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Monthly Archives: July 2017
Teens put aside grown-up conflicts at robotics competition – The Mercury News
Posted: July 19, 2017 at 4:14 am
By Moriah Balingit and Sharif Hassan | Washington Post
WASHINGTON As six robots battled it out on the floor of the DAR Constitution Halls auditorium during the FIRST Global Challenge competition Tuesday afternoon, a cheer rose above the din of voices echoing across the stands.
Team Hope! Team Hope! Team Hope!
The cheering came from a corner of the stadium where a group of boys from Team Lebanon wearing rainbow clown wigs stood next to Team Palestine. They, and teams from Libya and Jordan, were lending their voices to support a group of Syrian refugees, known as Team Hope. It was one of many times when teens would spontaneously break out into cheers for competitors.
When they werent cheering, hundreds of teens from 157 countries mingled, chatted and leaned in for selfies in the sweltering corridors of the concert hall at the first international Global Challenge competition. In between making final adjustments on their robots, a bonding experience that has become central to this competition, they signed each others T-shirts and exchanged pins. If they did not speak the same language, they all understood the thrill, the frustration and the anxiety that comes with competition.
These are precisely the kinds of friendships FIRST Global founder Dean Kamen, an inventor, hoped to build ones that crossed languages, cultures and geopolitical frontiers. His lofty vision is one in which graduates of this program put aside politics to solve the worlds most pressing challenges, like shortages of clean water and the myriad problems wrought by global climate change. In this years competition, teams built robots to sort contaminated water from clean water actually orange and blue plastic balls to get them thinking about the real-life challenge that many face getting enough clean water.
If we can get kids from around the world to deal with the same issues . . . we could compete on the same team, Kamen said on Sunday evening, in remarks at the opening ceremony. You dont have to have self-inflicted wounds created by arbitrary differences and politics.
This cauldron of competition with countries sending some of their brightest and best aspiring engineers forged plenty of unusual friendships. Team Armenia and Team Turkey, who come from countries whose relations are strained were allied in one match. The Armenian team also helped Lesotho make modifications to their robot.
You have to put politics aside, said Lilit Tarumyan, a 16-year-old team member. Her teammate. Maria Ter-Minasyan, chimed in: They were some cool guys!
The contest is called a coopera-tition, with points given to teams for working together to form alliances.
Under their countrys flag, three young Iranian men tinkered with their robot on Tuesday afternoon, in preparation for the final, nerve-racking matches of the FIRST Global Robotics competition. Just feet away, Team Israel was busily making adjustments to theirs. The two countries have hostile relations. But in this corner of the DAR Constitution Hall, separated by no more than 30 feet, the teens from both countries forged an unlikely bond.
They chatted about robots and politics, and then the two teams huddled together for a group photo with founder Kamen. And then the teens wished each other good luck.
Please, see us today, we Israelis and Iranians were together and happy,said Mohammad Reza Karami, the mentor for Team Iran. You also can see, learn and be together.
The competition capped weeks of drama in which two teams one from Gambia and Afghanistans all-girls squad appeared to be in jeopardy of competing in the U.S. when their visas were initially denied. Their plight garnered international attention and sympathy. The Gambian team finally received their visas in early July, according to the Associated Press. But the Afghan girls did not get their visas until President Donald Trump intervened at the last-minute, granting them passage to the U.S.
Alieu Bah, an 18-year-old Gambian team member from Serakunda, said the team was crestfallen when their visa applications were initially denied. But they did not give up and continued to put in hours of work sometimes seven hours at a stretch on their competition robot, with plans to ship it to Gambians living in the U.S., who would compete in their place.
We worked hard. And even when we didnt get it, we worked hard, said Bah, who added that he was just excited to see Gambia represented in the international competition. But he was still thrilled when he heard the State Department had reversed its decisions. Im proud to be here.
Tuesday, First Daughter Ivanka Trump came to the hall and met with five other all-girl squads, including the teams from Jordan, Brunei, Vanuatu and the U.S. She then pulled the lever to start a friendly match between the six teams.
Kawsar Roshan, a 15-year-old member of Team Afghanistan, said Trump was welcoming, telling her through a translator: Youre most welcome. Im happy you made it to the U.S.
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Robotics contest draws global student entries – Washington Times
Posted: at 4:14 am
Student inventors from across the globe defied the STEM gender gap this week, convening in the District to compete in the worlds first international robot contest for high schoolers.
First daughter Ivanka Trump arrived at the competition Tuesday morning to congratulate the six all-female teams on their work in STEM (science, technology, engineering, mathematics).
For many of you who have traveled great lengths to be here, we welcome you. Its a privilege and an honor to have you all with us, Ms. Trump said.
FIRST Global, a leadership program sponsoring kids interested in STEM, aided nearly 160 countries in sending student teams and the robots they designed to the two-day competition at DAR Constitution Hall in the District.
FIRST Global founder Dean Kamen highlighted the mission of the event: aiding less-prosperous nations to finally enter into the world of robotics.
By empowering the bright young minds of tomorrow through STEM, countries all over the world particularly in developing countries could experience accelerated economic growth and obtain secure and peaceful livelihoods for their nations, Mr. Kamen said during Sunday nights opening ceremony.
Jose Escotto, communications director for FIRST Global, told The Washington Times that the organization prioritizes giving women the tools to take their place confidently in the technology field.
We have over 800 students in this competition 200 of them are women. Thats something we definitely pride ourselves in. We know women have been terribly underrepresented when it comes to careers in STEM, said Mr. Escotto. So today we have a number of all-female teams from the U.S., Ghana, Vanuatu, Jordan and Afghanistan. Sixty percent of the teams we have here today were either led, formed or organized by women.
Tightly packed and brightly colored stations for each country lined the walls of Constitution Hall, where teams chatted excitedly as they worked on their robots.
Despite language barriers, a spirit of camaraderie and a passion for robotics joined the students together. In fact, many competitors went from table to table with plastic balls or T-shirts for opposing teams to sign as mementos.
Since the challenge was released, theres been social media flying between all these teams. Theyve all been chatting, Skypeing and talking for months, said Team USA coach Sharon Johnson. So they show up to the competition and they already know some of these teams. Theyve been collaborating on programming and building ideas. The hope is that theyll continue to stay networked and continue collaborating beyond the competition.
The robot competition is to be an annual event in a different country each year with a different theme like the Olympics athletic games, according to FIRST Global. This years theme, Clean Water, was evidenced by the advanced challenges in which the teams robots competed.
There are particles little orange and blue balls on the field. The blue particles represent clean water, the orange balls represent contaminants, said Ms. Johnson. So the robots have to drive around, pick up those balls, sort them by color, and then put them in the appropriate pots based on whether its a contaminant or a particle. Then, at the end, theres an onrush of a flood, and they have to go do a pullup onto the bar with the idea that the robot is saving itself from the flood. Its pretty awesome.
The teams were obviously happy with their carefully designed bots, but many said they were just as thrilled to be in the capital of the United States for the first time.
However, the high schoolers maintained motivation for a higher purpose to bring positive change to their communities.
Nabih Alkhateeb, a 17-year old Syrian student on the competitions HOPE refugee team, says these opportunities are only stepping stones to helping his people.
Right now in the Syrian war, science is going backwards. A lot of people are out of schools. Im not in Syria because Im living in Lebanon now. Im able to study, but more than 300,000 children are out of school even there, said Nabih.
In the future, he wants to use robotics in civil engineering to aid his war-torn nation.
I love buildings and I love how they look. So after I finish my studies, Im going to go back to Syria and help rebuild what has been lost, Nabih said.
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New breed of collaborative robots "work hand in hand" with humans – CBS News
Posted: at 4:14 am
On Tuesday's episode of "Robotics Revolution," CBS News explores how robots can transform the way we live and work.
An estimated 38 percent of American jobs are at "high risk" of automation by the early 2030s. Some cities, like Las Vegas, will be hit hard. Research shows that nearly two-thirds of all Las Vegas jobs may be automated by 2035. But what if machines could be a natural extension of us?
MIT hosted the brightest minds in tech on Monday, showing off the latest in artificial intelligence and robotics. One of the most notable and multi-dimensional advances is a way for humans and robots to safely join forces. CBS News' Dana Jacobson met one robot who works side-by-side with people. Another uses brain control to take cues from humans in order to complete tasks. Both robots are changing the workplace as we know it.
"Well, this is our great innovation, YuMi, which means you and me," Sami Atiya said. "And it allows robots to work hand in hand with human beings."
YuMi is what's called a "cobot," which is a new breed of collaborative robot that could revolutionize the assembly line. YuMi makes paper airplanes, solves the Rubik's cube and even helps a person with multiple sclerosis play chess.
Baxter is a brain-controlled robot that could help humans think more and do less.
"One idea that we kind of thought about was, well, can the Baxter robot help a human assemble Ikea furniture or something like this?" Stephanie Gil said.
YuMi allows robots to work hand in hand with human beings.
CBS News
At MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab, Gil and Andres Salazar are developing robots like Baxter, who can learn from his mistakes by reading your brainwaves and transmitting your thoughts.
The researchers assure us they're not teaching robots to read our minds. But the lab's director, Daniela Rus, imagines the possibility of someday seeing man and machine work hand in hand.
"A machine would be able to ready more radiology scans in a day than a physician will see in a lifetime," Rus said. "But the machine will not have the same kind of creativity. So, I like to think of machines and people as working together. Machines doing what they're best at and people doing what they're best at."
Not everyone thinks it's a match made in heaven. Tesla CEO Elon Musk recently warned that artifical intelligence poses an "existential threat" to humanity.
"Robots will be able to do everything better than us," Musk said. "I mean all of us, you know."
"You can't stop technology from evolving and from changing the world," Rus added. "But we can anticipate the changes and we can put the rules in place to make sure that the changes are for the better."
"It will take a lot of time for a robot to become human-like," Atiya said. "So, a robot to do this interview with you and go and then take a cab back home, you know, that will take decades."
Atiya is the president of robotics and motion at ABB, the company that developed YuMi, the collaborative industrial robot.
"I think what is important is that artificial intelligence is used as a tool," Atiya said. "And it's not a means by itself."
All the experts Jacobson spoke with this week say technological advancement isn't new. We've seen it over time from the agricultural revolution to the invention of the spreadsheet. They say as artificial intelligence gains steam and blue collar manufacturing jobs disappear, we will have to retrain workers to compensate, but the revolution will happen. You can find jobs, it's just the training needs to be there.
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The future of robotics means robots and humans will work side by side, experts say – Metro US
Posted: at 4:14 am
Right now, roboticist Daniela Rus main aspiration is to have a world where anyone can have a robot, where anyone can use a robot, the MIT professor told TechCrunch Sessions: Robotics on Monday.
Rus, who is also the director of the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory at MIT, said that though the world of robotics has certainly made recent advancements, her dream isnt possible quite yet.
But just remember that only two decades ago, computation was a task reserved for an expert few, because computers were large, expensive and hard to use, she said. All that changed now everyone uses computers and I believe in the future, tasks will be equally changed by artificial intelligence.
What followed throughout the one-day robotics event organized by tech media company TechCrunch was the musings of many immersed in the robotics world as to where we are exactly in the timeline of robot advancement, and how that advancement will affect humans.
Basically, were just at the beginning of developing robots, and were still pretty far from many developments and from the sci-fi situation of robots taking over the world.
In a talk about robots, AI and humanity, experts discussed the difficult goal of creating a robot consciousness, which would allow artificial intelligence to make ethical decisions and follow social cues.
If you look at theology, humans are born without common sense, said Dr. David Barrett, a professor of mechanical engineering at Olin College. Its an acquired skill a little bit is better than none, a little bit more is better than that, until you get to a level of confidence to perform a job and interact with people. Computers and AI are far from that baseline point.
Even though the tech behind robots still has a long way to go, people are already thinking about how robots and humans will coexist. If you fear robots taking over the world, or just all your job options, dont worry.
I think there is sometimes a misconception that automation is all about a direct line march from all people to all robots, said Clara Vu, VP of engineering at Veo Robotics. Really, in many ways, humans and robots have very complementary strengths: Robots can be fast and strong, but humans have flexibility and judgment.
When people are looking for robotic solutions to problems, Vu said, theyre looking for ways robot and humans can work together.
There are already more than 80,000 robots working in Amazons warehouses and fulfillment centers, said Tye Brady, chief technologist for Amazon Robots, at TechCrunch Sessions: Robotics on Monday.
Though the robotics world is still developing, Brady doesnt expect or want robots to replace humans completely at Amazon.
Humans are really great at creative problem-solving, abstraction and generalizations. Robots are really good at crunching numbers, pulling data, lifting heavy objects and moving with precision, he said. We have to think about how we can build systems that bring the strengths of each of these components together.
To Brady, that collaboration will look like a symphony of humans and robots fulfilling orders in a way the world hasnt seen.
That collaboration will extend into other businesses as well, like helping first responders or law enforcement officials react to a crisis.
Heather Ames of Neurala, a Boston-based deep learning software company, unveiled at the TechCrunch event a partnership between Neurala and Motorola Solutions in which artificial intelligence can help find a missing child.
The description of a missing child can be sent to body cameras on the uniforms of officers, she said, so that thousands of eyes are scanning the crowd looking for a lost child. The same system could also be applied to finding suspicious packages.
Drones can help first responders assess a catastrophic event, said Buddy Michini of Airware.
They can take a drone for getting an overview of whats happening and put [help] at, say, the most crashed building, he said, adding that Airware sent drones to assist with a recent earthquake in Italy.
And robots can even be integrated right onto the human body, to augment human skills. David Perry from Harvard Labs demoed an exosuit at the event that straps robotics right onto someones legs.
This has two main applications, he said: to enhance the natural ability of healthy people and to restore ability that those with a physical impairment may have lost. For the first use, Harvard Labs has been working with the military to put these robotic pants onto soldiers, so they dont get as tired while walking and carrying packs that often weigh more than 100 pounds.
The machine doesnt control the user, Perry explained, but follows his moves, whether walking up a hill or stepping over rough terrain, combining the strengths of both robots and humans together in one use.
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The future of robotics means robots and humans will work side by side, experts say - Metro US
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Assisted living tries virtual reality to help seniors with dementia – Orlando Sentinel
Posted: at 4:13 am
Black-and-white striped angelfish glide past Mary Spencer as she scuba dives for the first time in her 84 years.
Above, the sun glows white at the top of the Thai sea. Below, a school of bright orange fish darts by.
Oh, its a beautiful blue ocean, the Orlando native said. There goes a diver. Hes floating by."
The retired Walt Disney World workers next adventure could take her to the Grand Canyon or on a safari without ever leaving her home in an east Orange County assisted-living facility. Shes among the residents testing whether virtual reality can help people with dementia.
We are trying to be on the cutting edge of what we provide to our residents, said Kimberly Edwards, executive director at Encore at Avalon Park assisted living and memory care.
Susan Jacobson/Orlando Sentinel
Mary Spencer, 84, watches a video that immerses her in deep-sea diving. She's participating in a virtual-reality trial of dementia patients at Encore at Avalon Park assisted living facility on July 14, 2017.
Mary Spencer, 84, watches a video that immerses her in deep-sea diving. She's participating in a virtual-reality trial of dementia patients at Encore at Avalon Park assisted living facility on July 14, 2017. (Susan Jacobson/Orlando Sentinel)
Encore at Avalon Park is the third senior residence in the country to test the virtual-reality system created by MyndVR, a Dallas start-up whose partners are Samsung and the University of Texas at Dallas.
All 89 residents will have a chance to try the 360-degree experience, but only 16 will participate in the four-week field trial eight with dementia and eight without.
Theyll spend no more than half an hour at a time looking at three- to five-minute scenes meant to evoke nostalgia, serenity and wonder. Choices include a 1950s jazz club with a live singer and patrons sipping martinis, a sunset on a farm and a painter creating a flower-filled canvas.
MyndVR hopes the scenes will soothe the patients with dementia and reduce agitation and depression.
Stephen M. Dowell/Orlando Sentinel
Chris Brickler, left, CEO and co-founder of MyndVR, helps resident John Auchter, 89, with a headset to view a virtual reality video at Encore at Avalon Park assisted living facility on July 12, 2017.
Chris Brickler, left, CEO and co-founder of MyndVR, helps resident John Auchter, 89, with a headset to view a virtual reality video at Encore at Avalon Park assisted living facility on July 12, 2017. (Stephen M. Dowell/Orlando Sentinel)
During a past trial in Plano, Texas, a few residents without memory loss were allowed to try a skydiving segment that was a hit with an 85-year-old woman, Brickler said.
Our plan is to essentially be the Netflix of VR for seniors, MyndVR CEO and co-founder Chris Brickler, 45, said on a visit to kick off the trial last week at Encore at Avalon Park.
Thats why the equipment is designed to be light enough for comfort and easy to navigate.
It consists of a headphones and a headset powered by a specially programmed cellphone. The user sits in an office swivel chair under the supervision of a staff member trained by MyndVR. Slowly twirling the chair and moving the head create the panoramic effect.
The hurdles are far less than we thought, and the unintended benefits are starting to be more than we anticipated, said Brickler, who plans to lease the equipment to senior-care residences across the Sunbelt, where many older people live.
Stephen M. Dowell/Orlando Sentinel
Jane Auchter, 85, a resident at Encore at Avalon Park assisted living facility, takes a virtual-reality trip to the Grand Canyon on July 12, 2017.
Jane Auchter, 85, a resident at Encore at Avalon Park assisted living facility, takes a virtual-reality trip to the Grand Canyon on July 12, 2017. (Stephen M. Dowell/Orlando Sentinel)
No scientific studies prove the value of the technology among patients with dementia or other seniors.
But with society aging fast the U.S. Census Bureau predicts the 65-and-older population will grow from 49.1 million in 2016 to 83.7 million in 2050 and 98.2 million in 2060 several other companies in the U.S. and abroad also are experimenting with or marketing VR to senior-care and senior-living communities, hospitals and consumers.
Dr. Rosemary Laird, a Winter Park geriatrician whose specialties include memory disorders, said the technology sounds promising if only to bring the world to people who no longer can venture out.
One caveat, she said, would be to avoid scenarios that might frighten or overwhelm seniors who cant distinguish reality from the virtual world.
Virtual reality is part of a leap in care from three or four decades ago, when nursing homes tied unruly patients to chairs or their beds to keep them from hurting themselves or others, said Daniel Paulson, a professor of psychology at the University of Central Florida.
Later, drugs took the place of restraints, said Paulson, who is not familiar with the VR project but is involved with a music-therapy pilot program that pairs middle schoolers with residents at Encore at Avalon Park.
No one wants to go into a nursing home and learn that grandma has been drugged into submission, he said.
At minimum, Encore at Avalon Park administrators hope to inject a novel diversion into the lives of their residents.
If it doesnt decrease their anxiety or depression, at the very least, it gives them an enjoyable experience for half an hour and increases their quality of life, Edwards said.
sjacobson@orlandosentinel.com or 407-540-5981
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Skydance Interactive’s Award-Winning Virtual Reality Game ‘Archangel’ Is Available Now On Playstation VR – PR Newswire (press release)
Posted: at 4:13 am
Set in a post-apocalyptic America during the year 2089, players choose to play the role of Gabby or Gabriel Walker, codename "Guardian," who has been selected by the United States Free Forces to lead the resistance against the tyrannical corporation HUMNX, a private conglomerate that governs what is left of our ravaged nation. Players must use strategy and skill to fire upon enemies with a wide array of high-powered weapons while protecting their allies from onslaught.
"How better tointroduce players to Skydance Interactive's vision for the future of virtual reality gamingthantogive themhands-on controlofa giant mechin a waythat no other medium can deliver," said Peter Akemann, President of Skydance Interactive. "Now is the time to join the resistance, protect your friends and countrymen, and become the beacon of hope that America needs the Archangel!"
Archangel garnered "Best VR Game" Awards at E3 2017 from Geek Citadel, MMOGames, and MEUPS4. On August 2, 2017 it will be available on other leading virtual reality platforms, including HTC Vive and Oculus. A location-based version of the game will also be made available in IMAX VR Centres in August.
View the newest trailer for Archangel here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XoaFEXviJpE
To learn more about Archangel visit http://www.archangelgame.com and follow @archangelgame on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.
About Skydance InteractiveSkydance Interactive creates and publishes original and IP-based virtual reality, PC, and console games. The division of Skydance Media was launched in 2016 through the acquisition of The Workshop Entertainment, whose prior credits include franchise and genre-defining work on "Gears of War 4," "XCOM 2" for PS4/Xbox One, "Borderlands 2: Mr. Torgue's Campaign of Carnage," and "Sorcery" for Playstation Move. Skydance Interactive's first VR game the award-winning Archangel launches in July of 2017. The studio is located in Marina del Rey, CA.
ContactsShannon Olivas Corporate Communications (424) 2913485 solivas@skydance.com
View original content:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/skydance-interactives-award-winning-virtual-reality-game-archangel-is-available-now-on-playstation-vr-300489734.html
SOURCE Skydance Interactive
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Do You Need an Artificial Intelligence Strategy? The Answer May Surprise You – Fortune
Posted: at 4:13 am
Hilarie Koplow-McAdams, former president of New Relic.Stuart Isett for Fortune Brainstorm Tech
Although artificial intelligenceor AIhas taken center stage in nearly all technology discussions, it's unclear that every business needs an "AI strategy."
Initially, most attendees of a Fortune Brainstorm Tech conference panel in Aspen, Colo. on Tuesday agreed with the assertion that all companies need an AI game plan. But that consensus withered after just a little while.
For small companies, in particular, it probably makes no sense to dedicate limited resources to hire an AI expert, even if there were one available. It was also unclear how a mom-and-pop business, say a tailor shop, could benefit from AI, although Zachary Bogue, co-managing partner of the Data Collective, an early-stage tech venture fund, said that robots can already handle and sew fabric.
"Maybe every industry needs an AI strategy, but not every business," said George Kurtz, CEO of CrowdStrike, a cybersecurity specialist.
Related: Beware the Hype of AI
"AI is just beginning, so having a strategy around it is a problem because you have to define what you're talking about," said Norman Winarski, founder of Winarski Ventures. "A lot of industries will not do well by deploying chatbots," he added, referring to those automated customer service agents that are increasingly used by companies online. "You have to be incredibly careful in how you deploy an AI solution, you need to think about how people will react, and it takes a lot of resources."
And small businesses, as noted, have limited resources. And, given that small companies are the vast majority of American businesses, this is a rather large gap in the AI picture.
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Having said that, it's likely that many small businesses will end up using software that incorporates AI, said Hilary Koplow-McAdams, former president of New Relic ( newr ) and now board member of Tableau ( data ) . Virtually every business software company from Salesforce ( crm ) to Microsoft ( msft ) says they are weaving AI capabilities into their products.
Several attendees were skeptical of the notion that all applications are under the AI umbrella is wrong. Expert systems technology that emulates human decision processes doesn't necessarily require a lot of data, for example, said Michael Schrage, fellow for MIT's Center for Digital Business.
While machine learning, by its nature, requires large amounts of data in order to learn to recognize patterns, there are other jobs in which simple rules or operations can be automated without a lot of data.
"If you compete just on massive data, youve already lost to Facebook ( fb ) , Google ( goog ) , and Microsoft ( msft ) you've already lost," he said.
And, in those cases where a company does have a lot of data at its disposal, that data won't isn't valuable for AI if it is not formatted and prepared correctly. Several attendees stressed the need for "data refineries" to clean that data.
"If your data is not cleansed, you cannot use AI," Kurtz said.
So in this new-age era of AI, the old maxim still applies: Garbage in, garbage out.
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Do You Need an Artificial Intelligence Strategy? The Answer May Surprise You - Fortune
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Syte.ai, a visual search startup just for fashion, closes $8M Series A … – TechCrunch
Posted: at 4:13 am
Syte.ai, a visual search startup focused on fashion products, announced that it has raised an $8 million Series A. The lead investor is NHN Ventures (the investment arm of Korean internet services giant NHN), with participation from Naver Corp., messaging app Line Corp., Magma VC, Remagine VC, KDC Ventures, and NBM Ventures.
Co-founder and CMO Lihi Pinto Fryman was working as an investment banker in London when a red dress in Vogue caught her eye. She tried to find a similar one online, but couldnt.
I said to my husband, how can it be that in 2014 I see a dress that I really like and cant just tap it and get it? she told TechCrunch. The two started looking at ways to build a better visual search engine and in 2015 teamed up with CTO Dr. Helge Voss and COO Idan Pinto to launch Syte.ai (Lihis husband, Ofer Fryman, a former account executive at Hewlett-Packard, is CEO).
Syte.ais Series A will be used for marketing and growth in the U.S., where it hopes to sign up large fashion publishers and retailers. Of course, with Syte.ais new roster of investors, its fair to assume that it will also look for deals in Asia. Fryman declined to talk about potential partnerships, but said Syte.ais new Asian backers, including NHN and Line, have been searching for a while to find the most accurate deep-learning technology that can make images shoppable.
In a prepared statement, Woo Kim, managing director and partner of NHN Investment, said that many next-generation search solutions have delivered disappointing results so far.
It was largely because such below-average image search results were driven by essentially the same deep learning approach, and the only differentiation was how many sample images you have to train your database, he added.Syte.ais unique approach of redefining how machines understand images is simply ground-breaking innovation. We believe thatSyte.ai will disrupt the way industry adopts image search technology.
Syte.ais founders have spent the last three years developing its deep-learning algorithms, which Fryman describes as building a bridge between physics and fashion. Fryman says Syte.ai is different from its competitors because its deep learning-based search engine focuses only on fashion products, even though there are other verticals, such as home decor, where visual search is also in demand. Its main business are search tools for online publishers and retailers, but it also has several consumer products, including a Chrome extension called Fashion Lover, and Glamix, a chatbot.
The startup is just one of several that are tackling visual search as online businesses try to reduce their dependency on banner ads and find ways to monetize that are better suited to mobile screens. Other companies in the same space include Slyce, Clarifai, and Visenze, which is itself funded by another one of Asias leading Internet firms, Rakuten.
The reason we chose fashion is because its so hard to recognize, says Fryman. Think about your top. It looks completely different if you are wearing it, or if its on a hanger, or in a catalog, or if you are walking on a red carpet or sitting down. Its hard to teach the machine its the same item.
After a site integrates Syte.ais search technology, users can hover their cursor over an item in a photo and automatically get results for similar products that are on sale. For publishers, including fashion blogs and magazines, Syte.ai displays items from a range of stores and price points to increase the chances that the user will click on at least one result. The company monetizes by sharing revenue with publishers and charging e-commerce stores a subscription fee.
One of the main attractions for online stores is that Syte.ais search engine can help customers find alternative items if what they want is out of stock. According to a study by IHL Group, out-of-stocks cost retailers about $634.1 billion a year. It also helps sites turn over indexed inventory, or items overlooked by customers because they arent on the front page (at larger sellers, this can potentially be hundreds of items). Visual search is especially crucial for mobile shopping, where customers want to see as many results displayed as quickly as possible on their small screens. Once Syte.ai perfects visual search for fashion, Fryman says, it will move onto other verticals.
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Could artificial intelligence disrupt the photography world? – TechRepublic
Posted: at 4:12 am
Scroll through some of the recent stories found on TechRepublic and you'll see the topic of artificial intelligence (AI) mentioned on several occasions. AI isn't something widely seen in action today, but the reality of its becoming more common is definitely on the lips and text editors of technologists. Can AI disrupt the world of photography? Will it eventually replace human input when it comes to processing photos? Anything is possible, but I truly doubt it.
In a recent blog post, a team at Google shared how its deep learning technology has been able to produce "professional quality" photo editing for a batch of landscape photos. In blind testing, pro photographers rated up to 40% of the images edited by AI as semi-pro or pro level quality. Quite frankly, some of the images published were quite nice, but is this enough to disrupt the world of photography? I don't think so. Disrupt the world of photography editing? Well it could be useful, but not disruptive. Allow me to explain.
Let's think of a scenario that a photographer may face. First there's a scheduled photo shoot with a client. In general, the client will have ideas on what they're looking for in the session and the photographer works closely with the client to meet those needs. We'll just throw headshot sessions out the window and look more at product photography or photography based on a scene in our example. Now close your eyes, be the client, and think of an ad showing a boardroom setting. In any scenario, it's up to the client and photographer to determine the mood and message it wants presented in that boardroom photo shoot.
Is the message "Board meetings are serious and powerful"? Or is the message "Come together and collaborate"? Both messages can be answered from the same scene by making a few nuance changes with lighting, the models' posture, facial expressions, and gestures, or even the props used within the scene. The client may not understand those concepts, but the photographer will. In this scenario, I can't say AI will aid in getting the client's message across. Right now, the AI used by Google isn't based on compositing or replacing props in a scene. A boardroom with with a few bottles of water or cups of coffee does not give the same vibe as a boardroom with an open box of doughnuts and crumpled cans of energy drinks. AI isn't ready to replace the analytical skills a photographer brings to the set of a photo shoot.
In the editing process, the photographer and AI share the same data. If a client were to upload an image into an AI system, it could easily input specified parameters to assist in the editing process. Keywords and maybe even a brief description of what the client is looking for is handy data. The AI could analyze the keywords against the uploaded image, proceed with editing to fit the client's needs, and display it within minutes or even SECONDS as a preview. The client could then approve the image and download it for use.
But what if the client doesn't approve?
Speaking from experience, I've edited photos for clients who didn't always agree with my post processingespecially when dealing with humans in the images. "Can you make my neck look slimmer?" "Can you remove that small mole that's under my left eye?" Those are not outlandish requests and are pretty common because most people want aesthetically superior models in their photographs. On the other hand, some individuals have taken pride in or made a name for themselves around their imperfections. Think of the former NFL player, Michael Strahan. Strahan has a gap between his two front teeth. With the gazillions of dollars he's earned as a professional football player, he could easily have gotten orthodontic care to correct the gap. He didn't. How will AI photo editing handle such situations? Sure, the machine can learn to touch up skin blemishes or imperfections, but to what extent? Will the AI understand the context of the edit or the subject matter better than a human?
When I hosted a Smartphone Photographers Community, we discussed how photos that tell a story are usually the photos that capture our emotions. It may not be the photo with the best exposure or color saturation, but when you see it, you stop to admire it. For example, one of the more iconic images of US history is the raising of the US flag at Iwo Jima. This image isn't technically sound. The exposure isn't quite right and the contrast could be increased. But at the end of the day, WHO CARES? It's an awesome photo capturing an emotional moment. Who's to say that running the image through post processing wouldn't have ruined it?
I think it would be tough for AI to know when and where to draw the line when it comes to post processing photos. Some photos need human intervention in the editing process to understand the mood and message the photo is supposed to convey, not just the adjusting of exposure or white balance. If a photo is just a run-of-the-mill landscape photograph, there just may be a place for AI photo editing. But even with that said, I'd much rather lean on the professional skills of landscape photographers, such as Trey Ratcliff or Thomas Heaton, who have a way of tugging at your emotions with their photography.
What are your thoughts about AI photo editing? Leave a comment below or tag me on Twitter with your thoughts.
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Artificial Intelligence Experts Respond to Elon Musk’s Dire Warning for US Governors – Discover Magazine (blog)
Posted: at 4:12 am
If you hadnt heard, Elon Musk is worried about the machines.
Though that may seem a quixotic stance for the head of multiple techcompanies to take, it seems that his proximity to the bleeding edge of technological development has given him the heebie-jeebies when it comes to artificial intelligence. Hes shared his fears of AI running amok before, likening it to summoning the demon, and Musk doubled down on his stanceat a meeting of the National Governors Association this weekend, telling state leaders that AI poses an existential threat to humanity.
Amid a discussion of driverless vehicles and space exploration, Musk called for greater government regulations surrounding artificial intelligence research and implementation, stating:
Until people see robots going down the street killing people, they dont know how to react because it seems so ethereal. AI is a rare case where I think we need to be proactive in regulation instead of reactive. Because I think by the time we are reactive in AI regulation, its too late, according to theMIT Tech Review.
Its far from delusional to voice such concerns, given that AI could one day reach the point where it becomes capable of improving upon itself, sparking a feedback loop of progress that takes it far beyond human capabilities. When well actually reach that point is anyones guess, and were not at all close at the moment, as todays footage of a security robot wandering blindly into a fountain makes clear.
While computers may be snapping up video game records and mastering poker, they cannot approximate anything like general intelligence the broad reasoning skills that allow us to accomplish many variable tasks. This is why AI that excels at a single task, like playing chess, fails miserably when asked to do something as simple as describe a chair.
To get some perspective on Musks comments,Discover reached out to computer scientists and futurists working on the very kind of AI that the tech CEO warns about.
Elon Musks obsession with AI as an existential threat for humanity is a distraction from the real concern about AIs impact on jobs and weapons systems. What the public needs is good information about the actual consequences of AI both positive and negative. We have to distinguish between science and science fiction. In fictional accounts, AI is often cast as the bad guy, scheming to take over the world, but in reality AI is a tool, a technology and one that has the potential to save many lives by improving transportation, medicine, and more. Instead of creating a new regulatory body, we need to better educate and inform people on what AI can and cannot do. We need research on how to build AI guardiansAI systems that monitor and analyze other AI systems to help ensure they obey our laws and values. The world needs AI for its benefits, AI needs regulation like the Pacific ocean needs global warming.
Elon Musks remarks arealarmist. I recently surveyed300 leading AI researchers andthe majority of themthinkit will take at least 50 moreyearsto get tomachines as smart as humans. Sothis is not a problem that needs immediate attention.
And Im not too worried about what happenswhen we get to super-intelligence, astheresa healthy research communityworking onensuring that thesemachines wont pose an existential threat to humanity. I expecttheyll have worked out preciselywhat safeguards are needed by then.
But Elon is right about one thing: We do need government to startregulating AI now.However, it isthe stupid AI we have today that we need to start regulating.The biased algorithms. Thearms race to develop killer robots, where stupid AI will be giventhe ability to make life or death decisions. The threat to our privacy as the techcompanies get hold of all our personal and medical data. And the distortionof political debate that the internet is enabling.
The tech companies realizethey have a problem, and they havemade some efforts to avoid government regulation by beginning toself-regulate.Butthere are serious questions to be askedwhether they can be left to do this themselves.We are witnessing anAI race between the big tech giants, investing billionsof dollars in thiswinner takes all contest. Many other industries have seengovernment step in to prevent monopolies behaving poorly. Ive said thisin a talk recently, but Ill repeat it again: If some of the giants like Google and Facebookarent broken up in twenty years time, Ill be immensely worried for thefuture of our society.
There are no independent machine values; machine values are human values. If humanity is truly worried about the future impact of a technology, be it AI or energy or anything else, lets have all walks and voices of life be represented in developing and applying this technology. Every technologist has a role in making benevolent technology for bettering our society, no matter if its Stanford, Google or Tesla. As an AI educator and technologist, my foremost hope is to see much more inclusion and diversity in both the development of AI as well as the dissemination of AI voices and opinions.
Artificial Intelligence is already everywhere. Its ramifications of use rival that of the Internet,and actually reinforces them. AIis being embedded in almost every algorithm and system were building now and in the future. There is an essential opportunity to prioritize ethical and responsible design today for AI. However, this is more related to the greater immediate risk for AI and society, which isthe prioritization of exponential economic growth while ignoring environmental and societal issues.
In terms of whether Musks warnings of existential threats regarding Artificial Super-intelligence merit immediate attention, we actually risk large-scale negative and unintended consequences because were placing exponential growth and shareholder value abovesocietal flourishing metricsas indicators of successfor these amazing technologies.
To address these issues, every stakeholder creating AI must address issues of transparency, accountability and traceability in their work. They must ensure the safe and trusted access to and exchange of user data as encouraged by the GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation)in the EU. And they must prioritize human rights-centric well being metrics like the UN Sustainable Development Goals as predetermined global metrics of success that can provably increase human prosperity.
TheIEEE Global AI Ethics InitiativecreatedEthically Aligned Design: A Vision for Prioritizing Human Wellbeing with Artificial Intelligence and Autonomous Systemsto pragmatically help any stakeholders creating these technologies toproactively deal with the general types of ethical issues Musks concerns bring up. The group of over 250 global AI and Ethics experts were also the inspiration behind the series ofIEEE P7000 Standards Model Process for Addressing Ethical Concerns During System Designcurrently in progress, designed to create solutions to these issues in a global consensus building process.
My biggest concern about AI is designing and proliferating the technology without prioritizing ethical and responsible design or rushing to increase economic growth in a time we so desperately need to focus on environmental and societal sustainability to avoid the existential risks weve already created without the help of AI. Humanity doesnt need to fear AI, as long as we actnowto prioritize ethical and responsible design of it.
Elon Musks concerns about AI that will pose an existential threat to humanity are legitimate and should not be dismissedbut they concern developments that almost certainly lie in the relatively far future, probably at least 30 to 50 years from now, and perhaps much more.
Calls to immediately regulate or restrict AI development are misplaced for a number of reasons, perhaps most importantly because the U.S. is currently engaged in active competition with other countries, especially China. We cannot afford to fall behind in this critical race.
Additionally, worries about truly advanced AI taking over distract us from the much more immediate issues associated with progress in specialized artificial intelligence. These include the possibility of massive economic and social disruption as millions of jobs are eliminated, as well as potential threats to privacy and the deployment of artificial intelligence in cybercrime and cyberwarfare, as well as the advent of truly autonomous military and security robots. None of these more near term developments rely on the development of the advanced super-intelligence that Musk worries about. They are a simple extrapolation of technology that already exists. Our immediate focus should be on addressing these far less speculative risks, which are highly likely to have a dramatic impact within the next two decades.
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