Artificial Intelligence – The New York Times

Posted: June 17, 2016 at 4:54 am

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Virtual travel assistant services designed to understand conversational language are expected to change the way travel is planned.

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At an event sponsored by the Office of Science and Technology Policy, experts explored questions about systems that would make decisions without human input.

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Googles Home device puts it in the race to become the go-to company for A.I. along with several rivals.

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A virtual assistant designed to compete with the Echo from Amazon and other artificial intelligence devices coming from Microsoft, Apple and Facebook.

By DAVID STREITFELD

Smartphone apps offer a hint of the possible uses for emerging artificial intelligence technology.

By KIT EATON

Apple has Siri, Amazon has its Echo, and now Google will introduce its virtual agent, Google Home.

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A submersible robot in humanoid form, developed at Stanford University, completed its first dive in April, recovering a 17th-century vase.

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Mr. Cohen, an abstract painter, developed Aaron, a software program that learned to create art in a manner similar to freehand drawing.

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Regulators and others question whether robo-advisers, which assemble investment portfolios online, can grasp clients situations the way humans can.

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The two-foot-tall robot Xianer dwells in a Buddhist temple, dispensing wisdom about religion and life.

By DIDI KIRSTEN TATLOW

Silicon Valley has fallen in love with A.I. assistants, but so far theyre hardly impressive. Is it the industrys fault, or is it ours?

By JENNA WORTHAM

The company reported a 21 percent decline in first-quarter earnings for the first quarter, though operating earnings per share were above estimates.

By STEVE LOHR

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These automated software critters are growing in popularity, especially now that theyre doing more than pretending to be a human in a call center.

By JIM KERSTETTER

Features being added to Googles calendar will let users program in their aspirations for times when they dont have work or meetings scheduled.

By QUENTIN HARDY

The titan of consumer technology has a conundrum: Can it create consumer delight in technology without snooping on its customers?

By QUENTIN HARDY

Apple still seems to view online services as add-ons to its devices, not as products or platforms that rise above the equipment.

By FARHAD MANJOO

Virtual travel assistant services designed to understand conversational language are expected to change the way travel is planned.

By JANE L. LEVERE

At an event sponsored by the Office of Science and Technology Policy, experts explored questions about systems that would make decisions without human input.

By JOHN MARKOFF

Googles Home device puts it in the race to become the go-to company for A.I. along with several rivals.

By PUI-WING TAM

A virtual assistant designed to compete with the Echo from Amazon and other artificial intelligence devices coming from Microsoft, Apple and Facebook.

By DAVID STREITFELD

Smartphone apps offer a hint of the possible uses for emerging artificial intelligence technology.

By KIT EATON

Apple has Siri, Amazon has its Echo, and now Google will introduce its virtual agent, Google Home.

By DAVID STREITFELD

The Pentagon is trying to build bridges with Silicon Valley as it looks to build a new generation of smart weapons.

By QUENTIN HARDY

Fund-Raisers Pitch for Trump at Hedge Fund Conference | Online Art Auctioneers to Merge

Secretary of Defense Ashton B. Carter takes his bridge-building message to Silicon Valley despite skepticism among some in the tech community.

By JOHN MARKOFF

A submersible robot in humanoid form, developed at Stanford University, completed its first dive in April, recovering a 17th-century vase.

By JAMES GORMAN

Mr. Cohen, an abstract painter, developed Aaron, a software program that learned to create art in a manner similar to freehand drawing.

By WILLIAM GRIMES

Regulators and others question whether robo-advisers, which assemble investment portfolios online, can grasp clients situations the way humans can.

By TARA SIEGEL BERNARD

The two-foot-tall robot Xianer dwells in a Buddhist temple, dispensing wisdom about religion and life.

By DIDI KIRSTEN
TATLOW

Silicon Valley has fallen in love with A.I. assistants, but so far theyre hardly impressive. Is it the industrys fault, or is it ours?

By JENNA WORTHAM

The company reported a 21 percent decline in first-quarter earnings for the first quarter, though operating earnings per share were above estimates.

By STEVE LOHR

Wall Street Veterans Bet on Low-Income Homebuyers | Jose Cuervo Said to Be Preparing for I.P.O.

These automated software critters are growing in popularity, especially now that theyre doing more than pretending to be a human in a call center.

By JIM KERSTETTER

Features being added to Googles calendar will let users program in their aspirations for times when they dont have work or meetings scheduled.

By QUENTIN HARDY

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Artificial Intelligence - The New York Times

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