Tuesday was the 30th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square Protests. Here's a video of Chinese college students being asked about the event. It is a pretty interesting look at censorship and fear of government consequences for lack of free speech.
Here are some of the posts that caught my eye recently. Hope you find something interesting.
- China's Big AI Advantage: Humans. (News)
- The Natural Genius of Ants is Helping Us Build Better Algorithms. (Wired)
- 5 Myths about Strategy. (HBR)
- Percentage of Americans Who Never Traveled beyond the State Where They Were Born? A Surprise? (Forbes)
- At Disneyland's New Star Wars' Attraction – Brace Yourself for $200 Lightsabers, $42 Cocktails and 4 A.M. Lines. (MarketWatch)
- Billionaire Mike Bloomberg Tells Harvard Graduates that Money Isn't Important. (TheLadders)
- The Radical Plan to Change How Harvard Teaches Economics. (Vox)
- Apple Patents the Foldable iPhone Display; Here's What It Looks Like. (ValueWalk)
- Quantum Computing Will Change the Digital World beyond Recognition. (Metro)
- Atlanta Fed President Bostic Does Not See a Rate Cut this Year like the Market is Telegraphing. (CNBC)
Visualizing The AI Revolution
I'm surprised how often I see people who are bearish on Artificial Intelligence. Many are stuck in science fiction's depictions - sentience, personification, etc.. Modern AI is very different from science fiction predictions, but is still exciting. (Here's an infographic debunking 8 common AI myths)
Modern AI does many things and has many applications, but ultimately it's relatively faceless. It works in the background, impacts everything it touches, and silently collects vast lakes of data. AI may not be Star Trek's "Data," but it is transforming our economy at warp speed.
TechJury has put together an infographic on the history of AI until today. It highlights a number of key inflection points, AI's impact on today's economy, and which countries and companies are leading the pack.
AI By The Numbers (Taken From TechJury)
To me, it's clear that AI is the major driving force of tomorrow. AI continues to perform increasingly impressive tasks. Last week, I saw an AI that can make realistic video renderings from one picture, and Google's DeepMind beat humans in a multiplayer shooting game, operating on a single metric.
If you're as excited about the potential for AI as I am, here are some articles I wrote that you may have missed:
Posted at 09:47 AM in Business, Current Affairs, Gadgets, Ideas, Market Commentary, Science, Trading, Trading Tools, Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (0)
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