MIT Technology Review Subscribe

AI’s Chip War, Robots Slow to Steal Jobs, and Life Without Amazon—The Download, May 11, 2017

The most fascinating and important news in technology and innovation delivered straight to your inbox, every day.

The battle to build chips for the AI boom is about to get serious.
As machine learning has blossomed, the technique has become the hot ticket for businesses keen to innovate (or at least, sound like they plan to). That’s proven to be good news for anyone building hardware that runs AI software—and until now, that really meant Nvidia, which happily found that the graphics processors it had been making for years were surprisingly well-suited to crunching AI problems. But our own Tom Simonite explains that Nvidia’s dominance may be about to slide.

Get The Download! Sign up here to have it delivered free to your inbox.

Advertisement

Is automation actually doing enough to transform the labor market?
We always hear that robots are taking jobs. Now a report by the industry-supported Information Technology and Innovation Foundation provides a counter. It says that 165 years of U.S. labor history show job churn is lower than in the past, suggesting that technology’s impact isn’t as pronounced as many think. Robots certainly fuel unemployment, but that assumes they’re put to use—and many roles still aren’t automated which may explain the result. It’s questionable to argue the problem doesn’t exist, but the ITIF’s right about one thing: productivity needs a boost.

Microsoft is looking beyond the smartphone for its next stab at success.
At its annual developer conference this week, Microsoft continued an innovation push by describing its vision for the future. The plan, outlined by the Register: hulking AIs in the cloud, feeding smaller devices—not necessarily smartphones—each running their own nimble AIs. Described by Microsoft’s CEO, Satya Nadella, as the “intelligent cloud and intelligent edge,” it feels to us more like a natural evolution of the current cloud-and-smartphone combination.

This story is only available to subscribers.

Don’t settle for half the story.
Get paywall-free access to technology news for the here and now.

Subscribe now Already a subscriber? Sign in
You’ve read all your free stories.

MIT Technology Review provides an intelligent and independent filter for the flood of information about technology.

Subscribe now Already a subscriber? Sign in

Ten Fascinating Things

  1. Would you cope if you could no longer use Amazon? Google? Facebook? Farhad Manjoo argues that the largest tech firms have us all locked in.
  2. A new device the size of a Saltine can track motion, sound, pressure, humidity, temperature, light intensity, and more to make any room smart
  3. As commercial space firms hustle to get to Mars, NASA is left behind in the race to build better rockets. (Plus: why Buzz Aldrin wants to scrap the ISS.)
  4. Tesla’s new solar roof tiles are now ready to pre-order. Bloomberg’s analysis: they might just be cheap enough to really grow the U.S. solar market.
  5. When Germany decided to stop using nuclear power, it had a lot of decommissioning work ahead of it. Now, it’s selling on its newfound expertise.
  6. A new system allows surgeons to load data from MRI and CT scans onto a HoloLens so that they can see a patient’s organs in augmented reality.
  7. Make no mistake: India loves to burn coal. But solar prices in the country have recently plummeted, which may spur adoption of renewables.
  8. Drones can capture stacks of data as they zip through the sky. But as their numbers increase, question is: what will we do with all that information?
  9. Think of biofuels and you likely picture fields of corn and sugarcane. Would plants like agave and hemp be a better bet?
  10. Seeing text with your tongue and visualizing surroundings via sound. These sensory-substitution techniques could change how we interact with the world.

Quote of the Day

“Everyone starts … with the ‘brain’ of the robot completely empty. The robot doesn’t know anything about the world, but now we want those robots to learn new tasks?”

—Claudia Perez-D’Arpino, from MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab, explains why it’s so important to build robots that can learn quickly.

This is your last free story.
Sign in Subscribe now

Your daily newsletter about what’s up in emerging technology from MIT Technology Review.

Please, enter a valid email.
Privacy Policy
Submitting...
There was an error submitting the request.
Thanks for signing up!

Our most popular stories

Advertisement