On Sunday, January 14, 2018 at 9:57:14 AM UTC-7, John Clark wrote:
>
> On Sun, Jan 14, 2018 at 5:17 AM,
> wrote:
>
> >
>> I recently viewed a documentary on Quasars. IIRC, they are interpreted as
>> immense BH's with inflowing matter of galactic size to account for
Microsoft achieved 82,650 on the Stanford University reading and
comprehension test, the best human score so far is 82,304.
http://www.kurzweilai.net/deep-neural-network-models-
score-higher-than-humans-in-reading-and-comprehension-
test?utm_source=KurzweilAI+Daily+Newsletter_campaign=
--What is the craziest AI application you can think of?
A machine learned pet translator perhaps... they're actually working on that
app, Amazon amongst others.So, it seems the big players Google as well, are
running in that race... think of the potential market of pet owners forking
over their
On 1/16/2018 8:55 PM, 'Chris de Morsella' via Everything List wrote:
--What is the craziest AI application you can think of?
A machine learned pet translator perhaps... they're actually working
on that app, Amazon amongst others.
So, it seems the big players Google as well, are running in
Sent from Yahoo Mail on Android
On Tue, Jan 16, 2018 at 9:19 PM, Brent Meeker wrote:
On 1/16/2018 8:55 PM, 'Chris de Morsella' via Everything List wrote:
--What is the craziest AI application you can think of?
A machine learned pet translator perhaps...
Oh, no! As an media art student, I don’t believe in strict rules oft usefulness
(of course!). It was a rather suggestive or maybe even sarcastic approach to
get unusual thoughts from everything.
Maybe I should rephrase my question: What is the craziest AI application you
can think of?
K E N O
6 matches
Mail list logo