Archive for the ‘Machine Learning’ Category

Recorded Future – CIA,Google invests into future-predicting website

Sunday, August 8th, 2010

What can Recorded Future do? Lets watch:

How does it work?

Recorded Future scans Twitter accounts, blogs, and websites to find relationships, organizations, actions and incident data related to general themes.

  • Scour the web
  • Extract, rank and organize
  • Make it accessible and useful

It features the world’s first Temporal Analytics Engine (unlike a decision engine this uses a time series analysis). A new predictive analysis tool that allows you to visualize the future, past or present.

Prices and Plans:

About Recorded Future

Recorded Future is an early stage company headquartered in the Boston area. We have 15+ employees in various corners of the globe attacking a hard problem – organize the web in a radically new and useful way. The world’s 24×7 media flow constantly talk about time, whether it is reports of what’s transpired or statements of what’s expected to come. Recorded Future’s linguistics and statistics algorithms extract time-related information and through temporal reasoning helps users understand relationships between entities and events over time, to form the world’s first temporal analytics engine. Our customers include some of the most advanced financial institutions and leading government agencies in the world.

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AI & Home

Wednesday, July 14th, 2010

Microsoft Research displayed some latest AI software developed by them. The focus was on AI @ home; the software displayed used different kinds of machine learning techniques, where computer software is able to learn how to carry out tasks that are useful to people without having to be programmed to perform that exact task.

[Read Silicon]

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DARPA pushing machine learning into electronic warfare

Wednesday, July 14th, 2010

Behavioral Learning for Adaptive Electronic Warfare (BLADE) program under DARPA is  developing algorithms and techniques to enable U.S. electronic warfare systems to learn to jam new RF threats automatically in the field, instead of waiting for technicians in laboratories to characterize new communications threats and develop countermeasures. This is a clear sign of advancing intelligent technology in electronic warfare.

[Read MilitaryAeroSpace & BLADE]

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Watson! Dear Watson!

Monday, June 21st, 2010

For the last few years, IBM scientists have been developing the most advanced “question answering” machine, able to understand a question posed by the user, and is expected to respond with a precise answer. In other words, it must do more than what search engines like Google and Bing do, which is merely point to a set of results where you might find the answer. But Watson has to give the correct answer itself. Lets look at Watson in a trivia challenge:

[ MSNBC ]

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