Remove 2011 Remove Artificial Inteligence Remove Internet of things
article thumbnail

Artificial Intelligence: Disruption or Opportunity?

Daniel Burrus

Artificial intelligence (AI), one of twenty core technologies I identified back in 1983 as the drivers of exponential economic value creation, has worked its way into our lives. Watson is a cognitive computer that learns over time. The post Artificial Intelligence: Disruption or Opportunity?

article thumbnail

Me and Element AI!

Linda Bernardi

Be the transformation partner for our customers on the artificial intelligence journey, providing the business, process and AI-Mindset transformations to succeed as a company and culture. As you can see , this ties very closely to my role at Element AI.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Smart Cities Are Going to Be a Security Nightmare

Harvard Business Review

Advancements in artificial intelligence and Internet of Things (IoT) connected devices have made it possible for cities to increase efficiencies across multiple services like public safety, transportation, water management and even healthcare.

article thumbnail

Stop Saying Big Companies Can’t Innovate

Harvard Business Review

Pure Internet-plays Betterment and FutureAdvisor launched in 2010 and Wealthfront in 2011. The system allows “equipment and computers [to] talk to each other over the internet in real time, share information, and make decisions [to] help ensure top-notch product quality and avoid plant shutdowns.”

Company 14
article thumbnail

Why Today’s Corporate Research Centers Need to Be in Cities

Harvard Business Review

For example, Pfizer recently moved one of its largest research centers to Kendall Square in Cambridge, blocks from MIT, and Google now has its machine learning research hub in Baker Square in Pittsburgh, near Carnegie Mellon University. Second, technology “platforms” undergird new products more than in the past.

article thumbnail

What BMW’s Corporate VC Offers That Regular Investors Can’t

Harvard Business Review

This meant that the company was leaving out huge innovation potential — thousands of startups with billions of funding — that could help BMW innovate anything from core vehicle technology (batteries, sensors, artificial intelligence software) to manufacturing innovations (internet of things, cybersecurity, robotics).