Do Smart Cities have a Future?
Cities have been crucial for human development for hundreds of years. They have been hotbeds of innovation and education and they have allowed humans to use vital resources more efficiently and effectively.
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.
Cities have been crucial for human development for hundreds of years. They have been hotbeds of innovation and education and they have allowed humans to use vital resources more efficiently and effectively.
The inevitable advance of automation and the maturation of artificial intelligence (AI) have many analysts predicting the human race will be out of work in the decades ahead. I’m more optimistic about
A little over a year ago, IBM CEO Ginni Rometty (@GinniRometty) declared, “It is the dawn of a new era, the cognitive era.”[1] Indeed, the maturation of cognitive computing and the advance
Business leaders are always looking for the next big thing. One of those things might be blockchain technology. Thomas Cherian explains, “A blockchain is a distributed public ledger for carrying out transactions
Gartner analysts predict “smart machines will enter mainstream adoption by 2021 with 30 percent adoption by large companies. This will include cognitive computing, artificial intelligence, intelligent automation, machine learning, and deep learning.”[1]
The metamorphosis of a butterfly is one of nature’s wonders. From ground-bound, clumsy caterpillar to elegant and beautiful butterfly, this transformation takes place within the small confines of a chrysalis. Only when
Change is one of life’s constants. The supply chain is no exception to this rule. According to Jonathan Webb (@j_p_webb), Head of Strategy Research at Procurement Leaders, supply chain transformation efforts have the
Manufacturing is on the upswing in the United States and that trend was in the making before the tortuous presidential election of 2016. Andrew Tangel (@AndrewTangel) and Patrick McGroarty (@patmcgroarty) report, “Manufacturing
When it comes to interesting predictions, IBM’s 5 in 5: Five innovations that will help change our lives within five years, is usually among the best. This year’s predictions involve artificial intelligence
For decades, artificial intelligence (AI) was primarily confined to research projects in academia. That is no longer the case. “Artificial intelligence, long a subject of fanciful forecasts,” writes Steven Norton (@steven_norton), “is
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