their names aloud to blind people. Google Translate can replace text in one language with another language as soon as you point your camera at it. All this happens even if you can't get cell reception.
Smartphones Are Leading The Global Charge Against Blindness
"Seven hundred years after glasses were invented there are still 2.5 billion people in the world with poor vision and no access to vision correction," says Hong Kong philanthropist James Chen. Chairman of his family's Nigeria-based manufacturing company, Wahum Group, Chen is funding a contest called the Clearly Vision Prize that will award a total of 250,000 to projects that improve eyesight, especially in poor countries. Thirty-six semifinalists were announced this week (the five winners will be awarded September 15). Among the contenders: 3D printed eyeglass frames, drones that deliver medical supplies, and several smartphone-based technologies. Some of the smartphones help nonexperts test vision, and one uses artificial intelligence to "see" for blind people. The Clearly Vision semifinalists represent just a sampling of the smartphone projects fighting vision loss, a growing field that is bringing critical care to remote regions far from hospitals and doctors offices.
Aipoly - Vision Through Artificial Intelligence
When I'm walking around it would be wonderful to have access to street signs, maybe even just being able to get a perspective. Hey, what's around here, what am I looking at? What building is in front of me? What kind of car is this? As a blind person you don't really think about the things that you might be able to see because you aren't aware of them.
The technology helping blind people to see
Earlier this week, Facebook updated its iOS app offering voice descriptions of photographs uploaded by its users. A big step forward for accessibility, but it's far from the only company looking to make the world more inclusive to the visually impaired. In fact, rapid advances in artificial intelligence, machine vision and image-recognition technology are opening up the digital world to the blind and visually impaired – and helping them to interact with their surroundings. One interesting example is Austrian start-up BLITAB, which has created the first ever tactile tablet for blind and visually impaired people, dubbed "the iPad for the blind". As Kristina Tsvetanova, co-founder & CEO at BLITAB Technology, explains, the device looks similar to an ebook but displays small physical bubbles instead of using a screen, which means users can view whole pages of braille text at once, without any mechanical elements.
The technology helping blind people to see
Earlier this week, Facebook updated its iOS app offering voice descriptions of photographs uploaded by its users. A big step forward for accessibility, but it's far from the only company looking to make the world more inclusive to the visually impaired. In fact, rapid advances in artificial intelligence, machine vision and image-recognition technology are opening up the digital world to the blind and visually impaired – and helping them to interact with their surroundings. One interesting example is Austrian start-up BLITAB, which has created the first ever tactile tablet for blind and visually impaired people, dubbed "the iPad for the blind". As Kristina Tsvetanova, co-founder & CEO at BLITAB Technology, explains, the device looks similar to an ebook but displays small physical bubbles instead of using a screen, which means users can view whole pages of braille text at once, without any mechanical elements.
Take a look inside the advances in AI and machine learning that are helping the blind to see
Rapid advances in artificial intelligence, machine vision and image-recognition technology are opening up the digital world to the blind and visually impaired – and helping them to interact with their surroundings. One interesting example is Austrian start-up BLITAB, which has created the first ever tactile tablet for blind and visually impaired people, dubbed "the iPad for the blind". As Kristina Tsvetanova, co-founder & CEO at BLITAB Technology, explains, the device looks similar to an ebook but displays small physical bubbles instead of using a screen, which means users can view whole pages of braille text at once, without any mechanical elements. "It offers a completely new user experience for braille and non-braille readers via touch navigation, text-to-speech output and Perkins-style keyboard application. It also enables the direct conversion of any text file into braille and obtains information via NFC tags. BLITAB is not just a tablet, it is a platform for all existing and future software applications for blind readers," she says.
App Spots Objects for the Visually Impaired
As I walked around my office on a recent morning, a female voice on my iPhone narrated the objects I passed. "Brick," "wall," "telephone," she said matter-of-factly. The voice paused when I came upon a bike hung on a wall-mounted rack, then intoned, "bicycle." The voice is part of a free image-recognition app called Aipoly that's trying to make it easier for those with vision impairments to recognize their surroundings. To use it, you point the phone's rear camera at whatever you want it to identify, and Aipoly will speak what it sees (or, at least, what it thinks it sees) and show the object's name on the phone's display.
App Spots Objects for the Visually Impaired
Walking around my office on a recent morning, a female voice on my iPhone narrated the objects I passed. "Brick," "wall," "telephone," she said matter-of-factly. The voice paused when I came upon a bike hung on a wall-mounted rack, then intoned, "bicycle." The voice is part of a free image-recognition app called Aipoly that's trying to make it easier for those with vision impairments to recognize their surroundings. To use it, you point the phone's rear camera at whatever you want it to identify, and Aipoly will speak what it sees (or, at least, what it thinks it sees) and show the object's name on the phone's display.