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Strategies & Market Trends : John Pitera's Market Laboratory -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: isopatch who wrote (17848)3/6/2016 7:49:06 PM
From: John Pitera  Respond to of 33421
 
BIG Change at Google-Alaphabet ---Google Search Chief Singhal to Retire, Replaced by AI Exec

by Jack Clark


February 3, 2016 — 12:18 PM EST

Updated on February 3, 2016 — 4:08 PM EST

Google said its longtime search chief Amit Singhal is retiring and will be replaced by John Giannandrea, an executive who has worked on machine intelligence efforts.Singhal joined Google in 2000 and has led the technical development of the Internet search engine since then. Improvements overseen by Singhal have helped make the eponymous web-search tool faster, smarter and able to peer into the innards of software running on mobile devices. At the same time, it was augmented with clever widgets like calculators and weather forecasts that materialize in response to certain queries

“When I started, who would have imagined that in a short period of fifteen years, we would tap a button, ask Google anything and get the answer,” Singhal wrote in a Google+ post announcing his retirement. “My dream Star Trek computer is becoming a reality, and it is far better than what I ever imagined.”

With Giannandrea’s appointment, the technology may get smarter. The executive has overseen recent artificial intelligence efforts, including RankBrain, which saw Google plug an AI technology called a neural network into its search engine to boost the accuracy of results and an e-mail service called Smart Reply that automatically writes responses. Other work he has managed include efforts in image recognition and technologies that fetch information based on what users are doing with their devices, rather than what they’re explicitly searching for.

Data StorehouseGiannandrea joined Google in 2010 when it acquired a company he co-founded called Metaweb Technologies. Those assets became the basis for Google’s knowledge graph, a vast store of information on hundreds of millions of entities that helps the search engine present factual data in response to certain queries. Singhal’s last day is scheduled to be Feb. 26.

The elevation of Giannandrea represents a further emphasis on the importance of artificial intelligence to Google, a unit of Alphabet Inc. Chief Executive Officer Sundar Pichai said the technology has been key to recent efforts in search on mobile devices and personal assistant technologies.



“This comes thanks to our years of investments in areas like natural language processing, computer vision, knowledge graph and other areas,” Pichai said on a recent earnings call. “The next wave will be powered by big advances in machine learning and artificial intelligence, an area where we believe we lead the industry.”

Shares of Mountain View, California-based Alphabet fell 4 percent to $749.38 at the close.

bloomberg.com

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Google’s Head of Artificial Intelligence to Lead Search

Management change comes as Google’s head of search, Amit Singhal, announces departure

By
Alistair Barr
Updated Feb. 3, 2016 6:44 p.m. ET



Alphabet Inc. GOOGL -0.19 % ’s Google named the head of its artificial-intelligence research to run its search engine, demonstrating the importance of the rapidly evolving technology to the company’s main profit engine.

John Giannandrea, who has run Google’s artificial-intelligence efforts since late 2013, will take over from Amit Singhal, who said Wednesday he is leaving in late February after 15 years at Google to “give back to others.”

Google and others increasingly view artificial intelligence—advanced software that more closely mimics the human brain—as central to their products and services. In one technique, called deep learning, the software evolves by studying patterns, with minimal human involvement.

Google used deep learning to create RankBrain, a system it introduced last year to handle complex or rare queries, including the 15% of searches that are new to the search engine each day. RankBrain is now considered the third-most-important of more than 200 tools that Google uses to rank search results.

Other deep-learning programs can identify objects in images more consistently than humans can. Google also uses artificial-intelligence techniques in searches for photos, voice-based searches and a planned mobile-messaging service.

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Pedro Domingos --- The Master Algorithm

a really excellent and very readable book on A I, machine learning and the ways to build better algorithms.

I found that I was reading different parts of the book.... going to the index in the back....seeing references that I wanted to know more about.... It's very accessible.

amazon.com

The Master Algorithm: How the Quest for the Ultimate Learning Machine Will Remake Our World Hardcover – September 22, 2015
by Pedro Domingos (Author

Algorithms increasingly run our lives. They find books, movies, jobs, and dates for us, manage our investments, and discover new drugs. More and more, these algorithms work by learning from the trails of data we leave in our newly digital world. Like curious children, they observe us, imitate, and experiment. And in the world’s top research labs and universities, the race is on to invent the ultimate learning algorithm: one capable of discovering any knowledge from data, and doing anything we want, before we even ask.

Machine learning is the automation of discovery—the scientific method on steroids—that enables intelligent robots and computers to program themselves. No field of science today is more important yet more shrouded in mystery. Pedro Domingos, one of the field’s leading lights, lifts the veil for the first time to give us a peek inside the learning machines that power Google, Amazon, and your smartphone. He charts a course through machine learning’s five major schools of thought, showing how they turn ideas from neuroscience, evolution, psychology, physics, and statistics into algorithms ready to serve you. Step by step, he assembles a blueprint for the future universal learner—the Master Algorithm—and discusses what it means for you, and for the future of business, science, and society.

If data-ism is today’s rising philosophy, this book will be its bible. The quest for universal learning is one of the most significant, fascinating, and revolutionary intellectual developments of all time. A groundbreaking book, The Master Algorithm is the essential guide for anyone and everyone wanting to understand not just how the revolution will happen, but how to be at its forefront.