It's fashionable (and usually quite correct) to ding Oracle as it scrambles to navigate the transition to the cloud computing era. Buteven though we're getting ready to put on our ninth Structure cloud event this November, there is still a lot of time to carve out a cloud business, as Steve Daheb of Oracle argues in
an interview with The Wall Street Journal.
GOOGLE STARTED ON SELF-DRIVING CARS BEFORE UBER EXISTED, BUT UBER IS GETTING TO CUSTOMERS FIRST One of the most promising applications of artificial intelligence research is the developmentof self-driving vehicles, and Uber took a big step toward that future this week with plans to operate a fleet of self-driving (but closely supervised) cars in Pittsburgh.
Recode analyzes the competitive forces driving Google, Uber and all of us toward autonomousvehicles, which are so close and so far away at the same time.
CIA OFFICIAL: 'CLOUD HAS BEEN A GODSEND' In other secretive government agency news, it appears the CIA-Amazon Web Services cloud deal is working out pretty well for everybody. Sherril Nicely, the chief information security officer of the CIA, gave AWS quite the pull quote for its Re:Invent conference by declaring the service a "godsend" when it comes to securing sensitive workloads,
as reported by NextGov.
INTEL UNVEILS NEXT-GENERATION XEON PHI CHIPS FOR AI It was Intel Developer Forum week in San Francisco, and while the biggest news might have been Intel's deal with ARM to start making ARM-based chips in its factories, the company also showed that it is starting to produce much more flexible chips than in the past.
Venturebeat reports that Intel plans to launch new server processors designed specifically for artificial intelligence, and Baidu is already on board as a customer.
THE NEXT WAVE OF AI IS ROOTED IN HUMAN CULTURE AND HISTORY Speaking of Intel and artificial intelligence,
Engadget has a nice interview with Intel's Genevieve Bell this week on the future of AI. Bell, who has brought a human touch to Intel's chip research for years, has some interesting thoughts on how well manage the rise of artificial intelligence and why humanity isnt exactly about to disappear.
THE DIRTIEST LITTLE SECRET ABOUT BIG DATA: JOBS Data is the lifeblood of the modern tech industry, but using the tools required to unlock the power of that data is still harder than it should be.
ZDNet returns to something we discussed earlier this year at Structure Data: way too many data-driven analysis tools require a ton of human intervention to make sure the data being put into the system is clean and relevant, and that's a waste of time and money.