The Great AI Paradox
by Brian Bergstein, MIT Technology Review Don’t worry about supersmart AI eliminating all the jobs. That’s just a distraction from the problems …
by Brian Bergstein, MIT Technology Review Don’t worry about supersmart AI eliminating all the jobs. That’s just a distraction from the problems …
by Andrew Myers, Stanford News Since the term “artificial intelligence” (AI) was first used in print in 1956, the one-time science …
MIT Technology Review Reuters is scooping its rivals using intelligent machines that mine Twitter for news stories. “The advent of the internet …
by Edward C. Baig, USA Today What happens when the computers around you all but disappear? Tiny sensors built into walls, household products, what …
by Matt Burgess, Wired.co.uk The goal of the Turing test is for a human to work out whether they’re communicating with another …
by Yasemin Saplakoglu, Scientific American Pioneering 19th-century English mathematician Ada Lovelace is honored on the second Tuesday of every October for her …
by Nicola Jones, Nature As Earth-observing satellites become more plentiful and climate models more powerful, researchers who study global warming are facing a deluge …
by Pat Patterson, Information Management There has been an explosion of innovation in open source stream processing over the past few years. …
The Nation, from Asia News Network In an interview, Osaka University president Shojiro Nishio stresses the need to keep artificial intelligence (AI) …
by Kagan Pittman, Engineering.com Machine learning capabilities are a significant asset in IIoT platforms, assisting in the collection and organization of data …