Apple goes all-in on AI, with announcements at WWDC including computer vision for suggesting recipes, upgraded autocorrect, Vision Pro AR headset, and virtual avatars. National labs are also making strides with AI in police interactions, blood tracking, and hyperspectral imagery. Los Alamos is advancing memristors, and MIT is inching closer to autonomous aviating technology. Meanwhile, Disney Research has developed customized facial landmark detection network to enhance cinematic expression quality.
Ikigai Labs' AI Apps platform uses large graphical models and expert-in-the-loop to combat supply chain-directed ransomware attacks. Learn more with VentureBeat.
Meet Angelina Tsuboi, a 17-year-old coding prodigy who's making waves in the software industry with her innovative apps. From winning the Student Swift Challenge at Apple's annual Worldwide Developers Conference to working on low-cost buoy technology to detect tsunamis, Tsuboi's accomplishments are truly inspiring. Read on to learn more about her early successes, experience at WWDC 2022, and plans for the future.
MIT researchers, in collaboration with IBM, have developed a new machine-learning technique called CAV-MAE that blends multiple modalities to learn more like humans. The breakthrough method uses contrastive learning and masked data modeling with audio and visual data and aims to replicate how humans perceive and understand the world. CAV-MAE outperformed previous techniques in event classification, providing significant breakthroughs for action recognition, speech recognition, and audio-video generations.
Explore the evolution of tech policy from Obama's optimism to Harris's vision at the Democratic National Convention. What's next for Democrats in tech?