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Sony Xperia E with artificial intelligence in your ear - Albany Daily Star Gazette

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Sony will produce the new artificial intelligence with the user's ear and whispered. Spot news man seemed a little horse whispering, but it is not. Thank you for following us the development of the technology. Sony Xperia E is called the device aims to whisper into the ear of the user with artificial intelligence. When the device is placed in the ear phone owner put it on the news this veriyor.tek


Microsoft shared its Artificial Intelligence framework on Github with MIT License – Mobile Tech Time - Albany Daily Star Gazette

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Microsoft today announced that it is making it easier for developers to use its Computational Network Toolkit (CNTK) to build their own deep learning applications. The company first open sourced this toolkit in April 2015, but at the time, it was hosted on Microsoft's own CodePlex site and was only available under a restrictive academic license. Now, the team is moving the project to GitHub and to the MIT open source license. CNTK is an open-source deep-learning toolkit that became available back in April 2015. However, when it was still on CodePlex, it was restricted by an academic license, which means that it was virtually unused beyond scholarly use.


Robot Mule, AlphaDog won't never get own "Semper Fidelis" tattoo – Orange Tech Zone - Albany Daily Star Gazette

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A robotic mule called AlphaDog never won't be part U.S. Marines. As it turns out, the robot is too loudy.U.S. Marine Corps has decided its Legged Squad Support System, or LS3, also known as the "robotic mule," is too loud to use on the battlefield. The Marines began testing the robotic mule in a series of training events in September, although officials at the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency said the gas-powered quadruped would likely never see actual combat. The robot was used to carry equipment, lightening the load for troops on the field. Testing events included simulations in forests, open fields and urban environments, where the robot was able to carry over 400 pounds of equipment.


GOOGLE develops a deep learning neural network program – Virjinya Beach Daily Science - Albany Daily Star Gazette

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The program name is Planet and uses earning neural network program. Thanks to Google, a new artificial intelligence system is outperforming humans in spotting the origins of images. Google has unveiled a new system to identify where photos are taken. The task, simple when images contain famous landmarks or unique architecture, goes beyond the overt to examine small clues hidden in the pixels. The program, named PlaNet, uses a deep-learning neural network, which means the more images PlaNet sees, the smarter it gets.


Google open source their Machine Learning System – Anchorage Tech Time - Albany Daily Star Gazette

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Google, of course, can't give away all of its secrets. That's why TensorFlow's release into the wild only includes part of the code that allows it to run on a single machine. Despite being shared under what's called an Apache 2 license (meaning anyone is free to use it). These days, the big Internet giants frequently share the software sitting at the heart of their online operations. Open source accelerates the progress of technology.


Boston Dynamics revealed its last humanoid robot, Atlas – Cambridge Tech Time - Albany Daily Star Gazette

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Boston Dynamics turned the spotlight to Atlas, the surprising humanoid robot that wowed the world. This time, Google's Atlas is better and more fit to face unpredictable terrains or attacks. One thing you may not know, is that Boston Dynamics was acquired by Google in 2013, hence they no longer pitch the press or even describe their newest innovations, but merely make YouTube videos about their results and refuse repeated requests for interviews. Here's a short list of organizations that will be standing in line to acquire the future, commercial versions of this Cylon-like robot. What we do know is that the newest version of Atlas is a little less ominous at just five foot nine inch tall and 180 pounds–hefty for that height.


Now Artificial intelligence machines can learn as human – Cape Coral Science Centre - Albany Daily Star Gazette

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One Day, Robots may take over the world from us, leaving humanity to wonder when artificial intelligence (AI) became too powerful. That horrible scenario is unlikely in the near term because humans have a major advantage over machines: the ability to learn. But that gap between human and robots may decrease slowly in future, Artificial intelligence has capable learning now. Today's most sophisticated AI systems rely on learning from tens to hundreds of examples, whereas humans can learn from a few or even one. Taking inspiration from the way humans seem to learn, scientists have created AI software capable of picking up new knowledge in a far more efficient and sophisticated way.