livewire
LIVEWIRE
In the present world, technology is refining very agile and every day we are getting in touch with various new technologies, machines, devices, etc. Human is the creator of such great devices which have a compact size, high speed and can make our life very simple. Now, Artificial Intelligence is the booming technology in computer science which is ready to build a new revolution in the world by building machines with brains. Just a daydream in the domains of science fiction, artificial intelligence (AI) is now mainstream technology in our usual lives with applications in image and voice recognition, language translations, chatbots, and predictive data analysis. A vital part of artificial intelligence deals with outlining or deliberation for a system which can perform mechanical motions. This sort of processing requires input provided by a computer vision system, acting as a vision sensor and providing high-level information about the moving system.
The Morning After: Xbox Series X and PS5 progress update
Half a year since launch, and it's still a challenge for a lot of us to get our hands on a next-gen console. Sony has reportedly said there will be supply constraints for the rest of the year, but we didn't even need to be told. If you've tried to buy an Xbox Series X or PS5, you've probably had to shop around (online, mostly) for stock. What have you missed out on? According to Jessica Conditt, our newest consoles are still finding their feet, with Sony and Microsoft's differing approaches still yet to yield anything conclusive.
The Station: Cruise cuts, Waymo snags more cash, and a VC Mobility survey โ TechCrunch
The Station is a weekly newsletter dedicated to all things transportation. Sign up here -- just click The Station -- to receive it every Saturday in your inbox. If you're interested in all the future and present ways people and packages move from Point A to Point B, you're in the right place. It felt like Tesla dominated the news cycle once again this week. There was other mobility news though, including layoffs at self-driving company Cruise and new rules that Uber is rolling out Monday that will change the ride-hailing experience for the foreseeable future.
Livewired vs. Hardwired Data
In the digital age, business users need analytics tools that surface anomalies, the unexpected connections in the data. Unfortunately, these unexpected connections would not be seen if the analytics tool uses a relational data layer, where the data is connected by a human based on pre-canned business questions. As the name applies, relational analytics tools work based on the relationships between data tables, which means the users can only "traverse" in the data based on the pre-defined relationships, which would prohibit them from seeing the unexpected connections defined by the data. On the other hand, with Qlik's Associative technology, the connections between data points are defined by the natural associations found in the data, not by the data table relationships defined by a human. This difference becomes even more important as the analytics technologies start to leverage AI.