Archive for the ‘robotics/AI’ category: Page 2234
You may not typically be firing on all cylinders when your alarm clock goes off, but French startup Holi says it has created an alarm clock that will fire on all cylinders for you. The Bonjour is a voice-controlled, artificially intelligent device that learns about the user and acts as their personal assistant.
First things first – the Bonjour has a rather natty design that sits somewhere between contemporary cleanliness and retro stylishness. Its 5.3-in (13.5-cm) diameter circular body leans back on four short and stumpy legs, while a circular color HD screen is set into its center.
Like the Kello alarm clock, the Bonjour is aimed at enriching the user’s life beyond just waking them up. Whereas the Kello aims to improve the quality of the user’s sleep though, the Bonjour wants to improve their waking hours.
Oct 26, 2016
GPU’s Role in Artificial Intelligence Advances Featured at Conference
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: biotech/medical, information science, robotics/AI, supercomputing
NEWS ANALYSIS: The confluence of big data, massively powerful computing resources and advanced algorithms is bringing new artificial intelligence capabilities to scientific research.
WASHINGTON, DC—Massively parallel supercomputing hardware along with advanced artificial intelligence algorithms are being harnessed to deliver powerful new research tools in science and medicine, according to Dr. France A. Córdova, Director of the National Science Foundation.
Córdova spoke Oct. 26 at GPU Technology Conference organized by Nvidia, a company that got its start making video cards for PCs and gaming systems, that now manufactures advanced graphics processor for high-performance servers and supercomputers.
Oct 26, 2016
D-Wave founder Geordie Rose takes quantum leap into smart robotics
Posted by Karen Hurst in category: robotics/AI
Investors from Amazon to the CIA are excited about secretive startup Kindred Systems and its ‘human-like intelligence’ advances.
Oct 26, 2016
Google’s neural networks invent their own encryption
Posted by Sean Cusack in categories: computing, encryption, robotics/AI
Using machine learning, computers have come up with codes that let them send secret messages to each other – but they’re still a long way off humans.
Oct 26, 2016
AI Pioneer Yoshua Bengio Is Launching Element AI, a Deep-Learning Incubator — By Cade Metz | WIRED
Posted by Odette Bohr Dienel in categories: innovation, robotics/AI
“For researchers given the right guidance, the market for their skills is enormous. Deep learning is now technology that every big company needs. And there are only so many researchers to go around.”
Oct 25, 2016
The Pentagon’s ‘Terminator Conundrum’: Robots That Could Kill on Their Own
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: military, robotics/AI
Hmmm.
The United States has put artificial intelligence at the center of its defense strategy, with weapons that can identify targets and make decisions.
Oct 25, 2016
As In The Days Of Noah—New Synthetic Biology Factory Will Design, Build, And Test Exotic New Lifeforms
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: bioengineering, biological, genetics, robotics/AI
Why compliance exist.
Gingko Bioworks launched their new laboratory last month—an automated “factory” that mass-produces genetically modified organisms. The organism company’s tagline is “Biology By Design,” and it aims to deliver just that in their second foundry, which is equipped with numerous robots that mash together huge batches of genes to churn out new and exotic lifeforms […] Gingko is ambitiously working through the complexities of biology and genetics to create these experimental organisms. The company boasts of a design-build-test cycle: gene-enzyme mixes designed from the company’s scientific database is put together in a hundred different ways, and the “mashup” that services a client’s needs best is accepted as the new organism’s genetic profile. Their new liquid-handling robots like the Echo 525 make large-scale experimentation possible. (READ MORE)
Oct 25, 2016
Beyond Moore’s Law: 13 Investors, CEOs, And Researchers Sound Off On Quantum Computing
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: computing, finance, quantum physics, robotics/AI
A nice read on the who’s who in QC: congrats Vern Brownell and Michelle S. in making the top 13 list.
Leaders in quantum computing discuss the challenges and potential for this technology across finance, AI, and many other fields.
Oct 25, 2016
Will AI replace judges and lawyers?
Posted by Elmar Arunov in categories: computing, information science, law, robotics/AI
An artificial intelligence method developed by University College London computer scientists and associates has predicted the judicial decisions of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) with 79% accuracy, according to a paper published today (Monday, Oct. 24) in PeerJ Computer Science.
The method is the first to predict the outcomes of a major international court by automatically analyzing case text using a machine-learning algorithm.*.