Good read on automation

“You’re going to see automation not just in airports 
and grocery stores, but in restaurants.” He added that machines are, “always polite, they always upsell, they never take a vacation, they never show up late, there’s never a slip-and-fall, or an age, sex, or race discrimination case”

The funny things happening on the way to singularity
http://social.techcrunch.com/2016/04/09/the-funny-things-happening-on-the-way-to-singularity/
via Instapaper

Bots Need to Learn Some Manners, and It’s on Us to Teach Them

“Right now, their uses may seem mundane—ordering pizza over SMS, or buying burritos in Slack. But as chatbots proliferate and grow more skilled, they could offer smarter, more personalized experiences. Imagine a bot that counsels you about legal matters, or even your mental health.”

Bots Need to Learn Some Manners, and It’s on Us to Teach Them
http://www.wired.com/2016/04/bots-emergent-behavior-deception/
via Instapaper

The funny things happening on the way to singularity

“Machines will be better at math, science and engineering than we will.
But consider an alternative scenario. Let’s say you’re really sick and go to the emergency room. The hospital uses artificial intelligence to diagnose your symptoms. In real time, machines scan your DNA, review your medical history and analyze your vital signs.

AI can diagnose the problem much faster and more accurately. Plus, doctors work insane hours, seeing an average of 80 patients per week. Machines never get tired.

If your life was at stake, would you want machines to have access to your private, personal information? In either of the scenarios above, it may already be too late.”

The funny things happening on the way to singularity
http://social.techcrunch.com/2016/04/09/the-funny-things-happening-on-the-way-to-singularity/
via Instapaper

The Real Reasons That Amazon's Alexa May Become The Go-To AI For The Home | Fast Company | Business + Innovation


The Real Reasons That Amazon's Alexa May Become The Go-To AI For The Home

If Amazon’s Alexa had just served as an entry point to the company's mega-marketplace, it would have been as boring as the failed Amazon Fire smartphone. But Alexa is way more than that.

Alexa feels like an AI, nothing less. She’s a personal assistant that lives in the cloud and is always listening to you, through a number of available physical devices that use her as their brain. These include the Amazon Echo, the Echo Dot, the Amazon Tap, and Fire TV.

When the first embodiment of Alexa, the Echo, was introduced in late 2014, many thought the device was just a thing you could talk to to buy stuff on Amazon. That’s why Alexa was roundly mocked by tech pundits for the whole first chapter of her life.

But as the laughter died down, people began buying, and loving, the Echo. The Echo is just a thing with some microphones and a speaker; what they loved is Alexa, not her body but her brain. Some people bought two or three of her. People built special niches in their walls for her. The reviews on Amazon were glowing, and still are.

Standing on the kitchen counter, Alexa proved simple and immediately useful. She can read you recipes or the news. She played Spotify or Pandora streams. She made to-do lists for you. And yes, she ordered stuff for you on Amazon.

Alexa isn’t yet as smart and functional as other personal assistants like Apple’s Siri and Google’s Google Now, but she hears you better, she isn’t trapped inside a phone, or inside some platform's garden walls. And Amazon has made it easy for third-party developers and device makers to integrate with Alexa. These early strategic choices by Amazon will amplify the leaps forward in intelligence that Alexa will make in the future.


Photo: courtesy of Amazon

Alexa Is Open...