A different way of thinking about the advances of AI is to discuss the transitional techniques or technologies versus describing them as waves.
Read MoreThe report is deep in insights, direct and without hyperbole and speculation. The report focuses on research, talent, industry, politics, and they make a prediction while also letting us know how well they did with their 2019 predictions.
Read MoreI am encouraged about the possibilities of using federated AI to enable user privacy of healthcare data on mobile or edge devices.
Read MoreThe Bloch sphere is a representation of a qubit, the fundamental building block of quantum computers.
Read MoreStanford Engineering’s Stanford Computer Forum held a most excellent meeting in August 2020.
Read MoreThis ebook provides a look at technologies that will transform healthcare.
Read MoreA connectome is a comprehensive map of neural connections in the brain, and may be thought of as its "wiring diagram". Who would have thought of a connection between AI and connectome. As an IBM Fellow [Emeritus] I loved reading about a former colleague’s work, Dharmendra S. Modha, a letter to another former colleague Bernie Myerson about such work. Dharmendra’s work is most interesting, see http://www.research.ibm.com/articles/brain-chip.shtml
Read MorePamela McCorduck’s masterpiece on AI origins, Machines Who Think, is written like a novel, with fascinating first-hand insights from AI’s founding fathers.
Read MoreAI is proving to be a general purpose technology that changes the way we work, life and play. Like electricity and the computer before it, AI can be applied to every industry and an almost infinite set of problems. Technology companies and nations are racing for supremacy.
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