Jeff Bezos lays out Amazon’s three-pronged approach to AI – Quartz

Posted: April 17, 2017 at 12:53 pm

Amazonians and investors alike, rest assured: Jeff Bezos knows artificial intelligence is a big deal.

The Amazon CEO took a few paragraphs in his annual shareholder letter to explain how the company is using AI throughout its business, having recognized and embraced the external trend. The letter itself focuses on the idea that Amazon is still in Day 1, still a startup thats well aware that irrelevance and excruciating decline begins when you reach Day 2.

Bezos outlined three major categories that artificial intelligence falls into at the company: visible products and moonshots, core operations, and enterprise cloud.

The outside world can push you into Day 2 if you wont or cant embrace powerful trends quickly. If you fight them, youre probably fighting the future. Embrace them and you have a tailwind, Bezos writes.

This category is what Bezos calls a practical application of machine learning, consumer-facing products or services that wouldnt be possible without AI. The Amazon Go grocery store fits in here, as well as Prime Air delivery drones, and of course, the companys virtual personal assistant, Alexa.

While Amazon Go and Prime Air delivery are still in extremely early stages, Alexa has become the virtual assistant du jourthis year we think it won CES without even showing up. Its easy to see Amazon as a leader here, since the Echos release practically invented the product category of voice-assistant speaker.

Artificial intelligence isnt all drones and virtual assistantsBezos says that a lot of the AI work within the company happens under the hood of its core business, e-commerce. The company uses artificial intelligence to predict product demand, power search rankings, create and recommend deals, detect fraud, and translate the site into other languages.

Though less visible, much of the impact of machine learning will be of this type quietly but meaningfully improving core operations, Bezos says.

This also fails to mention Amazons highly-automated warehouses, which use robots to accelerate processing and shipping time.

This is typically where peoples eyes start to glaze over. Its hard to overstate Amazons dominance in the sector, though: the company earns more than 5 times the revenue of its nearest competitor, Microsoft. Alongside S3 storage that supports much of the web (and cripples much of the web when it fails), Amazon offers easy tools for developers to integrate Amazons artificial intelligence algorithms into their own applications, as well as servers for AI companies to run their own algorithms.

The cloud is also a great marketing tool for providers like Amazon, because the work that others are doing on the platform usually sounds very impressive, without the provider having to do much of the tinkering and design that makes the final product work. Bezos touts the companys pre-packaged AI algorithms as helping predict disease and estimate crop yields for farmers, with no machine learning expertise required.

Capping AIs section of the letter, Bezos says: Watch this space. Much more to come.

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Jeff Bezos lays out Amazon's three-pronged approach to AI - Quartz

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