AI will be having a big coming out party in 2017. While there are plenty of opportunities in this space for workers, executives, investors and partners, not every company that uses the term “AI” in its marketing will become a serious winner in the field. As advanced as AI is — and I have seen some technology that would blow your socks off — not every company is created equal. Some will be real winners early on, but most won’t go much further than using the terminology in their marketing, so they can ride the next growth wave.
I don't see how voice recognition would be True AI, though. I mean, on a very basic basic level on a technicality I can see that.... or one can make it specifically in that fashion...
But surely with various sounds and fluxuations and emphases, it can be more like an advanced grammar checker -- knowledge as it's core.
My challenge question to journalists in the 2016+ digital age, where pioneers are "architecting the future at the speed of though", is to ask if a journalist (especially one exhibiting your deep insights) might be justified in heeding the calling to interweave futures scenarios as challenge perspectives into their reflective content.
2017: AI’s Coming Out Party
Posted by: Jeff Kagan December 20, 2016 05:00 AMAI will be having a big coming out party in 2017. While there are plenty of opportunities in this space for workers, executives, investors and partners, not every company that uses the term “AI” in its marketing will become a serious winner in the field. As advanced as AI is — and I have seen some technology that would blow your socks off — not every company is created equal. Some will be real winners early on, but most won’t go much further than using the terminology in their marketing, so they can ride the next growth wave.
But surely with various sounds and fluxuations and emphases, it can be more like an advanced grammar checker -- knowledge as it's core.