AI and Bird Population
Why it matters: AI and bird population: Researchers are currently analyzing a million hours of audio to gain insight into how birds responded to the fires and to find out which measures helped the birds recover.
Everything AI, Robotics, and IoT
Why it matters: AI and bird population: Researchers are currently analyzing a million hours of audio to gain insight into how birds responded to the fires and to find out which measures helped the birds recover.
Why it matters: Fully automated warehouse is not a future fictional possibility. It is already here and sucking out jobs from the warehousing industry.
Why it matters: Fastbrick Robotics developed the world’s first autonomous bricklaying robot that can lay brick ten times faster than the usual pace of a bricklayer.
Why it matters: The First Combat Drone With Artificial Intelligence Shocked The World! AI is making great strides in drone technology.
Why it matters: Artificial Intelligence and Air Travel: Artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming a multitude of areas within the air travel sector. AI is disrupting and enhancing traditional operations that were the main stay of air travel.
Why it matters: The Age of Artificial Intelligence: Steven S. Gouveia is the host of an international documentary with the participation of international experts on Artificial Intelligence where he interviews prominent academic researchers from all over the world.
Why it matters: Robots run this farm: Bowery Farming is growing lettuce, microgreens, herbs, and even strawberries in a century-old building.
Why it matters: China is using AI in classrooms: China is using AI in classrooms: A number of Chinese schools have recently been experimenting with the use of Artificial Intelligence in the classroom.
Why it matters: AI and Power Grids: AI enables power grids to recover quickly from natural disasters or cyberattacks. It automatically detects faults and helps electricity networks to self-heal without human intervention.
Why it matters: AI disrupting trucking industry: According to a study out of the University of Michigan, an automated system like this could replace about 90% of human drivers in U.S. long-haul trucking, roughly 500,000 jobs.