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Archive for the ‘robotics/AI’ category: Page 2268

May 5, 2016

Academia Fights to Retain Talent As Facebook, Google, and Microsoft Pirate Their Best Artificial Intelligence Experts

Posted by in categories: innovation, robotics/AI

I find this amusing because much of the top US AI talent has worked for many decades in the National Labs and not always in academia. National labs often is a mix of top scientists, engineers as well as academia; not academia only. Granted universities do incubations such a GA Tech, VA Tech, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, etc.; however, the bulk of AI and other patented innovations truly have come out of the national labs such as X10, Los Alamos, Argonne, over the years.


The high demand for AI talents at giant corporations This means the academe is directly affected because their smartest AI experts are rapidly transferring to the corporate world and leaving the academe.

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May 4, 2016

What IBM’s new quantum processor means for the future of computing

Posted by in categories: computing, genetics, quantum physics, robotics/AI

Here is the impact of today’s IBM QC announcement & if proven real then the following will certainly be fasttracked:

1. IBM is now ahead of everyone in QC

2. China & Russia are now going to heat up their own QC efforts.

Continue reading “What IBM’s new quantum processor means for the future of computing” »

May 4, 2016

Own a piece of Siberia for free: Russia offers hectare of land to citizens willing to move to Far East

Posted by in categories: law, robotics/AI

Russia’s new frontier land grab. Anyone wanting to move to Siberia?


WASHINGTON — Call it the Muscovite version of “manifest destiny.” On Monday, President Vladimir Putin signed into law a bill that offers every Russian citizen a tract of land in their country’s remote Far East.

“All citizens will be entitled to apply for up to hectare of land in the Kamchatka, Primorye, Khabarovsk, Amur, Magadan and Sakhalin regions, the republic of Sakha, or the Jewish and Chukotka autonomous districts,” the Moscow Times reports. This is a vast stretch of territory spanning the upper Arctic reaches near Alaska, down to islands off the coast of Japan and deep into the Siberian hinterland.

Continue reading “Own a piece of Siberia for free: Russia offers hectare of land to citizens willing to move to Far East” »

May 4, 2016

Can artificial intelligence create the next wonder material?

Posted by in categories: materials, robotics/AI

Some researchers believe that machine-learning techniques can revolutionize how materials science is done.

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May 4, 2016

China’s Deadly Advantage in Driverless Cars

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, transportation

Wonder what kind of insurance they have?


http://www.bloomberg.com/gadfly/art…ads-give-china-a-grim-edge-in-driverless-cars

Transport safety advances the same way physicist Max Planck saw science progressing: one funeral at a time.

Continue reading “China’s Deadly Advantage in Driverless Cars” »

May 4, 2016

End of slow PCs? IBM creates super-fast quantum computer which brings AI closer

Posted by in categories: climatology, computing, quantum physics, robotics/AI

I have already been trying to access; guess we will see.


ENGINEERS have created lightning-quick quantum computers which will be freely available to everyone to use online.

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May 4, 2016

Rich and powerful warn robots are coming for your jobs

Posted by in categories: employment, robotics/AI

LOS ANGELES Some of the richest, smartest and most powerful humans have an important message for the rest of us as they convened this week to discuss pressing global issues: the robots are coming.

At the Milken Institute’s Global Conference in Beverly Hills, California, at least four panels so far have focused on technology taking over markets to mining — and most importantly, jobs.

“Most of the benefits we see from automation is about higher quality and fewer errors, but in many cases it does reduce labor,” Michael Chui, a partner at the McKinsey Global Institute, said on Tuesday during a panel on “Is Any Job Truly Safe?”

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May 4, 2016

Preparing for the Future of Artificial Intelligence

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, computing, health, robotics/AI

Today, we’re announcing a new series of workshops and an interagency working group to learn more about the benefits and risks of artificial intelligence.

There is a lot of excitement about artificial intelligence (AI) and how to create computers capable of intelligent behavior. After years of steady but slow progress on making computers “smarter” at everyday tasks, a series of breakthroughs in the research community and industry have recently spurred momentum and investment in the development of this field.

Today’s AI is confined to narrow, specific tasks, and isn’t anything like the general, adaptable intelligence that humans exhibit. Despite this, AI’s influence on the world is growing. The rate of progress we have seen will have broad implications for fields ranging from healthcare to image- and voice-recognition. In healthcare, the President’s Precision Medicine Initiative and the Cancer Moonshot will rely on AI to find patterns in medical data and, ultimately, to help doctors diagnose diseases and suggest treatments to improve patient care and health outcomes.

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May 4, 2016

Why Machine Vision Is Flawed in the Same Way as Human Vision

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

AI you’re only as good as the eye of your creator.


Humans and machines both use neural networks for object and face recognition. Now evidence is emerging that both types of vision are flawed in the same way.

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May 3, 2016

A Computer Was Programmed to Write a Novel, This Is What It Wrote

Posted by in categories: computing, robotics/AI

I had thought my job was safe from automation—a computer couldn’t possibly replicate the complex creativity of human language in writing or piece together a coherent story. I may have been wrong. Authors beware, because an AI-written novel just made it past the first round of screening for a national literary prize in Japan.

The novel this program co-authored is titled, The Day A Computer Writes A Novel. It was entered into a writing contest for the Hoshi Shinichi Literary Award. The contest has been open to non-human applicants in years prior, however, this was the first year the award committee received submissions from an AI. Out of the 1,450 submissions, 11 were at least partially written by a program.

Here’s a except from the novel to give you an idea as to what human contestants were up against:

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