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How to Use AI While Preserving The Human Element - Spiceworks

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He is an expert in designing and building adaptive music systems utilizing human-in-the-loop machine learning. He holds degrees in Music (Hons) and Science and completed a Ph.D. with a thesis in Adaptive Music Scores for Interactive Media. Since joining Aimi, Patrick has contributed as a named inventor on eight patents regarding various aspects of music analysis and generation. As an accomplished jazz musician and researcher in AI and interactive music, his goal is to create the world's best generative AI models and systems.


AI Trends in 2023: 15 Biggest Artificial Intelligence Trends from Industry Experts - Spiceworks

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Emerging technologies, such as artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning, will play a leading role in influencing operational efficiency and business decision-making in 2023. The reliance on these technologies is such that according to GartnerOpens a new window, the worldwide AI software market will reach $62 billion in 2022. In fact in a poll by SpiceworksOpens a new window, 42% of tech professionals attested that artificial intelligence will be the biggest technology trend for 2022. Let's hear from experts on ways AI will evolve in 2023 to enable new use cases for businesses of all sizes. Myles Gilsenan, the vice president of data, analytics, and AI at Apps Associates, believes that AI will continue to evolve and transform industries, businesses, and our day-to-day lives.


What US Manufacturers Need to Know about AI Regulatory Compliance – Spiceworks

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With the growth and widespread application of artificial intelligence (AI), there is a distinct need for regulatory compliance to ensure efficient …

  Industry:

How virtual assistants are driving business value

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The rise of virtual or artificial intelligence (AI) assistants has been underway for some time now with the growing popularity of products such as Amazon's Alexa, Apple's Siri, Microsoft's Cortana, and Google's Assistant The technology -- which has been trained to understand voice commands and complete tasks for users -- is also making headway in business as organizations look to leverage AI assistants (including chatbots) for a variety of use cases, including voice-to-text dictation, team collaboration tasks, email management, customer service, help desk management, and data analysis. Get the latest insights with our CIO Daily newsletter. According to a 2018 report from online IT community Spiceworks, 40 percent of businesses with more than 500 employees expect to implement one or more intelligent assistants or AI chatbots on company-owned devices in 2019. For its research, Spiceworks surveyed 529 technology buyers from North America and Europe in March 2018. Among organizations that have implemented the technology on company-owned devices and services, 49 percent are using Microsoft Cortana for work-related tasks, followed by Apple Siri at 47 percent.


What technology will drive the biggest changes in 2019?

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Recent outages from some of the world's biggest companies, including O2 and Facebook, have raised questions over how prepared infrastructure is to deal with the latest technology. From the O2 outage alone, payments systems went down, car parking tech didn't work and transport systems failed. While there are significant developments happening every year in technology, we are still some way off seeing some of the much-anticipated tech that was predicted to have an impact in 2018. With the year coming to an end, it's time to look ahead at what we can actually expect from 2019. AI is going beyond attention-grabbing gimmicks and is impacting everything from HR processes to measuring stock in retail. This is where the most significant developments will be made in 2019.


Spiceworks Adds Machine Learning To Supercharge IT Marketplace

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Spiceworks announced at its annual Spiceworld conference in Austin, TX that it is adding new machine-learning based capabilities to its IT marketplace in order to create "intent-based targeting capabilities" in matching buyers and sellers. The Spiceworks IT marketplace is visited by around 20 million people every quarter, according to Spiceworks, and is growing at 30% year-on-year. Spiceworks CEO and co-founder Jay Hallberg likened the proposed change to that of buying a house 15 years ago compared to the experience today with online marketplaces like Zillow. "We're building the first community-powered marketplace for the IT industry, one that couples unique first-party data and pervasive intelligence to directly connect technology buyers and sellers with the resources they need in any given moment," Hallberg said in a prepared statement. Traditionally, recommendation engines have struggled with opaque signals based on observing purchase and browsing behaviour.


Spiceworks Adds Machine Learning To Supercharge IT Marketplace

#artificialintelligence

Spiceworks announced at its annual Spiceworld conference in Austin, TX that it is adding new machine-learning based capabilities to its IT marketplace in order to create "intent-based targeting capabilities" in matching buyers and sellers. The Spiceworks IT marketplace is visited by around 17 million people every quarter, according to Spiceworks, and is growing at 30% year-on-year. Spiceworks CEO and co-founder Jay Hallberg likened the proposed change to that of buying a house 15 years ago compared to the experience today with online marketplaces like Zillow. "We're building the first community-powered marketplace for the IT industry, one that couples unique first-party data and pervasive intelligence to directly connect technology buyers and sellers with the resources they need in any given moment," Hallberg said in a prepared statement. Traditionally, recommendation engines have struggled with opaque signals based on observing purchase and browsing behaviour.


Peering into the future of IT: Business adoption plans for IoT, AI, VR, and beyond ZDNet

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Among emerging technologies, IT professionals expect Internet of Things (IoT) devices and artificial intelligence (AI) technology to have the biggest impact in the workplace, according to a new report from online IT professionals community Spiceworks. The study, "Future of IT: Hype vs. Reality," examines organizations' adoption plans for technologies such as virtual reality (VR), 3D printing, IoT and AI. While survey respondents don't expect mass adoption to take off for VR and 3D printers, some industries have significantly higher adoption rates than the industry average, the report notes. Of the 566 IT professionals surveyed worldwide in October 2016, 80 percent said IoT devices will be useful to their business practices in three to five years, and nearly 60 percent said the same for AI. Over the next five years 60 percent of companies plan to adopt machine learning and 72 percent plan to deploy business analytics with AI.


Intel tells companies to stop installing patch for security flaw as earnings loom

USATODAY - Tech Top Stories

Intel Corp. was founded in 1968. SAN FRANCISCO -- Intel is halting some patches to the broad chip flaws it discovered earlier this month, after evidence that fixes resulted in problems with the computer systems. It's the latest stumble after researchers discovered a design flaw that affects hundreds of millions of PCs, Macs and smartphones, and comes ahead of Intel's earnings report. The patches "may introduce higher than expected reboots and other unpredictable system behavior," wrote Navin Shenoy, general manager for Intel's data center group in a blog posting Monday. Intel (INTC) and other tech companies have been scrambling since January 3, when researchers disclosed a design flaw in chips made by Intel and others that could allow an attacker to view hidden information such as passwords.


IT pros see the promise of AI, IoT in the enterprise

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Internet of Things (IoT) and artificial intelligence (AI) are expected to have the biggest impact among all emerging technologies in the enterprise, according to a new report from Spiceworks. Almost 20% of IT pros said they have already deployed IoT devices within their organization, according to the survey of 560 IT professionals. Another 40% said they plan to adopt them. But IoT and AI also have IT pros concerned about security and privacy, Spiceworks found. Professionals are still waiting for vendors to emerge as leading providers of IoT and AI devices. Until that happens, device concerns could persist.