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artificial intelligence - GeekWire
Stories and news about artificial intelligence from GeekWire
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Advances in Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining
Usama M. Fayyad, Gregory Piatetsky-Shapiro, Padhraic Smyth, Ramasamy Uthurusamy. (01 February 1996). { Advances in Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining brings together the latest research -- in statistics, databases, machine learning, and artificial intelligence -- that are part of the exciting and rapidly growing field of Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining.
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Review: Amazon’s 4K Fire TV is blazing fast, but Alexa on the big screen is a letdown

BY JAMES RISLEY on October 9, 20151 Comment

We’re spoiled with artificially intelligent companions today. It started with our phones, which were once used for talking to others but are more often spoken to nowadays to set times… Read More

Reporter John Markoff and Microsoft Research head Peter Lee talk self-driving cars, robots taking the SAT and the AI of Hollywood

BY JAMES RISLEY on October 1, 2015Post a Comment

From self-driving cars to computers that can create new meals, artificial intelligence is only getting better. But what will an AI future really look like? New York Times science reporter John… Read More

 Podcast
Q&A: John Markoff on self-driving cars, the robot revolution and the chances of a ‘job-pocalypse’

BY TODD BISHOP on September 22, 20151 Comment

John Markoff is a New York Times science reporter and author of the new book, Machines of Loving Grace: The Quest for Common Ground Between Humans and Robots. I interviewed him recently… Read More

Paul Allen’s team of AI experts just nailed the SATs — with a robot

BY JACOB DEMMITT on September 21, 20152 Comments

The Allen Institute for Artificial Intelligence says it has built a machine that can solve geometry questions from the SAT about as well as an average American 11th-grade student. It’s a bigger feat for… Read More

Geek of the Week: Software engineer Mike Christensen wants to optimize the world

BY MONICA NICKELSBURG on September 15, 20151 Comment

Mike Christensen is a life-long software engineer — a career that began remarkably early. While most of his kindergarten peers were mastering their ABCs and 123s, he was programing his first computer… Read More

New campaign launches to save us from harmful, lonely life of sex with robots

BY MOLLY BROWN on September 15, 20152 Comments

Robots and artificial intelligence are all the rage these days — taking over our jobs, maybe even destroying the planet — but two researchers have started a campaign to warn… Read More

Artificial Intelligence in Avengers and Ex Machina: Time to Be Afraid?

BY DANIEL RASMUS on June 14, 201517 Comments

As the summer blockbuster season gets into full swing, two fictional robots have already emerged to challenge our love of technology. In Marvel’s Avengers: Age of Ultron, the lead nemesis, Ultron,… Read More

Facebook adds 3 former Microsoft Research employees to Artificial Intelligence team

BY BLAIR HANLEY FRANK on April 30, 2015Post a Comment

Facebook is strengthening the ranks of its artificial intelligence research team with the addition of six new employees, including three who the company brought on board from positions at Microsoft… Read More

InboxVudu uses artificial intelligence to keep people on top of important emails

BY BLAIR HANLEY FRANK on February 10, 20151 Comment

At a time when people are receiving massive volumes of email every day, it can be hard to keep tabs on all the important messages that require attention. Even just… Read More

Paul Allen gives $5.7M to ‘cutting-edge’ artificial intelligence researchers

BY TAYLOR SOPER on December 3, 20144 Comments

The Paul G. Allen Family Foundation today awarded $5.7 million to seven researchers in the artificial intelligence field as part of the most recent Allen Distinguished Investigator (ADI) Program grant. The… Read More

The next battleground for Amazon, Microsoft, Facebook and Google: Artificial Intelligence

BY TRICIA DURYEE on May 27, 20146 Comments

  Digital personal assistants today can help you send messages, place phone calls, schedule meetings or find answers from the Internet. But there’s evidence that all the major tech giants are investing heavily… Read More

Paul Allen offers up $8M for artificial intelligence researchers to uncover ‘world-changing breakthroughs’

BY TAYLOR SOPER on March 6, 20142 Comments

For the fourth year in a row, The Paul G. Allen Family Foundation is taking proposals from researchers interested in working on using “risky, novel approaches” to study artificial intelligence… Read More

Paul Allen on the race between brain research and artificial intelligence — and why he’s betting on both

BY TODD BISHOP on September 26, 20131 Comment

Over the past decade, Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen has committed $500 million toward understanding the brain through his Allen Institute for Brain Science — aiming to ultimately transform the treatment… Read More

Q&A: ‘Final Jeopardy’ author Stephen Baker on Watson, IBM, the future of e-books and the fate of humanity

BY TODD BISHOP on May 17, 2011Post a Comment

Stephen Baker is the journalist and author who traced IBM’s Watson project from its inception and development all the way through its TV duel with Ken Jennings and Brad Rutter… Read More

The Best Artificial Intelligence Movies
2,476 VOTES
A list of the best artificial intelligence movies ever made, ranked by movie fans with film trailers when available. This artificial intelligence movie list is ordered ...












Paul Allen’s Artificial Intelligence Institute launches startup incubator with top minds in AI
By 
ROBERT MCMILLAN
Oct. 6, 2015 12:01 a.m. ET

International Business Machines Corp. has formed a new business unit to capitalize on the recent groundswell in artificial intelligence.

The new Cognitive Business Solutions group will be run by Stephen Pratt, previously an executive in the consulting practice at Indian outsourcer Infosys. The new division’s 2,000 employees will advise companies in how to take advantage of IBM’s Watson artificial-intelligence software.

IBM Chief Executive Virginia Rometty is expected to announce the group on Tuesday at the Gartner Symposium, a gathering of information technology executives, in Orlando, Fla.

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Introduced in 2011, Watson excels at analyzing vast quantities of information to uncover relationships that humans might miss. It has assisted oncologists at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, contributed to a recipe book, and bested champions of television’s “Jeopardy” game show.

IBM believes it could serve as the core of a new generation of ultrasmart digital assistants in data-heavy industries such as medicine, financial management and oil-and-gas exploration.

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“We see that that is going mainstream,” said Bridget van Kralingen, senior vice president of IBM Global Business Services in a telephone interview. “It’s very, very early days, but we can see it.”

IBM has bet $1 billion on the technology and has high expectations for its growth. The company counts Watson as part of its $17 billion analytics business, but it won’t specify Watson’s portion of that total. It has set a revenue target of $1 billion annually by 2018, The Wall Street Journal previously reported, though the path to profit hasn’t been clear.

“It’s not huge yet,” said David Schubmehl, an analyst with research firm International Data Corp. “It’s not doing hundreds of millions of dollars, but it is significant.”

IBM collects a percentage of revenue from developers who base their programs on its Watson Developer Cloud service. More than 350 partners use the service, IBM said in a blog post last month, to extract useful information from large quantities of data.

But the company sees a significant opportunity in professional services as less technical companies adapt the technology to their unique problems. The Cognitive Business Solutions group will help such customers tailor the software to their business needs, for instance, helping technical support personnel answer questions or analyzing Twitter messages to reveal fashion trends.

The Cognitive Business Solutions group will also advise customers on data-intensive topics such as business analytics, security and the Internet of things, IBM said.

Amazon.com Inc., Apple Inc., Facebook Inc. and Google Inc. have taken advantage of recent advances in artificial intelligence to provide virtual assistants and to improve their voice- and image-recognition capabilities.

As companies with less technological expertise aim to put these techniques to use, they will turn to IBM and Watson, Ms. Kralingen said.

“We believe as this capability gets stronger—and we’re seeing it—it will become a basis for organizations to compete,” she said.

Write to Robert McMillan at Robert.Mcmillan@wsj.com

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There are 11 comments.
Scott Senft5 days ago

"Introduced in 2011, Watson excels at analyzing vast quantities of information to uncover relationships that humans might miss."

Isn't that just number crunching? Why is it being called "artificial intelligence?"

Furthermore, if a company hacked another company's data and then asked Watson to analyze the hacked data, would Watson resist on ethical grounds?

Marc Schneiderman5 days ago

It is a boon for the entire AI/Cognitive Computing community that IBM has invested a billion dollars into their new business. They have single handedly created a new market segment, and promoted an awareness for the technology within all Fortune 500 companies. The real beneficiaries are startups with more innovative software that can accomplish intelligent tasks that IBM's product can only dream of. In the end, it won't be about who was first to market, or who pumped the most money into advertising, it will be about who builds the smartest machines...

Gil Russell5 days ago

Interesting that IBM retains the "Cat Bird Seat" advantage in AI developments using Watson. They'll have an inside seat early on to write checks for those that have long term promise - somewhat akin to farming a field of useful dreams...,

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IBM's New Unit Bets on Boom in Artificial Intelligence
Division will advise companies on using IBM's Watson artificial-intelligence software International Business Machines Corp. has formed a new business unit to capitalize on the recent groundswell in artificial intelligence. The new Cognitive Business Solutions group will be run by Stephen Pratt, previously an executive in the consulting practice at Indian outsourcer Infosys.
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Allen Institute for Artificial Intelligence
The Allen Institute for Artificial Intelligence (abbreviated AI2) is a research institute funded by Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen to achieve scientific breakthroughs by constructing AI systems with reasoning, learning and reading capabilities. Oren Etzioni was appointed by Paul Allen in September 2013 to direct the research at the institute.
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The Key Components of Enterra® The Enterra Enterprise Cognitive System™ - Enterra Solutions
The Enterra Enterprise Cognitive System™ (ECS) was built to meet the demands of a data-rich world, where information is vast. ... Continued
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