Number of Posts: 120
Posts 31 - 40
Google launches new Assistant and puts it at heart of Home
Newspaper | The Guardian
Date | 4.10.2016
Language | English
Country | UK
Topic Tags | artificial intelligence, Google
Summary | Google just launched a personal assistant; its new characteristic is its conversational interface. You can ask it a question at home and it will respond to you. You can also use it on your smartphone. Instead of typing a question, you can now directly ask something. Besides Google, Apple also has its personal assistant Siri, and Amazon has Alexa. Google Home can turn on the lights, play music, and answer your questions.
Image Description | Photographs of Google's assistant, Google Home speakers, and three smartphones displaying chat conversations
Image Tags | Google, smartphone, speaker, text
Read it and bleep: is virtual reality the future of storytelling?
Newspaper | The Guardian
Date | 12.10.2016
Language | English
Country | UK
Topic Tags | virtual reality
Summary | The world of storytelling is changing thanks to virtual reality. Indeed, new media is giving writers the possibility to tell their stories in different ways. What's also changing is the status of author and owner of stories. A festival in New York presented different work resulting from this new trend, where real and imaginary worlds meet. The author of the article explains her experience as she was brought into an imaginary world where she was allowed to influence the story.
Image Description | Photograph of a man wearing VR glasses and looking at a robot, and photograph of a room full of people wearing masks,
Image Tags | male(s)
Invasion of the troll armies: from Russian Trump supporters to Turkish state stooges
Newspaper | The Guardian
Date | 6.11.2016
Language | English
Country | UK
Topic Tags | fake news, politics, threat
Summary | Thousands of trolls out there are pretending to be someone else. They spread fake news and write fake texts in exchange of some money. For instance, Russian people were paid by their government in order to pretend to be Trump's supporters. In China, the practice is common; the government pays people to manipulate social media. The article lists other examples such as Russia, Ukraine, Israel, the UK, North and South Korea, and Turkey.
Image Description | Image of military men (their faces has been replaced by thumbs up), image of someone using a laptop, two social media illustrations
Image Tags | computer/laptop, male(s), social media
How a Canadian app is helping refugees find food, clean water and medical care
Newspaper | The Guardian
Date | 16.11.2016
Language | English
Country | UK
Topic Tags | smartphone, threat
Summary | A new app called Services Advisor was created by Canadian nonprofit PeaceGeeks. The goal of the app is to give refugees basic information about food, shelter, or medical care. The app is available in English and Arabic. A lot of refugees are tech-saavy people and already owned a smartphone before they had to leave their country.
Image Description | Photograph of a group of refugees, and screenshot of the app displaying different categories
Image Tags | female(s), male(s)
Tech may rule, but the human backlash is coming
Newspaper | The Guardian
Date | 24.11.2016
Language | English
Country | UK
Topic Tags | smartphone, technology-free, threat
Summary | Movies have a special relationship with new media: they hate it. Romcoms prefer showing people who fall in love while meeting face-to-face rather than on dating apps, sci-fi movies show apocalyptic scenes representing the future, and movies such as "Her" or "Ex Machina" show how artificial intelligence can lead to downfall. Why is the movie industry tech-sceptic? Maybe because the internet is ruining the movie business.
Image Description | Screenshot of a movie scene with Brad Pitt and Marion Cotillard.
Image Tags | female(s), male(s)
Alexa, lights! How I turned my home into a sci-fi dream
Newspaper | The Guardian
Date | 23.12.2016
Language | English
Country | UK
Topic Tags | artificial intelligence
Summary | Voice control was considered a movie thing or something we would see in the future. Now, thanks to AI butlers, we can talk to digital personal assistants such as Amazon's Echo. The author of the article describes his experience with Alexa (Echo), hooking her up, what it felt like the first time he used it in his home, and some problems he encountered when he asked Alexa to turn on the living room lights, for instance.
Image Description | Photograph of a red room, photograph of three people wearing what looks like space suits and using guns, and three videos
2016: the year AI came of age
Newspaper | The Guardian
Date | 28.12.2016
Language | English
Country | UK
Topic Tags | artificial intelligence
Summary | Artificial intelligence is everywhere now; from period-tracking apps to food delivery apps. Companies want to integrate AI into their apps in order to provide the best services. 2011 was an important year for AI with the introduction of Siri, Apple's digital personal assistant. Since then, AI has gone a long way. The next step that DeepMind (research lab) wants to reach is instant voice-to-voice translation.
Image Description | Photograph of three South Korean people, photograph of a man standing in a room full of computers, photograph of Amazon's personal assistant Echo in the foreground and a person in the background
Image Tags | computer/laptop, male(s)
'Bring your own device': weighing up the business benefits
Newspaper | The Guardian
Date | 23.1.2017
Language | English
Country | UK
Topic Tags | smartphone
Summary | Some businesses let their employees bring their own devices (e.g. laptop) at work. This is called BYOD (Bring your own device). This way, companies can save money, and it's also more convenient for employees to carry one device instead of two. In order to avoid any problems, companies that work with BYOD need to come up with good employee agreements, and use cloud-based services. The article also lists several examples of BYOD companies and explains the (dis)advantages of the method.
Image Description | Portraits of four men, and photograph of people's hands using a tablet, a smartphone, and a laptop.
Image Tags | computer/laptop, hand(s), male(s), smartphone, tablet
Facebook’s censorship of Aboriginal bodies raises troubling ideas of ‘decency’
Newspaper | The Guardian
Date | 23.3.2016
Language | English
Country | UK
Topic Tags | censorship, diversity, Facebook, gender, law
Summary | Facebook does not mind showing Kim Kardashian’s cleavage, but it didn't allow images of topless Aboriginal women. Major social network platforms are led by capitalism, and although they claim they want to create global and equal platforms, not all stories are treated the same way. As a result, On Facebook, images of famous women naked are okay whereas images of other women around the world are deemed “inappropriate”.
Image Description | Photograph of four Aboriginal women
Image Tags | female(s)
Shazam for the soul - can computers assess us better than humans?
Newspaper | The Guardian
Date | 7.6.2016
Language | English
Country | UK
Topic Tags | artificial intelligence
Summary | Technology can be used to assess our personality. For instance, voice profiling is already being used to analyze how we speak. Thanks to voice profiling, we can predict a person's future job performance or tell what a person's personality is (e.g. extraverted/introverted). The words we choose can also tell something about our personality. For instance, it seems that agreeable/nice people use positive and friendly words, and that neurotic people swear more. Although technology can do a lot, people like their intuition. However, we should not forget that algorithms are not prejudiced the way people are.
Image Description | Photograph of a robot sitting at a desk
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