There’s no question, AI is set to revolutionise society as we know it. We’ll see unprecedented developments in the public sector and medicine and we’ll realise drastic improvements in the way we do business. Most businesses are now fully aware of the need to start embracing intelligent automation for competitive advantage and are looking long-term at how different forms of artificial intelligence (AI) will impact their market. By Amyn Jaffer, Head of Intelligent Automation, Ultima.
Read MoreArtificial Intelligence (AI) and automation has opened new levels of cost savings and efficiency to businesses worldwide, with the potential of driving the fourth industrial revolution. Automation already revolutionised business processes across the majority of industries, from manufacturing to retail, transport and healthcare. By Carmine Rimi, AI Product Manager at Canonical - the company behind Ubuntu.
Read MoreAccording to Gartner companies are adopting artificial intelligence (AI) at an unprecedented rate. The Stamford firm’s 2019 CIO Survey of more than 3,000 executives in 89 countries found that AI implementation grew 270 percent in the past four years, and 37 percent in the past year alone*. The enterprise AI market will be worth $6.14 billion by 2022. Within the Travel & Tourism sector, on a day-to-day level, AI is seemingly everywhere. From mapping apps and voice assistants to mobile...
Read MoreCustomer expectations have never been higher. Patience and tolerance for error is ever decreasing in the consumer world, where immediate results, on-hand service and uninterrupted availability are minimum requirements. It is imperative for organisations to ensure that consumer-facing assets are efficient, available and delivering on their mission-critical requirements as standard to ensure a positive customer experience, whilst mitigating waste and revenue loss. Yet, with a wealth of varied...
Read MoreThe frequency with which high-profile data breaches and massive data privacy violations appear in global headlines clearly demonstrates the need to manage information with more stringent security and privacy controls. By Aaron Rangel, Director Product Management at iManage.
Read MoreArtificial intelligence (AI) hasn’t always had favourable representation in pop culture. In Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), homicidal supercomputer Hal demonstrated how AI could surpass the intelligence of a human — and for humans, the results weren’t so great. In reality, AI threatens our jobs more than our lives. Here, Graham Smith, head of marketing at Microsoft recruitment partner Curo Talent, explains why IT workers needn’t worry about the AI takeover.
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