electronica
Black-Box System Identification for Low-Cost Quadrotor Attitude at Hovering
Telli, Khaled, Mohamed, Boumehraz
The accuracy of dynamic modelling of unmanned aerial vehicles, specifically quadrotors, is gaining importance since strict conditionalities are imposed on rotorcraft control. The system identification plays a crucial role as an effective approach for the problem of the fine-tuning dynamic models for applications such control system design and as handling quality evaluation. This paper focuses on black-box identification, describing the quadrotor dynamics based on experimental setup through sensor preparation for data collection, modelling, control design, and verification stages.
Using AI to Sell AI Apps
Using a marketing template to frame "meta AI" selling itself. GPT-3, via Copy.ai, on "Automating Viable Sales" Sybil Electronica, the eponymous co-author of "Sybil's World" (published by the algorithmic publishing house Nimble Books and for sale now on Amazon), is being fined-tuned by the GPT-3 Society to optimize her ability to persuade politicians to license Viable's Core Software Suite (CSS) so that they can aggregate, transcribe, analyze, and summarize comments from their voter/constituents in near real-time at scale automatically. With her experience as the conversational AI component of the Sybil Electronica Digital, Inc., Integrated Auto-Canvasser, Sybil is well-prepared and well-suited to explain the Viable CSS to cutting-edge politicians who want to use the latest advances in NLP to supercharge their campaigns and their incumbencies, not to mention the operations of the jurisdictions they've been elected to serve. Features: Sybil Electronica is a deep-learning conversational AI. Advantages: innovative, cutting edge technology that unites the best features and benefits of classic CSAI and chatbot technology.
79% of US Consumers Want "Artificial Intelligence" to Know the Limits
MUNICH, Nov. 08, 2016 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Ahead of the opening of the world's largest international trade fair for the electronics industry in Munich, Electronica reveals its trend index 2020, an international survey highlighting how people see their future lives with electronic devices. In the US, 1,000 consumers took part in the survey, which indicates strongly that artificial intelligence should not replace thinking. However 69% of US people were positive about an intelligent automobile which monitors traffic like a driving instructor, and only intervenes when the driver makes a mistake. People feel comfortable with idea of using devices for protection and general security, but they don't want them to be too intrusive or connect up their office and home. Results painted a similar picture for electronic healthcare. More than 80% of the population surveyed want electronic safety technology to make living easier for older people with connected emergency alert systems.