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‏إظهار الرسائل ذات التسميات English. إظهار كافة الرسائل
‏إظهار الرسائل ذات التسميات English. إظهار كافة الرسائل

الأربعاء، 2 أغسطس 2017

أغسطس 02, 2017

Do the imagination will become a true ?

A buried line in a new Facebook report about chatbots' conversations with one another offers a remarkable glimpse at the future of language.

In the report, researchers at the Facebook Artificial Intelligence Research lab describe using machine learning to train their "dialog agents" to negotiate. (And it turns out bots are actually quite good at dealmaking.) At one point, the researchers write, they had to tweak one of their models because else the bot-to-bot conversation "led to divergence from human language as the agents developed Their own language for negotiating. "They had to use what's called a fixed supervised model instead.

In other words, the model that allowed two bots to have a conversation and use machine learning to constantly iterate strategies for that conversation along the way-led to those bots communicating in their own non-human language. If this does not fill you with a sense of wonder and awe about the future of machines and humanity then, I do not know, go watch Blade Runner or something.





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What an AI's Non-Human Language Actually Looks Like

The larger point of the report is that bots can be pretty decent negotiators-they even use strategies like feigning interest in something valueless, so that it can later appear to "compromise" by relating it. But the detail about language is, as one tech entrepreneur put it, a mind-boggling "sign of what's to come."

To be clear, Facebook's chatty bots are not evidence of the singularity's arrival. Not even close. But they do demonstrate how machines are redefining people's understanding of so many realms once believed to be exclusively human-like language.

Already, there's a good deal of guesswork involved in machine learning research, which often involves feeding a neural net a huge pile of data then examining the output to try to understand how the machine thinks. But the fact that machines will make up their own non-human ways of conversing is an astonishing reminder of just how little we know, even when people are the ones designing these systems.

"There remains much potential for future work," Facebook's researchers wrote in their paper, "particularly in exploring other reasoning strategies, and in improving the diversity of influences without diverging from human language."

الخميس، 13 يوليو 2017

يوليو 13, 2017

KFC mobile in china !!!

The first Kentucky Fried Chicken franchise opened in 1952, and it has grown into the second-largest restaurant chain by sales (second only to McDonalds). But America isn't the only place enjoying the Colonel's chicken - KFC arrived in China in 1987. 

To celebrate 30 years of KFC in China, Huawei is making a KFC-branded smartphone.
It's called the "KFC Huawei 7 Plus," and is powered by a Snapdragon 430 processor, 3GB of RAM, and 32GB of expandable storage. It also has a fingerprint sensor and a 3,020mAh battery. 
Colonel Sanders is embossed on the back of the phone, so everyone knows you have good taste in chicken.

It also comes with a KFC-branded music app pre-installed, which allows users to create and share playlists at KFC restaurants. Huawei will only be manufacturing 5,000 of these phones, and they will be available for 1,099 yuan (about $162 USD) from July 13. It's the perfect companion for the Pepsi phone.

الاثنين، 24 أبريل 2017

أبريل 24, 2017

The all-new Lincoln Navigator takes the luxury SUV to a higher level


Lincoln has some positive history with the New York Auto Show. In 2015, Ford's luxury brand unveiled its Continental concept car, and then in 2016, it repeated the move with its Navigator concept.

The Continental is now Lincoln's flagship sedan, reviving a storied automotive nameplate. We checked it out and were impressed.
The Navigator is just as important — it was the first luxury SUV, hitting the streets in the 1990s. 


It's large and in charge, and in 2016 Lincoln showed it as a spectacular yacht-like concept, complete with massive gull wing doors.
What was a concept is a reality. The gullwing doors are gone. But the big Lincoln is still a sight to behold. We saw it at an event right before the 2016 New York Auto Show kicked off.

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