Showing posts with label Cloud Computing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cloud Computing. Show all posts

Friday, February 18

Artificial Intelligence as a Service


Artificial intelligence as a service refers to off-the-shelf AI tools that enable companies to implement and scale AI techniques at a fraction of the cost of a full, in-house AI.

The concept of everything as a service refers to any software that can be called upon across a network because it relies on cloud computing. In most cases, the software is available off the shelf. You buy it from a third-party vendor, make a few tweaks, and begin using it nearly immediately, even if it hasn’t been totally customized to your system.

For a long time, artificial intelligence was cost-prohibitive to most companies:
  • The machines were massive and expensive.
  • The programmers who worked on such machines were in short supply (which meant they demanded high payments).
  • Many companies didn’t have sufficient data to study.

As cloud services have become incredibly accessible, AI is more accessible: companies can gather and store infinite data. This is where AI-as-a-service comes in.

Now, let’s detour into AI so that we have the right expectations when engaging with AIaaS.
Understanding AI

We hear it repeated over and over: artificial intelligence is a way to get machines to do the same kind of work that human brains can accomplish. This definition is the subject of significant debate, with technology experts arguing that comparing machines to human brains is the wrong paradigm to use. It may promote fear that humans can be taken over by machines.

The term AI can also be used as a marketing tactic for companies to show how innovative they are—something known as artificial AI or fake AI.

Before we start worrying about the technological singularity, we need to understand what AI actually is.

“Intelligence is the efficiency with which you acquire new skills at tasks you didn’t previously prepare for… Intelligence is not skill itself, it’s not what you can do, it’s how well and how efficiently you can learn new things.”Francois Challot, AI Researcher at Google and creator of Keras

Monday, November 29

Forecasting 2022

Artificial Intelligence (AI) and machine learning, cloud computing, and 5G will be the most important technologies in 2022, according to a survey to global technology leaders from the U.S., U.K., China, India, and Brasil, conducted by IEEE.

The IEEE is the Institute of electronic and Electrical engineers....  and they believe the following areas will lead the way:
  • Telemedicine
  • Remote surgery
  • remote learning
  • personal communications
  • professional communications
  • live event streaming
  • manufacturing
  • transportations
  • energy efficiency
  • agriculture


Thursday, February 25

Technology Trends for 2021

According to Rohit Sharma of UpGrad.com, there are 8 Technological Trends for 2021 of which we should be or become aware...  

These are:
  1. Artificial Intelligence
  2. Data Science
  3. Networking Devices
  4. Electronic Ledger Blockchain
  5. Robotic Process Automation
  6. Virtual Reality
  7. Edge Computing
  8. Intelligence Applications
Of course...  UpGrad is offering courses in each one of these areas, in case you want to move towards a career in any of these areas...  however, Community College and Technical Institutes are offering the same courses and probably for a substantial reduction of enrollment fees...   I'm just saying...

With this said...  most if not all of these 8 areas are predicated upon cloud computing or storing data in the cloud so that the proximity to the user is closer thus reducing time...

Cloud computing is the on-demand availability of computer system resources, especially data storage and computing power, without direct active management by the user. The term is generally used to describe data centers available to many users over the Internet.