New York Times wades into Watson
Apparently, it is not Applish enough
The New York Times, which long ago sacrificed its technology journalistic credibility to hawk Apple products, has waded into the IBM supercomputer Watson.
Watson will work on rival clouds
IBM seeks to win over more AI customers
Big Blue has said that some of its Watson artificial intelligence services will work on rival cloud computing providers.
IBM cloud looks for AI bias
More transparency
IBM is now offering a cloud-based service designed to detect bias in AI and bring transparency to how AI-powered systems make decisions.
IBM's Watson still not Dr House yet
Made a few mistakes
Hopes that AI might prove useful in medical diagnosis have received a bit of a set back after it was found that IBM's Watson supercomputer had been coming up with "multiple examples of unsafe and incorrect treatment recommendations".
IBM CEO says 80 percent of data is not searchable
IBM Think 2018: That is where AI can help
Ginni Rometty, the President and CEO of IBM, reminded us that the world we are living in has changed dramatically. Eighty percent of data created is not searchable and this is where AI can really help.
Business users get their paws on Watson
To build Mobile AI for the great unwashed
IBM has launched Watson Assistant, an artificial intelligence (AI) powered voice assistant for businesses to package to consumers.
IBM wants to put Watson on a smartphone
Project Intu gets into embodied cognition
The ever-shrinking Big Blue is improving its cognitive computing efforts with the launch of a new system-agnostic platform called Project Intu.
IBM's CTO shows off GPU-accelerated Cognitive Computing
Watson is all about human insight, discovery and advice
On Wednesday, IBM’s Chief Technology Officer Rob High gave a keynote speech with an emphasis on “cognitive computing” – another term for artificial intelligence, but with a goal of changing the role between humans and machines rather than recreating the human brain in machine form.
IBM's Watson has written a cookbook
And it can't even try what it creates
Normally when people are set to retire they have a crack at writing a novel or a biography and it seems that IBM's supercomputer Watson is no different.