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Tim van Kasteren, Adevinta: On using AI to improve online classifieds

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Amid global economic turmoil, using AI to improve online experiences and extract the most value from every investment is more important than ever. The advertising industry is a pioneer of AI and machine learning; harnessing the technologies to deliver personalised experiences that ensure the right content is put in front of the right people at the right time. AI News caught up with Tim van Kasteren, Head of Engineering at Adevinta, to learn more about how one of Europe's online classifieds leaders is using AI. AI News: From the top, how is AI improving online classifieds? Tim van Kasteren: Online classifieds are a form of two-sided marketplaces where a buyer and a seller come together to close a deal.


Exemplary Skill: How to Outshine Other Machine Learning Engineers - PROPRIUS

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Prominent digital companies such as Google, Amazon, and Netflix are making tremendous strides in the machine learning landscape, and this means the tide is drawing everyone toward the machine learning horizon. Therefore, you would be doing yourself a favor by mastering the field of machine learning. Soon, the phrase "I know a little about machine learning" won't cut it; experts and knowledgeable engineers are needed to usher in the future of machine learning. We have tips to help you become a top-notch machine learning engineer so you're not left alone on the shore. Thankfully, the emergent push toward more sophisticated machine learning systems has led many engineers and academics to learn the basics of machine learning systems, and many qualified individuals offer classes about machine learning on the internet.


These graduate students had no idea their teaching assistant was a robot

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On the Internet, "nobody knows you're a dog," as the old meme goes, and today, the same can increasingly be said of robots. There are already scheduling robots that are virtually indistinguishable from humans, and recently students at the Georgia Institute of Technology learned that "Jill Watson" -- a teaching assistant they had relied upon all semester -- was in fact artificially intelligent. "The world is full of online classes, and they're plagued with low retention rates," said Ashok Goel, a Georgia Tech professor who teaches a class entitled Knowledge-Based Artificial Intelligence. "One of the main reasons many students drop out is because they don't receive enough teaching support. We created Jill as a way to provide faster answers and feedback."