suzanne
'Battlestar Galactica' star says show's AI warnings more timely as sci-fi fantasies come to life
Tricia Helfer, who played a humanoid robot Cylon on "Battlestar Galactica," says the show's look at the conflict between humans and AI still resonates today. "We did warn against AI while we were shooting it," Helfer told Fox News Digital at the Beverly Hills Film Festival this week. She continued, "It was 20 years ago, and I've recently re-watched it and went, 'Oh my gosh, it's even more relevant now.' So I think we just really need to be careful. It's a slippery slope between using it to our advantage and having it maybe be able to control us a little bit." "I think we're a little bit far off from the humanoid Cylons yet and humanoid robots, but I don't know, they're coming," Helfer added.
Design Thinking In Product & Spaces & Future of Work - FoundersList
As the world continues to grapple with the impact of both artificial intelligence & the global pandemic, it's essential to consider the future of work. What will the workplace look like, & how will people adapt? Calling all designers, UX researchers, PMs, & architects in NYC! Join us for an exciting evening of discussion & exploration, meet like-minded individuals, & learn from Ate Atema, owner of Atema Architecture, & Suzanne Li, Director of Product Design at Newstand, during an intimate fireside chat! More about speakers: Ate is a visionary architect passionate about creating sustainable spaces. He has designed offices for TED, Endeavor Global, & The Nature Conservancy NY.
Being mindful in chaos - Suzanne Jewell [Interview]
Suzanne is a global expert and proven strategic marketing and communications lead on strategic initiatives for corporations, start-ups, non-profits, and the community. Suzanne's most recent project is Mindful Mornings Miami, the hottest new one-hour talk show on independent JoltRadio. With a reach of over 200,000, the show focuses on what it means to wake up and live in the world today. We have the pleasure of welcoming Suzanne Jewell to our interview series, I am Aishwarya Jain from the peopleHum team before we begin just a quick introduction of peopleHum, peopleHum is an end-to-end, one-view, integrated Human Capital Management automation platform, the winner of the 2019 global Codie Award for HCM that is specifically built for crafted employee experiences and the future of work with AI and automation technologies. We run the peopleHum blog and video channel which receives upwards of 200,000 visitors a year and publish around 2 interviews with well-known names globally, every month. We're thrilled to have you on our series. Awesome to be here and welcome to everyone, and my first wish is that everyone is awake, aware and well, today! Thank you so much for that. You know, my experience of living in one place and working on pretty much every other continent on the planet really made me aware that I was always in, kind of autopilot. The media tends to do that, both in the way that it bombards us. And I find that I personally was really being the same way, and so, in that regard for me, mindfulness became a way to really get present to what was going on wherever I happen to be on the planet for my GPS location, but also where my head and my mind and my body is located. The most recent Harvard study actually shows that 47% of the time that we're out of bed and awakened vertical, our mind and our body are actually not in the same place.
SCL: SCL Irish Group event: "Exploring Bias in AI" (Breakfast meeting) - Thursday 28 November 2019, Dublin
This event will be highly interactive. Dr Suzanne Little will give a short talk followed by group break-out sessions to discuss the topic in more depth. About the speaker: Dr Suzanne Little is Associate Professor and Senior Lecturer at the School of Computing, Dublin City University and SFI Principal Investigator, Insight Centre for Data Analytics. Before moving to the School of Computing at DCU in 2015, Suzanne was previously a Senior Research Fellow at the Insight Centre for Data Analytics at DCU. Suzanne originally joined the CLARITY research centre at Dublin City University in February 2012 and was principally responsible for the SAVASA project (Standards based Approach to Video Archive Search and Analysis). In 2013, CLARITY evolved to become Insight where Suzanne worked on and managed a number of projects in video analytics, motion analysis and data collection.
Work It
Suzanne, a young woman in San Francisco, met a man--call him John--on the dating site OKCupid. John was attractive and charming. More notably, he indulged in the kind of profligate displays of affection which signal a definite eagerness to commit. He sneaked Suzanne's favorite snacks into her purse as a workday surprise and insisted early on that she keep a key to his apartment. He asked her to help him choose a couch and then spooned with her on all the floor models. He even accompanied her, unprompted, to the D.M.V.--an act roughly equivalent, in today's gallantry currency, to Perseus rescuing Andromeda from the sea monster. As we learn from the podcast "Reply All," which reported the tale, Suzanne was not the only woman on whom John had chosen to bestow his favor. Six months into their relationship, she discovered that he was seeing half a dozen other women, one of whom he'd been stringing along for two years. All of them had received the couch-spooning treatment.