First Watson won 'Jeopardy!' and now it's coming to your iPhone app. In this file photo, visitors check out a slimmed down version of the IBM Watson supercomputer at IBM's stand at the CeBIT ...
After conventional methods of detection failed, a team of Japanese researchers from the University of Tokyo’s Institute of Medical Science used IBM Watson to successfully diagnose a 60 year-old woman ...
IBM researchers have created the IBM Watson Tone Analyzer, a supercomputer application which can read a message and judge the tone conveyed in the message. This is the kind of task that a human can do ...
IBM is basking in the glow of the victory of its Watson supercomputer over the Jeopardy TV show’s best human players. But watching the supercomputer answer questions during the three nights of the ...
Tech giant IBM announced a new artificial intelligence and data platform called watsonx. The corporation said in a release Tuesday that enterprises need a full technology stack to train, tune and ...
The IBM CEO has been at Big Blue for more than three decades, we wanted to know how she keeps engaged, about IBM’s future with artificial intelligence and what career tips she might have for young ...
IBM Exec: The Age Of Cognitive 'Is Here' As vice president for implementations in IBM's Watson group, Ed Harbour leads Big Blue's efforts to bring cognitive computing to the masses. IBM is betting big ...
IBM debuted the Watson brand more than a decade ago, but the tech giant has been unable to turn it into a successful product. IBM is repurposing the brand for its watsonx suite of AI products, aimed ...
After wowing the world way back in 2011 by defeating humans at the TV game show "Jeopardy!" with early-stage AI tech, IBM's Watson is making a bit of a comeback. Cloud platform rankings typically ...
In the spirit of productivity and advancement, industrial Internet of Things tools are becoming increasingly viable and profound. These tools can help collect data, communicate with organization ...
IBM’s Watson supercomputer outperformed humans in the televised game show “Jeopardy.” Now the company is moving some of its underlying technologies from the supercomputer into new entry-level servers.