Artificial Intelligence and the Supply Chain
The human race has progressed in fits and starts. Great leaps forward can always be traced to advances in technology. That doesn’t mean that everyone is happy with such progress. MIT business
In this blog, we discuss cognitive computing and other technologies with a focus on supply chain management and innovation. Other topics of discussion include digital enterprise transformation, marketing, the Internet of Things, and smart cities. Our goal is to advance the public discussion about how cognitive computing and other advanced technologies affect the world in which we live.
Bradd C. Hayes is the active editor of this blog.
The human race has progressed in fits and starts. Great leaps forward can always be traced to advances in technology. That doesn’t mean that everyone is happy with such progress. MIT business
Manufacturers try almost anything they can to get shoppers to pay attention to the products they offer on store shelves. For example, “marketers know vintage clothes and retro art sell well. Now,
About a year and a half ago, Steve Lohr wrote, “When problems are nuanced or ambiguous, or require combining varied sources of information, computers are no match for human intelligence.” [“Aiming to
This past May Google quietly introduced the world to its “Knowledge Graph.” Gary Marcus writes, “In the short-term, Knowledge Graph will not make a big difference in your world. … But what’s
Back in March 2012, Alex Cocotas reported that a new study from Nielsen, estimated that “just under half of American mobile subscribers (49.7 percent) are smartphone users.” [“U.S. Smartphone Penetration Hits 50
“A massively disruptive transformation is taking at place leading companies,” writes Gunjan Soni, Joshua Goff, and Paul McInerney, “a disruption that could rewrite the entire traditional marketing canon.” [“By the numbers: Unleashing
Yann LeCun, a professor of computer and neural science at New York University, claims that, “in terms of computational ability, even the most-powerful computers in the world are just approaching that of
Reuven Cohen, a self-proclaimed “digital provocateur,” believes that the excitement surrounding the emergence of cloud computing is really more about access to Big Data than anything else. “Big Data,” he writes, “is
“The business of Big Data, which involves collecting large amounts of data and then searching it for patterns and new revelations,” writes Quentin Hardy, “is the result of cheap storage, abundant sensors
Don Brandes writes, “It is estimated that by 2020 a $1,000 dollar computer will have the processing power to match the human brain. By 2030 the average personal computer will have the
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