Watson, the Jeopardy-winning supercomputer developed by IBM, could become a cloud-based service that people can consult on a wide range of issues, the company announced last week. “Watson is going to be an advisor and an assistant to all kinds of professional decision-makers, starting in healthcare and then moving beyond. We’re already looking at a role for Watson in financial services and in other applications,” says John Gordon, Watson Solutions Marketing Manager at IBM in New York. More »
Those looking for a juxtaposition of IBM’s past and future needn’t look much further than two bits of news out of the company this week. The first comes with IBM’s announcement of its new zEnterprise EC12 25 mainframe server — a class of computer that may be a thing of the past in some places, but which still serves a fairly broad range of companies. In addition to an appearance that lives up to the “mainframe” moniker, this one promises 25 percent more performance per core than its predecessor and 50 percent more capacity. The second bit of news involves Watson, the company’s AI effort that rose to fame on Jeopardy! and has since gone on to find a number of new roles. As Bloomberg reports, one of its next steps may be to take on Siri in the smartphone space. While there’s no indication of a broader consumer product, IBM sees a range of possible applications for a mobile Watson in business and enterprise — even, for instance, giving farmers the ability to ask when they should plant their crops. Before that happens, though, IBM says it needs to give Watson more “senses” in order to respond to real-world input like image recognition — not to mention learn all it can about any given subject.
IBM debuts new mainframe computer as it eyes a more mobile Watson originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 29 Aug 2012 12:48:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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AT&T officially releases Watson speech API, gives devs a bit of babel fish for their apps
Posted in: Today's Chili Ma Bell’s been hard at work on its Watson speech recognition system for years, and 2012 has seen the tech show up in an automobile and a real-time translator app. Months after announcing it would grant Watson’s skills to the developer masses, AT&T has made good on its promise and officially released its Speech API. In case you forgot, AT&T’s Nuance competitor’s been tailored for different use cases — including voice web search, voicemail-to-text and talk-to-text — so that it can offer contextually accurate results in any app. If you’re among the coders itchin’ to test out Watson’s capabilities, head on past the break for a promotional video, then click the source below to sign up for access.
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AT&T officially releases Watson speech API, gives devs a bit of babel fish for their apps originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 10 Jul 2012 02:26:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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AT&T Watson SDK released
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AT&T announced its own speech recognition technology, Watson, not too long ago and now it looks like developers can finally make use of it. The company recently made its Watson engine SDK available to its developers. In case you’re unsure of what Watson is, it is AT&T’s response to Apple’s Siri or Google’s Voice Search/Google Now. However, Watson is touted to be more functional than its counterparts, with the ability to recognize not only speech, but speech combined with other modalities (i.e. in conjunction with a touchscreen tap or gesture). Check out the video above to see a promo video for Watson. We can’t wait to see what sort of apps and services will make use of Watson in the future.
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