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Daily Archives: February 18, 2017
The AI to help us drive is already possible, so where is it? – VentureBeat
Posted: February 18, 2017 at 4:17 am
You climb into a Honda Civic and a motion detector sees that you are not wearing a seatbelt. Seems like a simple problem for AI to resolve. The car might know, based on previous driving patterns, that you always drive for a bit before clicking, but maybe you could set an option that the car wont even start unless you (or one of your teen drivers) are all fastened up. Ford does have a system that works a bit like this and is related to seatbelts, but Im talking about an AI that adapts to how you drive, knows what you normally do, and acts on your behalf.
Modern cars dont really monitor driver behavior that much, unless you count the attention monitoring in some cars. Even that is fairly rudimentary and not that accurate in a few Mercedes-Benz cars Ive tested, the technology is supposed to show you an icon for a coffee cup that encourages you to take a break, and it looks for erratic steering and tracks how long youve been behind the wheel, but Ive had the alert chime after driving only a couple of hours.
In the future, AI could do much more than show us a coffee cup. The2017 Ford F-350 Im driving this weekhas multiple high-tech features, but Im hoping they evolve even further. For example, if Im hooking up a trailer in the back of the vehicle and Ive connected all of the cables and safety chains, then climb into the cab, the truck could easily show me the camera view for the trailer (or I could disable that option). Its the first thing you do every time click the camera button, check the view from the truck bed. Ironically, this scenario is closer than you think. The Ford F-350 already has an alert system called the Smart Trailer Tow Module that warns you if theres a tow issue. An AI would go further and walk me through making better connections.
Taking this to another level, AI in cars could become like a driving assistant. Lets say you always go to Caribou Coffee in the morning. Today, Google Maps can already determine your home address by monitoring where you drive, but an AI could watch for way more patterns it could tell you theres a special at Starbucks or that you have a reward. It could connect to a parking system if youre going downtown and reserve a spot automatically.
As you drive, an AI could note when theres someone pulled over at the same spot on a highway week after week, something you havent tracked because youre too busy eating donuts. It could show a subtle alert on screen reminding you to slow down. With the adaptive cruise control enabled, it could even slow down for you. You might not even notice.
This AI in cars is possible today, but development is desperately behind. The sensors are already in the car, and the AI programming is already available. One reason its not happening yet is simply because the car companies have decided not to add these features. Its certainly not a cost issue, although they probably would want to test and retest an AI for safety reasons.
Speaking of safety, an AI could provide a ton of assistance here. Cars today have a feature that prevents the rear door locks from unlocking, but you have to push the button. An AI could detect the size of the passengers, know theyre kids, and enable the lock function for you. If you have a baby on board and dont quite latch the car seat straps correctly, an AI could detect that something is wrong.
Some of these features are likely in the works, and maybe they are already in acar. Whats missing is an AI similar to Alexa or Siri that runs in the car and communicates with you, in the car and on your phone, about all issues related to entertainment, safety, and other factors. The AI would monitor all functions of the car, tell you about repairs basically do all of the work.
All we would have to do is get in and drive. Eventually, even that will be automated.
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Banco Santander Invests in Artificial Intelligence Startups – Fortune
Posted: at 4:17 am
When learning becomes cognition. Photograph by Agliolo Mike Getty Images/Photo Researchers RM
Spanish lender Banco Santander SA has invested in two artificial-intelligence companies, part of the financial industry's increased focus on technology smart enough to mimic human thinking, sources familiar with the deals told Reuters.
The bank's venture arm, Santander InnoVentures, bought stakes in Personetics Technologies, which provides automated customer service, and Gridspace, whose software can learn and interpret language the way a person would, the sources said.
The size of the investments could not be determined and the sources asked not to be named because they were not allowed to disclose the information publicly.
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The deals underscore how lenders have become more interested in using artificial intelligence for a wide variety of tasks, including hiring, spotting fraud, improving call centers and recommending products for customers.
Personetics, which has offices in New York, London and Tel Aviv, creates "chatbots" that can respond to customer questions through popular messaging platforms like Facebook's ( fb ) Messenger. French bank Societe Generale, for instance, is using Personetics to answer queries about equity funds in its Romanian banking unit.
San Francisco-based Gridspace's technology can be used by banks to monitor conversations between customers and employees at call centers to improve service.
Its Time to Hire a Chief AI Officer
Santander ( san ) set up its London-based InnoVentures group in 2014 to invest in young financial-technology companies that can improve its digital offerings. The division was initially allocated $100 million to invest but was given an extra $100 million in July.
It has backed more than a dozen companies so far, including automated wealth manager SigFig, Swedish payments company iZettle and Digital Asset Holdings, which develops blockchain software and is led by former JPMorgan Chase & Co ( jpm ) commodities chief Blythe Masters.
Other global banks have venture units with similar remits. Santander InnoVentures was among the most active bank-owned investors in fintech companies last year, alongside Goldman Sachs Group ( gs ) and Citigroup ( c ) , according to data by CB Insights.
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Banco Santander Invests in Artificial Intelligence Startups - Fortune
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Artificial Intelligence In Schools Is Closer Than You Think – Forbes
Posted: at 4:17 am
Artificial Intelligence In Schools Is Closer Than You Think Forbes Education stands to benefit from rapid developments in artificial intelligence. But historically, adaptive learning software has been programmed in a top-down fashion. It asks a question, and if the child provides a particular answer, a set of prompts ... |
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The new IQ test: Technologists assess the potential of artificial intelligence – SC Magazine
Posted: at 4:17 am
AI may still seem like a far-flung concept, but in cybersecurity its already a reality.
Rather than focus on attack signatures, these AI solutions look for anomalous network behavior, flagging when a machine goes rogue or if user activity or traffic patterns appear unusual. A really simple example is someone with high privilege who attempts to get onto a system at a time of day or night that they never normally log in and potentially from a geolocation or a machine that they don't log in from, said Kelley.
Another example would be a really rapid transfer of a lot of data, especially if that data consists of the corporate crown jewels.
Such red-flags allow admins to quickly catch high-priority malware infections and network compromises before they can cause irreparable damage.
IBM calls this kind of machine learning cognitive with a little c' which the company was already practicing prior to Watson. Despite its diminutive designation, little c can have some big benefits for one's network.
A network really in its simplest form, is a data set, one that changes with every millisecond, said Justin Fier, director of cyber intelligence and analysis at U.K.-based cybersecurity company Darktrace, whose network threat detection solution was created by mathematicians and machine-learning specialists from the University of Cambridge. With machine learning, we can analyze that data in a more efficient way.
We're not looking for malicious behavior, we're looking for anomalous behavior, Fier continued, in an interview with SC Media. And that can sometimes turn into malicious behavior and intent, or it can turn into configuration errors or it could just be vulnerable protocols. But we're looking for the things that just stand out.
An advantage of these kinds of AI solutions is that they often run on unsupervised learning models meaning they do not need to be fed scores of data in advance to help its algorithms define what constitutes a true threat. Rather, they tend to self-learn through observation, making note of which machines are defying typical patterns a process that Fier said is the AI determining its own sense of self on the network.
While Fier said that basic compliance failures are the most commonly detected issue, he recalled one particular client that used biometric fingerprint scanners for security access, only to discover through anomaly detection that one of these devices had been connected to the Internet and subsequently breached.
To cover up his activity, the perpetrator modified and deleted various log files, but this unusual behavior was discovered as well. The solution even found irregularities in the network server that suggested the culprit moved fingerprint data from the biometric device to a company database, perhaps to establish an alibi. My belief is that somebody on the inside was probably getting get help from somebody on the outside, said Fier, noting that it was a significant find because insider threats are one of the hardest things to catch.
Another client, Catholic Charities of Santa Clara County, an affiliate of CatholicCharities USA that helps 54,000 local clients per year, used anomaly detection to thwart an attempted ransomware attack only weeks after commencing a test of the technology. The solution immediately flagged the event, after a receptionist opened a malicious email with a fake invoice attachment. I was able to respond right away, and disconnected the targeted device to prevent any further encryption or financial cost, saidWill Bailey, director of IT at the social services organization.
Little c's benefits extend beyond the network as well. Kelley cited the advent of application scanning tools that seek out problematic lines of code in websites and mobile software that could result in exploitation. And Fier noted a current Darktrace endeavor called Project Turing, whereby researchers are using AI to model how security analysts and investigators work in order to make their jobs more efficient.
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The new IQ test: Technologists assess the potential of artificial intelligence - SC Magazine
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Artificial intelligence ‘to revolutionise higher education’ – Times Higher Education (THE)
Posted: at 4:17 am
The use of artificial intelligence and the next-generation of virtual learning environments (VLEs) are two areas of technology that have been forecast to have a major impact on higher education in the future, according to the expert panel of a major new report.
The NMC Horizon Report: 2017 Higher Education Editionis produced by the New Media Consortium a community of hundreds of universities, colleges, museums and research organisations driving innovation across their campuses and is the flagship publication of the NMC Horizon Project, which analyses emerging technology uptake in education.
Artificial intelligence, the report notes, has the potential to enhance online learning, adaptive learning software, and research processes in ways that more intuitively respond to and engage with students.
Samantha Adams Becker, senior director of publications and communications at NMC and the reports editor, said that the higher education world was already seeing the initial benefits of AI, which was very much driving the adaptive learning field.
If you think about online courses where there may be hundreds of students, its currently very difficult for a professor or instructor to maybe get a good grasp on how students not only are performing, but are feeling about the materialas theyre lecturing or a videos playing, she said.
Virtual avatars and chatbotshave the ability to assess that on an individual level, and if the student seems stuck then maybe you can replay part of the video. Or if a student seems bored, it can indicate to the instructor that its time to move on to new material.
Adaptive learning leverages basic AI algorithms to personalise learning and deliver content that students need. Theyre learning about students as students learn, which is helpful in informing educators and providing them with datasets to analyse and understand the needs of individuals and their classes as a whole. The possibilities are endless.
Meanwhile, the next generation of learning management systems (LMS) also referred to as VLEs was a topic entirely new to the Horizon project, according to Ms Adams Becker.
LMS is a category of software and web applications enabling the online delivery of course materials as well as the tracking and reporting of student participation.
Although they have been in use in higher education for some time to manage and administer online and blended courses and as a portal for students to access syllabuses, submit assignments or check grades some experts believe that they are limited in capacity and too narrowly focused on the administration of learning rather than the learning itself, the report notes.
Next-generation LMS refers to the development of more flexible spaces that support personalisation, meet universal design standards, and play a larger role in formative learning assessment, the report states.
Ms Adams Becker said that the technology would enable educational leaders at universities to unbundle all the components of the learning experience and allow them to repurpose content and educational apps in unique and compelling ways.
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Facebook to use artificial intelligence to ID terrorist posts – The Daily Herald
Posted: at 4:17 am
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By Steven Overly
The Washington Post
Facebook plans to use artificial intelligence to identify posts that might promote or glorify terrorism, a move that follows growing concern about terrorists efforts to recruit on social networks.
In a 5,700-word missive posted Thursday, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg wrote that the technology will take many years to fully develop because it requires software sophisticated enough to distinguish between a news story about a terrorist attack and efforts to recruit on behalf of a terrorist organization.
Currently, Facebook largely relies on users to flag questionable content.
Zuckerberg also expounded on the companys efforts to build a global community through Facebook, and wrote that its success will depend on whether were building a community that helps keep us safe that prevents harm, helps during crises, and rebuilds afterwards.
Critics have taken aim at Facebook, along with other social networks, for what they see as insufficient efforts to police the content transmitted across its network. From propaganda shared by suspected terrorists to suicides streamed live to friends and family, social networks have inadvertently become a breeding ground for the unsavory sides of the Internet.
Terrorism has been a particularly sensitive topic. A Department of Justice official told CNBC last October that most cases of domestic terrorism begin with communication on social media and that terrorism groups are targeting their messages at young people.
Looking ahead, one of our greatest opportunities to keep people safe is building artificial intelligence to understand more quickly and accurately what is happening across our community, Zuckerberg wrote.
Facebook has attempted to tamp down potential terrorist propaganda for more than a year. A Wall Street Journal report from February 2016 said pressure from the government prompted the company to remove profiles of those suspected of supporting terrorism and scrutinize their friends posts more carefully.
In December, CNN reported that Facebook, Twitter, Google and Microsoft would create a shared database to track and delete violent terrorist imagery or terrorist recruitment videos.
Facebooks attempts to filter, or not filter, content on its network has led to controversy before. The company came under fire for failing to stop fake news stories from circulating during the recent presidential campaign, but also alarmed conservatives who expressed concern their views were being suppressed. Zuckerberg acknowledged the fake news problem in his letter Thursday, though he did not say whether artificial intelligence might help solve that challenge as well.
The letter states:
There are billions of posts, comments and messages across our services each day, and since its impossible to review all of them, we review content once it is reported to us. There have been terribly tragic events like suicides, some live streamed that perhaps could have been prevented if someone had realized what was happening and reported them sooner. There are cases of bullying and harassment every day, that our team must be alerted to before we can help out. These stories show we must find a way to do more.
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Bangkok city guide: what to do plus the best hotels, restaurants and bars – The Guardian
Posted: at 4:12 am
Floods, protests, power struggles, a military takeover Krungthep, known to the rest of the world as Bangkok, has endured more than its share of hardships recently. The loss of the countrys beloved King Bhumibol Adulyadej, who remained remarkably popular throughout his 70-year reign, hit particularly hard last year. Thailands populace is nothing if not resilient, though: after a dozen coups dtat in less than a century, they have to be and, in spite of it all, the capital continues to flourish and, in the process, reshape its identity.
For decades, this was a city that imported everything, to which strings of glitzy megamalls attests. But somewhere along the way, Thailand began to foster its own considerable creative pool. Look closely and youll notice that generic luxury brands are ceding shelf space to funkier fashions by Thai designers; local chefs proudly flaunt family recipes on the hottest tables in town; and even north-eastern Thai folk music is in the midst of a revival.
Bangkoks historic heart may rest on temple-studded Rattanakosin Island, but its contemporary pulse is scattered throughout smaller, splintered neighbourhoods in Sukhumvit, Sathorn and Silom and can be harder to pinpoint. Travellers looking to tap into the zeitgeist should venture past the backpacker cocoon of Khao San Road and make their way towards nearby Phra Athit Road, a boho hangout with live music venues and restaurants near the Chao Phraya river, then make a beeline for Chinatown. On Soi Nana, off Charoen Krung Road, minutes from Cantonese holes-in-the-wall and stores selling traditional herbal remedies, shophouses are being refurbished into galleries and unpretentious bars.
Booming, chaotic, at times overwhelming, but never, ever boring, Bangkok is more culturally diverse, complex and compelling than ever.
After stopping by celeb chef Ian Kittichais signature restaurant for updated Thai classics, such as massaman-braised lamb shanks and jasmine-infused panna cotta, youll want to learn how to cook like the maestro. Classes at Issaya Cooking Studio teach some of the chefs best-loved recipes, plus insights into everything from mixology to sous-vide techniques. Courses from 2,000 baht (45), issayastudio.com
Bangkoks art movement has blossomed in recent years. Artha Gallery keeps the emphasis on regional talent from Thailand, Myanmar and Vietnam. Over in Sathorn, head to Sathorn 11 Art Space, which features exhibitions on the ground floor and four resident artist studios above, and H Gallery, with edgy works by Asian artists in a converted mansion. Closer to the riverside, be sure to visit Bridge and The Jam Factory, housed in a sprawling multipurpose complex designed by starchitect Duangrit Bunnag.
An industrial space with eclectic collections, Speedy Grandma fills up with creative types at weekends. Treading the line between gallery and bar, Cho Why is one of several revamped shophouses injecting new energy into Chinatown. Events range from a street-art fest to a rooftop paella party. Across the street at 23 Bar and Gallery, the artsy incarnation of one of the citys legendary dives, expect indie tunes and no-nonsense drinks.
With more than 8,000 stalls selling everything from parakeets to pottery, Chatuchak Weekend Market, up by the Mo Chit BTS Skytrain station, remains the one to beat. Go early or late, when the tropical temperatures are more forgiving, as navigating the 27 sections can prove a dizzying experience. Plan for a post-shopping sundowner at Viva 8, a ramshackle bar with excellent mojitos where DJs spin house. Many up-and-coming Thai designers try to make it here first, so keep an eye out for next seasons labels before they hit the big time.
Head to Talad Rod Fai (Sri Nakarin Soi 51) and Talad Rod Fai 2 (Esplanade Complex) for all sorts of vintage bric-a-brac. At the Rot Boran Market (The Walk, Kaset-Nawamin road), known as the Classic Car Market, VW bugs and other old-school autos find new life as pop-ups selling just about everything.
After visiting the requisite temples Wat Saket for the view, Wat Phra Kaew for the glittering, gilded everything, and Wat Pho for a massage and seeing all manner of standing, sitting and reclining Buddhas head to the Thonburi side of the river for this lesser-known cultural gem: a teak house decorated with quirky sculptures. Shadow puppet performances, a traditional art that is becoming increasingly scarce, are worth seeing, but be sure to call ahead, as showtimes are irregular. 315 Wat Tong Salangam, Phet Kasem Road, +66 2 868 5279
If the concrete jungle becomes a bit wearing, consider a cycling trip over to Phra Pradaeng, a mangrove-covered peninsula on the western side of the Chao Phraya. ABC Amazing Bangkok Cyclist offers half-day tours for 29pp, including longtail boat transfers and mountain bike rentals, realasia.net
Salty, sweet and screaming hot, Bangkoks street food is adored by all strata of society. Hygiene is sometimes questionable and MSG rampant, but that shouldnt stop anyone from dining like a king on a shoestring budget. Keep your eyes peeled for rib-sticking jook (rice porridge with pork crackling and raw egg), comforting khao mun gai (chicken and rice) or its rarer, biryani-inspired cousin khao mok gai, crispy hoi tod (eggy mussel or oyster pancakes), fatty khao kha moo (meltingly tender braised pork leg with gravy), Isaan-style jim jum (hot pot), and the ubiquitous trio of gai yaang, som tom and khao niew (grilled chicken with spicy papaya salad and sticky rice). Noodles, including yen ta fo (neon-red glass noodles with tofu), ban mee (thin egg noodles often served with wontons), suki (bean thread noodles, egg, cabbage and seafood or meat) and richly flavoured kuai tiao ruea (boat noodles in a spiced, blood-enriched broth with offal), are served around the clock and can be ordered haeng (dry or stir-fried) or nam (wet with soup broth). For sugar fiends, khao niew mamuang (mango sticky rice) is a dependable go-to, but consider branching out to khanom krok (custardy coconut confections) and the dangerously craveable kluay kaek (deep-fried bananas in a coconut batter).
Gentrification has edged out many of Sukhumvits street eats, which means travelling a bit further to find larger pockets. Victory Monument and the surrounding area has an abundance, as do Silom and the historic areas of the city. Chinatown, especially Yaowarat and Charoen Krung roads, is packed with stalls that have been serving the same dishes for generations.
It might have started out as an artisanal pickle cannery in a hostel, but this eatery is currently whipping up some of the most interesting fare in town. As the name references, 80% of ingredients are local, while the remaining 20% allow for creative wiggle room. Chef Napol Jantraget delights in genre-bending plates like charcoal-grilled squid with fingeroot glaze, black garlic paste, popped rice berries, roasted peanuts and local sour greens that are rooted in Thai traditions, but also draw on his time at a brasserie in Toronto. 1052-1054 Charoen Krung Road, +66 2 639 1135, on Facebook
Duangporn Bo Songvisava and Dylan Jones, a Thai-Australian chef duo who cut their teeth at Londons Nahm, are best-known for their uncompromising Thai fine-dining eatery Bo.lan. The pairs second offering ditches the fancier trappings in favour of gutsy countryside bites, best washed down with a Chang beer or a whisky-soda. Order a couple of rounds and nibble on sai ouwa (coconut-smoked northern sausage, 4) and kor moo yang (grilled pork neck with tamarind sauce, 5), while deciding which mains to share. 394/35 Maharaj Road,+66 2 622 2291, errbkk.com
Rare Khon Kaen and Trat recipes from the owners grandmother help explain this cosy places enduring popularity. Its hard to order wrong, but steer away from the usual pad thai and opt for khai jiew pu (omelette stuffed with crabmeat, 3) or ka lum tod nam pla (stir-fried Chinese cabbage, 2), an umami bomb anointed with pungent fermented fish sauce. 160/11 Soi 55 Sukhumvit road, +66 2 714 7508, supannigaeatingroom.com
Bangkoks sizable Indian diaspora has given rise to some excellent eateries, including this number, which steers clear of cliched curries and peppers in subtler nods to the subcontinent, such as the decorative latticework derived from mosques and cheeky broken-English signs in the bathroom. Order the gently spiced lamb sheekh kebab (9) or the house-made paneer tikka (8), which is as silky as cheesecake and just as rich. After dinner, walk down the street to a darkened alley where, behind a door by an abandoned phone booth, salsa dancers shimmy to live bands at Havana Social, the owners hidden Cuban-inspired speakeasy. 38/8 Soi 11 Sukhumvit Road, Fraser Suites Hotel, +66 89 307 1111, charcoalbkk.com
Ash Sutton, the genius behind bars including Iron Fairies and Maggie Choos, outdid himself with this hideaways stripped-down, brooding aesthetic and succinct Prohibition-era cocktail list. A gleaming copper distillery serves as the centrepiece and produces the places namesake elixir, a south-east Asian spin on gin, fermented with a heady mix of fresh pineapple, coconut, lemongrass, ginger and juniper. Park Lane, Sukhumvit 63, on Facebook
Follow the sounds of soul and funk four nights a week to one of Bangkoks best live music spots. The lack of a cover charge and the rollicking house party vibe help explain why the crowds keep coming, even when the tiny joint is past capacity. Bigger bands often see the party spill out onto the street, which doesnt seem to bother anybody one bit. 945 Charoen Krung road, on Facebook
Slide open an unmarked wooden door in Thonglor and step into this dimly lit drinking den housed in a three-story shophouse. A long marble bar and gleaming, ceiling-high shelves displaying a formidable liquor collection make this one of the sexiest speakeasies in town, while the craft cocktails by legendary local mixologists Suwincha Chacha Singsuwan and Naphat Yod Natchachon mean the narrow space is packed on weekends. 125 Sukhumvit Soi 55, +66 98 969 1335, on Facebook
Drop whatever preconceptions the term lifestyle mall calls to mind, because this industrial complex buried in Thonglor houses some of Bangkoks best bars and eateries. A crawl should start with a craft brew and greasy grub like laab fries at Beer Belly, then go for something stiffer at U.N.C.L.E, a leather-upholstered lounge with tipples such at the Honey Keep It Cool, with cachaa, lemon-infused green tea, Fernet-Branca, honey and Tullamore Dew whiskey. Touch Hombre has the best selection of mezcals and tequilas in the city, not to mention authentic bites like elotes callejeros (grilled corn with cotija cheese, chipotle-spiked mayonnaise and lime). Finish your night with a trip to Beam, a warehouse-style club where techno pounds till late. 72 Soi Sukhumvit 55, on Facebook
A G&T here might well carry a lingering, savoury aroma of peppered pork jerky or Thai tea. Housed in an 80-year-old shophouse, cluttered with vintage Thai furniture, this watering hole has earned a cult following for its gin infusions made from whatever the owners find from neighbouring Chinatown stores. On a weekend, be prepared to queue for one of the coveted 16 seats. 76 Soi Nana, Charoen Krung road, on Facebook
An opium-den fever dream of paper lanterns, Chinese dragons and slinky qipao-clad ladies, Sing Sing Theaters retro-glam, over-the-top vision of 1930s Shanghai packs the dance floor on weekends. Sukhumvit Soi 45, on Facebook
OK, so its expensive, but for a luxe stay, this is the place. Six years in the making, this Bill Bensley-designed passion project of local celebrity, actor and former indie rocker Krissada Sukosol Clapp is chockablock with antiques. The resulting property is remarkably atmospheric, especially on the serene verandah overlooking the Chao Phraya. Guests can learn to fight like a champion with an Olympic Muay Thai trainer or even pick up a sacred sak yant tattoo from Ajarn Boo, a master of this ancient art. Doubles from 295 room only, thesiamhotel.com
A night at this colonial mansion might evoke memories of a stay at an eccentric uncles, if said uncle were the swashbuckling, well-travelled type and a bit of a hoarder. The place is crammed with curios, ranging from the intriguing (retro typewriters) to the downright kooky (cheetah skulls). Its got character to burn, not to mention a rooftop pool, a restaurant serving Isaan and Lao cuisine, and prime location just off of Sukhumvit Road. Doubles from 93 B&B, cabochonhotel.com
Signs of this riverside boutiques previous existence as a coconut sugar factory are everywhere, from the original storage tins in the walls to the oversized wheels of jaggery that serve as tables in the restaurant. Each of the rooms is named and colour-coded to different times of day, starting with 7:00 AM in early-morning hues and ending with the crepuscular-tinted 5:00 PM. If the budget allows, spring for one of the later suites, which feature lovely views of Wat Arun (Temple of the Dawn) at sunset. Doubles from 80 room only, innaday.com,
With floor-to-ceiling windows in its 25 rooms and a lively rooftop restaurant with river views, the new Riva Arun makes for a great spot to soak in the scenery. Doubles from 72 room only, snhotels.com
Travellers neednt spend a fortune to sleep comfortably in this town, thanks to a spate of design-forward hostels opening in trendy neighbourhoods. Decked out in warm wood tones and sporting a craft beer bar, co-working space and third-wave coffee shop, ONEDAY (dorms from 9) is as hip as they come. In Ari, a lively residential area with tons of street food, The Yard Hostel (dorms from 13), made of upcycled shipping containers, quickly established itself as a neighbourhood haunt, as well as a social stop for wayfarers. Considerate extras bicycles for rent, two-month luggage storage, barbecue equipment for impromptu grill parties and a friendly staff add to the experience. In Chinatown, Loftell 22 (dorms from 7) offers comfy dorms and private rooms in two previously abandoned historic buildings in Talad Noi.
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Bangkok city guide: what to do plus the best hotels, restaurants and bars - The Guardian
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Howard gives Barnett a hand on hustings – The West Australian
Posted: at 4:12 am
Time will tell if former prime minister John Howard's visit to Perth helps Colin Barnett to an extraordinary election victory or amounts to a farewell from one enduring political figure to another.
Australia's second-longest serving PM and the WA Premier, who will turn 78 and 67 respectively this year, strolled through central Perth's Murray St mall and greeted mostly friendly strangers on Friday morning.
Labor leader Mark McGowan had similarly used the political star power of former WA Premier Geoff Gallop on Thursday, with the pair catching a train to the city from the former's home in Rockingham.
Despite most polls pointing to a Labor win on March 11, Mr Howard disagrees.
"I believe the government will be returned because in the end West Australians will sensibly decide it is better to hang on to the government that's done stuff and protected Western Australia than take a risk on somebody who's inexperienced," he told reporters.
Sport including the prospect of this year's Ashes cricket being played at Perth's new stadium dominated the conversation as the pair went in search of a coffee and before journalists began asking Mr Howard about the election.
"The great thing about Colin is he's done things. The state premier is meant to look after schools and the education system of Western Australia has been more innovative with government schools than any other state with the introduction of what some people call charter schools," he said.
"Western Australia was carrying the country for a number of years and let's face it, if it hadn't been for the resources boom in Western Australia a few years ago the whole nation would have been in trouble.
"I know the West Australian economy is not quite as robust as it was but that's not the fault of the state government, it is the natural swings and roundabouts of a resource-based economy and there are signs to me that the WA economy is coming back."
The pair attracted one or two less-than-pleasant greetings with a passer-by shouting "shame" at Mr Howard and another telling Mr Barnett he was wasting money on projects like the new stadium while hospitals and schools were suffering.
Mr Barnett pointed out that a lot of people relatively new to Australia but who remembered Mr Howard as PM were among those to warmly greet him, including a Malaysian man and Ghanaian man.
When the rest of the country turned against him for Kevin Rudd in 2007, there was actually a swing towards the coalition in WA where it gained seats.
Speaking of Mr Rudd, the former PM criticised his predecessor on Friday for giving his blessing to the WA Liberals' preferences deal with Pauline Hanson's One Nation.
"Utter disgrace from John Howard. He defended Hanson in 1996. Now once again.Pushing the Liberals further to the right," he tweeted.
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Howard gives Barnett a hand on hustings - The West Australian
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Expert: We Can Have Universal Basic Income and Jobs – Futurism – Futurism
Posted: at 4:11 am
Basic Income and Jobs
The debate about the effectiveness of a universal basic income (UBI) program has been fueled by concerns over job displacement due to increased automation. Several studies have shown that a number of jobs from several industries including transportation, manufacturing, finance, law, and even ITare going to be affected by this trend. This has generated support for UBI from a number of economic experts and tech industry giants, including Elon Musk.
Basic Income Guarantee (BIG) proponents also see UBI as a better alternative to current social welfare programs. Brad Voracek, who holds a degree in Applied Mathematics in Economics and Computer Science from the University of California, Berkeley, and a masters in Economic Theory and Policy from the Levy Institute at Bard College, shared his thoughts on how proponents of BIG and Job Guarantee (JG) shouldnt be at odds with one another.
Supporters of either of these policies should be working together to get either one implemented and we can debate adding the other later,Voracek writes in The Minskys.Today, we need to move beyond our current disjointed welfare system to one that will help Americans, and either policy (or both!) seems like a step in the right direction.
In the article, Voracek also tackles several of the arguments against UBI.
Contrary to what some critics say, he doesnt seeUBI as incentivizing not having ajob. I havent seen any proof an income stops people from working, he writes. Its all speculation. He also points out that many of the jobs that are available to those who qualify for the current welfare system arent beneficial to society.
We have to keep abject poverty as a social option so that people keep working at McDonalds making the McObese, and keep stocking the Wal-Mart shelves so that Wal-Mart can pay starvation wages which allow people to be eligible for the [welfare] in the first place, says Voracek. Im not really sure those are the jobs that need to be done.
Voracek has a plan on how we should pay for a new system as well. He argues that the total cost of the welfare programs currently in place is higher than the potential cost of UBI, so we could get rid of all of those programs (with the exception of the complicated Medicaid) and apply all of that money to a singular UBI program.
At the moment, its all about trying it out. Lets see what happens when everyone has some cash on hand, Voracek writes. BIG and JG proponents, lets not quibble. Were on the same side. Theres work to be done. Get organized. Make it happen.
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Expert: We Can Have Universal Basic Income and Jobs - Futurism - Futurism
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Trump and automation challenge India’s IT industry – VentureBeat
Posted: at 4:09 am
(Reuters) Automation and the new U.S. administration were the big unknowns at the Indian tech sectors annual shindig this week, with machines threatening to take away thousands of jobs and concerns over possible visa rule changes in the key American market.
But senior executives from the $150 billion industry, which rose to prominence at the turn of the century by helping Western firms solve the Y2K bug, said companies with skilled English-speaking staff and low costs could not be written off yet.
The sector, led by Tata Consultancy Services, Infosys, and Wipro, is lobbying hard as the new U.S. administration under President Donald Trump considers putting in place visa restrictions.
The administration may also raise salaries paid to H1-B visa holders, a move that could significantly increase costs for IT companies that are already facing pressure on margins.
The longer-term challenge and opportunity for the sector was automation, executives said, as global corporations from plane-makers to consumer firms bet on the use of machines to further cut costs and boost efficiency.
That threatens lower-end software services and outsourcing jobs in a sector which employs more than 3.5 million people.
Summing up the mood at the three-day NASSCOM leadership event in Mumbai ending on Friday, Malcolm Frank, Chief Strategy Officer at Cognizant which has most of its operations in India, spoke of fear and optimism.
Even top IT executives were fearing the machines, he said.
Some Indian executives, including Infosys Chief Operating Officer Pravin Rao, said that greater automation was expected to help engineers and developers shed repetitive jobs for more creative roles.
Some part of the work well be automating 100 percent, you dont require people to do that kind of work, Rao told Reuters. But there are always newer things, where we will be able to re-purpose employees who are released from those areas.
With rapidly changing technology, Indian IT firms are emphasizing the need for retraining their workforce, in many cases setting up experience centers and learning zones on their sprawling campuses.
Some companies are partnering with universities to design and fund education programs, while staff members spoke of employers laying on training and webinars to help develop skills in automation and cloud computing.
The threat from automation killing jobs is more than Trumps anticipated visa rule changes, a general manager-level employee at a top Indian IT firm said.
NASSCOM chairman and Tech Mahindra CEO C.P. Gurnani said technology would create new roles where man will manage machines, even if a fourth of Indian IT jobs were to be replaced by machines over the next four years.
Hiring patterns may also change, with unconventional, high-value graduates likely to be more attractive, to the possible detriment of hiring from Indias engineering colleges.
Infosys, which traditionally recruited only engineering graduates, is considering hiring people educated in liberal arts to add creative skills to its workforce, COO Rao said.
In a first, NASSCOM (National Association of Software and Services Companies), the leading Indian IT lobby group, delayed its initial growth forecast for fiscal 2017/18, citing market uncertainty.
NASSCOM officials said it had deferred its predictions by three months to give it time to gauge policy announcements in the United States which could make immigration rules tougher.
The industry body aims to announce a firmer growth forecast after the quarter to March when IT companies report annual earnings and give guidance for the next fiscal year.
A certain level of uncertainty will continue over the medium-term, said NASSCOM President R. Chandrashekhar. And businesses therefore have to take essential decisions on new technology in the face of a certain degree of uncertainty.
(By Sankalp Phartiyal and Promit Mukherjee; Additional reporting by Devidutta Tripathy and Euan Rocha in Mumbai, Sayantani Ghosh and Aby Jose Koilparambil in Bengaluru; Editing by Mike Collett-White)
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Trump and automation challenge India's IT industry - VentureBeat
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