Writing a recursion program using human level artificial intelligence – Video


Writing a recursion program using human level artificial intelligence
This video shows a robot writing a fibonacci program using a recursive function. There are no sound in the video because I wanted the viewers to focus on what the robot is thinking while writing...

By: electronicdave2

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Writing a recursion program using human level artificial intelligence - Video

Google and NASA launch a quantum artificial intelligence lab

COMPUTING PIONEERS Google and NASA have launched the Quantum Artificial Intelligence Lab that will use a controversial quantum computer built by D-Wave.

Google and NASA joined forces to establish the Quantum Artificial Intelligence Lab that will allow researchers at the two organisations and a number of universities to research artificial intelligence using quantum computers. The lab will use a D-Wave 2 computer that is priced at around $15m.

D-Wave's computer, which for years has courted controversy regarding whether it really is a quantum computer, is a second generation unit that is rated at 512-qubit and makes use of quantum effects that in theory can deliver performance that is several orders of magnitude higher than that of traditional computers for certain workloads.

Google and NASA's collaboration is intended to foster research into machine learning by using D-Wave's quantum computer. For Google, research into machine learning presents some obvious benefits for trying to attach contextual meaning to data that it collects.

NASA also makes extensive use of high performance computing for its research and missions. Colin Williams, director of business development and strategic partnerships at D-Wave said, "Examples today include using supercomputers to model space weather, simulate planetary atmospheres, explore magnetohydrodynamics, mimic galactic collisions, simulate hypersonic vehicles, and analyse large amounts of mission data."

Aside from Google and NASA, 20 percent of the machine's compute cycles will be available to university researchers for free. However university researchers will have to submit proposals and go through a competitive process to get access to the machine.

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Google and NASA launch a quantum artificial intelligence lab

Google Buys a Quantum Computer for Artificial Intelligence Lab with NASA

The search giant Google is now too much interested to elaborate artificial intelligence. Google and NASA together establishing a laboratory called 'Quantum Artificial Intelligence Lab' to study AI by...

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The search giant Google is now too much interested to elaborate artificial intelligence. Google and NASA together establishing a laboratory called 'Quantum Artificial Intelligence Lab' to study AI by using quantum computers. For this purpose, Google actually buys a big Quantum Computer worth 15 million dollars. This computer has a speed 1000 times faster than latest super computers. Google buys this speedy computer from D-Wave systems. This new Google quantum computer will start working during the third quarter of this year.

Director of Engineering at Google, Hartmut Neven, has made the official announcement of launching the lab in a blog post today. He stated that Google is launching the Quantum Artificial Intelligence Lab today. While Ames Research Center of NASA will be responsible to run the lab. Google also indulged the USRA (Universities Space Research Association) in this project. The duty of USRA is to gather researchers from around the world to provide their time and efforts on this project. Google's actual goal is to study that how quantum computing will enhance machine learning.

Google has already worked on quantum computing and developed some algorithms for machine learning. One of these algorithms succeeded in getting efficient results that will be useful when your mobile device is on low power. While another is used for computed data for proper labeling. Now the search giant wants to use these algorithms in real practice to find real solutions for the quantum hardware.

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Google Buys a Quantum Computer for Artificial Intelligence Lab with NASA

Google quantum computer lab to study artificial intelligence

The search giant's new Quantum Artificial Intelligence Lab will be home to a new supercomputer from D-Wave Systems.

Google is opening a new research lab to see if a quantum computer can solve problems too taxing for traditional computers.

Hosted by NASA's Ames Research Center, the new Quantum Artificial Intelligence Lab will be home to a quantum computer made by D-Wave Systems. Operated by the Universities Space Research Association, the supercomputer will be available to researchers around the world to work on their own projects.

The goal, as stated in a Google blog posted today, is "to study how quantum computing might advance machine learning."

Traditional computers are limited, as they think in terms of ones and zeros and therefore aren't adept at solving real-world creative problems. In contrast, quantum computers use a single chip to store hundreds or elements known as quantum bits or "qubits." D-Wave's supercomputer houses 512 qubits on a single chip, according to The Wall Street Journal.

Tapping into the often odd world of quantum mechanics, a lone qubit can be a one, a zero, or both at the same time. As such, quantum computers can perform calculations and store information on a level much greater than can conventional computers.

"Machine learning is all about building better models of the world to make more accurate predictions," Hartmut Neven, director of engineering for Google, said in Thursday's blog. "If we want to cure diseases, we need better models of how they develop. If we want to create effective environmental policies, we need better models of what's happening to our climate. And if we want to build a more useful search engine, we need to better understand spoken questions and what's on the Web so you get the best answer."

Installation of the lab has already kicked off at the Ames Research Center, according to D-Wave, which expects its supercomputer to be ready for researchers sometime in the third quarter of 2013.

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Google quantum computer lab to study artificial intelligence

NASA, Google Launch Quantum Artificial Intelligence Lab

While much of the world is locked in a race to harness traditional computers to create the next groundbreaking application, there is another, potentially more powerful option: quantum computers.

One day after kicking off its annual I/O developer conference to much fanfare, Google quietly announced a new partnership with NASA that will use quantum computing to bring an advanced approach to some of the world's most challenging research efforts.

The combined effort will result in a new research facility called the Quantum Artificial Intelligence Lab. The device housed inside the lab will be the 512-qubit D-Wave Two from D-Wave Systems, a Vancouver-based company that first made headlines when it sold Lockheed Martin the world's first commercial quantum computer back in 2011. The Universities Space Research Association (USRA) will work with the lab to invite researchers from around the world to share working time on the machine.

"We hope [the lab] helps researchers construct more efficient and more accurate models for everything from speech recognition, to Web search, to protein folding," the lab's director of engineering, Hartmut Neven, said in a blog post. "We actually think quantum machine learning may provide the most creative problem-solving process under the known laws of physics."

Although Google has not revealed the price being paid for its quantum computer, at least one report claimed that Lockheed Martin's equipment cost the company $10 million. Interestingly, D-Wave System counts Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos as a primary investor, throughBezos Expeditions, along with In-Q-Tel, a venture capital firm designed to support the efforts of U.S. intelligence agencies. D-Wave Systems began tackling the arduous task of building a commercial quantum computer way back in the '90s, a process explained in detail by founder Geordie Rose in a new set of video interviews (below) released just yesterday.

As for the technology itself, quantum computing combines the traditional binary dynamic of computing with quantum mechanics. This new approach toward computing allows us to put bits of information into their 0 and 1 states at the same time, essentially allowing researchers to view a number of possibilities simultaneously. Accelerating computation on a massive scale, quantum computing promises to allow researchers to better examine patterns in everything from weather systems to the stock market.

According to Google, the general goal of the Quantum Artificial Intelligence Lab will be to examine how quantum computing might advance machine learning. Google recently made a very public commitment to this area of research by hiring inventor and futurist Ray Kurzweil as director of engineering.

Google's announcement, meanwhile, comes shortly after it was revealed that a team of researchers at Los Alamos National Labs in New Mexico has been successfully running a mini quantum Internet for 2.5 years.

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NASA, Google Launch Quantum Artificial Intelligence Lab

InsideSales.com Continues Its Partnership With Brigham Young University's Machine Learning and Artificial Intelligence …

PROVO, UT--(Marketwired - May 14, 2013) - InsideSales.com, the leading provider of sales automation technology for inside sales professionals, today announced a sponsorship of additional Ph.D. programs for the Brigham Young University Neural Network and Machine Learning Laboratory to further advance their sales automation platform through artificial intelligence applications.

"Partnering with BYU's Computer Science department reinforces our commitment to research," said David Elkington, CEO and founder of InsideSales.com. "We are a data-driven, innovation focused company and we feel an obligation to advance the machine learning space. The Neural Network and Machine Learning Lab is the perfect partner for much-needed innovation in this down economy."

InsideSales.com has received four patents in the sales automation and machine learning categories from the U.S. Patent Office with many more in process, solidifying InsideSales.com as the market leader in the inside sales market.

"The BYU Neural Networks and Machine Learning Laboratory is excited and grateful for support fromInsideSales.com," said Tony Martinez, Professor and Director of the BYU Neural Networks and Machine Learning Laboratory."This support will aid graduate students in their research goals and also lead to advances in how machine intelligence can benefit business processes."

InsideSales.com research has been published in the Harvard Business Review, Inc., Forbes, Fast Company and Bloomberg. See all published research at http://www.insidesales.com/research_papers.php.

To learn more about the InsideSales.com lead management software, research conducted, PowerDialer, or to speak to a sales rep, call (877) 200-5698 to arrange a free trial of our phone dialer software.

About InsideSales.com, Inc.

InsideSales.com is the worldwide leader in cloud-based, sales automation and predictive analytics for inside sales professionals. Their PowerDialer for Salesforce 5.0 has been one of the most popular applications on the salesforce.com AppExchange for over five years. The company was recently recognized #9 by Inc. Magazine for employee growth in Utah and #347 of the 500 Fastest Growing Companies on Deloitte's 2012 Technology Fast 500. The company was also named Service Provider of the Year by the American Association of Inside Sales Professionals (AA-ISP). InsideSales.com enterprise customers include ADP, Dell, Gannett Local, Inc., Marketo, ON24, Re/Max Cornerstone, Seagate, Groupon and more. To try the technology, visit http://www.insidesales.com.

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InsideSales.com Continues Its Partnership With Brigham Young University's Machine Learning and Artificial Intelligence ...

When Will Artificial Intelligence Replicate the Human Mind? Physicist Louis Del Monte's New Webisode Explains

Minneapolis, MN (PRWEB) May 14, 2013

In his newest webisode, Artificial Intelligence Explained, author, physicist and CEO, Louis A. Del Monte provides the history and future of human-like artificial intelligence.

Can super computers beat a human in chess or Jeopardy? Can these smart computers carry on a conversation with another human being? Louis Del Monte schools us on the historical achievements of super computers, current science, and astounding possibilities of an artificial intelligence.

It doesnt hurt that Louis Del Monte is a physicist and master engineer of integrated circuits who understands the capability of semiconductors.

With his background and study of artificial intelligence, he gives reason to think that by the year 2029, computers will be able to replicate the human mind, become self-aware, and be considered a life form. More startling, by the year 2050, computers will have advanced to the point that they will far exceed the intelligence of a human mind.

Intrigued yet? Find this video on artificial intelligence, as well as other webisodes on scientific mysteries on Lou Del Montes YouTube channel.

Del Monte is the author of Unraveling the Universes Mysteries available on Amazon and Barnes & Noble and soon-to-be published title on time travel. You can find articles on Huffington Post, and on his blog, Science Questions & Answers, where you can find links to his Twitter channel, Facebook page, YouTube channel, and LinkedIn profile. To contact Louis Del Monte, visit http://www.unraveluniversemysteries.com.

Louis A. Del Monte is an author, physicist and the Chief Executive Officer of Del Monte & Associates, Inc. For over thirty years, he was a leader in the development of microelectronics for IBM and Honeywell before forming a high-tech e-marketing agency and authoring Unraveling the Universes Mysteries. He has a B.S. degree in Physics and Chemistry and an M.S. degree in Physics, published numerous technical papers, and developed several patents fundamental to the fabrication of integrated circuits. Del Monte is the recipient of the H.W. Sweat Award for scientific/engineering achievement and the Lund Award for human resource management excellence.

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When Will Artificial Intelligence Replicate the Human Mind? Physicist Louis Del Monte's New Webisode Explains

Accomplishing recursive tasks using Human-Level Artificial Intelligence – Video


Accomplishing recursive tasks using Human-Level Artificial Intelligence
This video shows a robot solving a problem by doing recursive tasks. There are no sound in this video because I wanted the viewers to focus on the robot #39;s thoughts while solving a problem....

By: electronicdave2

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Accomplishing recursive tasks using Human-Level Artificial Intelligence - Video

Navigating in 3-d using human level artificial intelligence (pt 1) – Video


Navigating in 3-d using human level artificial intelligence (pt 1)
This video shows a robot navigating in a 3-dimensional environment. There are no sound in this video because I wanted the viewers to focus on the robot #39;s thoughts while navigating in a 3-d...

By: electronicdave2

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Navigating in 3-d using human level artificial intelligence (pt 1) - Video