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Gregory Zuckerman
Special Writer, The Wall Street Journal
Michael Zeltkevic
Managing Partner, Global Head of Capabilities, Oliver Wyman
The steady advancement of artificial intelligence is rapidly transforming our world with a host of emerging innovations such as self-driving cars, automated financial advisers, and expert medical systems. Developers are producing data-intensive computer systems designed to observe, learn, and solve complex problems faster and more accurately than their human counterparts. As these technologies become increasingly mainstream, they promise enormous public benefits including higher productivity, improved health and safety, and fairer decision making. While these technologies have incredible potential to generate economic and social good, these breakthroughs may not occur unless the public and private sectors work in partnership to promote the development and adoption of artificial intelligence, address new regulatory questions, and integrate the technology into agencies at all levels of government.
The Center for Data Innovation hosted a conversation with leading experts on the state of artificial intelligence and machine learning, the efforts by the public and private sectors to support related research and development, and the important policy steps that regulators and lawmakers should make to unlock these new opportunities.
Speakers included: Greg Corrado (co-lead of Google’s deep neural networks project), Ashley J. Llorens (Chief of the Intelligent Systems Center at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory), Fernando Diaz (Senior Researcher at Microsoft Research), Dennis Mortensen (CEO, x.ai), FTC Commissioner Terrell McSweeny, Terah Lyons (Policy Advisor, Office of Science and Technology Policy, White House), Hilary Cain (Director, Tech and Innovation Policy, Toyota), and David Moschella (Director of Research, Computer Sciences Corp).
CAMP TV reads the YouTube algorithm report so you don't have to. Watch this 90-second video on the CAMP TV YouTube Channel. CAMP TV, the summer camp video experts. Found online at www.camptv.net
Broken plastic forks, CD-ROMs, and a nuked and cleaned CD-ROM placed on the flatbed scanner. The resulting image has had the contrast adaptively increased.
The Algorithm in the Room
MDP Design Dialogues Symposium + Exhibition with Tim Durfee, Ben Hooker, and Mimi Zeiger
The Algorithm in the Room: An Evening of the Post-Geographic brings together an interdisciplinary group of designers and thinkers to discuss relationships between algorithmic and spatial practices. The algorithm in the room is the unspoken technological subject that reorients our understanding of design outcomes, ethics/politics, and authorship. Yet to concretize the algorithm, to try to peg down its functional uses within design is to misunderstand its potentially slippery (and productive) role as a bad collaborator. Feral and unpredictable, it provokes human, systemic, and urbanistic response. Via conversations and through digital, video, and screen-based works, this symposium and exhibition looks to raise difficult questions regarding the politics of predictive/automatized software, its architectural and urban impacts, and the aftereffects of recalibrated design agency. Speakers include: Jeff Maki, urban strategist and Joanne McNeil, writer. Videos exhibited by John Szot Studio, Tim Durfee + Ben Hooker, Jenny Rodenhouse.
Do Algorithms Care? is a collaboration between artist Amanda Bennetts and data scientist Johanna Einsiedler. The project is realized in an installation that mimics a tech store, turning a critical lens on the commercialization of bio-data. Using the duo's open-source DIY smartwatches and interactive data interface, they explore the predictive potential of personal data and machine learning for well-being, inviting viewers to reconsider their relationship with data control and privacy.
Photo: martin doersch
drawing on canvas with trear physics tendrils using texones creative computing framework which is based on processing
This picture have been generated by Julien Bayle's Electronic Cities art installation at the Gallery Karima Celestin during the UT0PIA exhibition in 2015
1. misty mornings, 2. tea or coffee, 3. “Friendship is a sheltering tree.”, 4. HBW!, 5. At the fair, 6. Celebration time!, 7. little field of flowers..., 8. gloves,
9. “The more we sweat in peace, the less we bleed in war.”, 10. esplanade in Ostend, Belgium, 11. High, 12. on her way..., 13. the castle of Horst, 14. summer..., 15. choices..., 16. anne & granita & nikon,
17. garden flowers, 18. flickr.com/photos/16921807@N04/2590608212/, 19. lean on me..., 20. “He is happiest who hath power to gather wisdom from a flower.”, 21. .... in the bubble, 22. first lavender, 23. “Spring has come when you can put your foot on three daisies”, 24. blossom & co,
25. looking forward...., 26. need an umbrella?, 27. swan... a beauty, 28. lantern, waiting too..., 29. a cloud.. or..., 30. canadian goose, 31. duck, 32. In love,
33. Laïs, 34. Badeendjes, 35. Zandberg, Langdorp
Created with fd's Flickr Toys.
The graceful bend of this sculpture is shaped by the precise hand of artificial intelligence, blending natural form with digital precision.
Algorithmic composition. A zoomable image can be found here. Unlike what you may think, this image is brightly colored, see this blog post.