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Friday, March 12, 2021

Reinforcement Learning and Entropy

 Have recently been looking at Reinforcement Learning methods.   And this as a form of simulation-optimization for 'Twin' style models that need training.  Berkeley BAIR  makes some points about entropy (disorder) in a recent  article.   (Technical)  Consideringe the application. See the full article, linked to below,  for sufficient detail.

Maximum Entropy RL (Provably) Solves Some Robust RL Problems  By Ben Eysenbach    Mar 10, 2021    Berkeley BAIR  AI

Nearly all real-world applications of reinforcement learning involve some degree of shift between the training environment and the testing environment. However, prior work has observed that even small shifts in the environment cause most RL algorithms to perform markedly worse. As we aim to scale reinforcement learning algorithms and apply them in the real world, it is increasingly important to learn policies that are robust to changes in the environment.

Robust reinforcement learning maximizes reward on an adversarially-chosen environment.

Broadly, prior approaches to handling distribution shift in RL aim to maximize performance in either the average case or the worst case. The first set of approaches, such as domain randomization, train a policy on a distribution of environments, and optimize the average performance of the policy on these environments. While these methods have been successfully applied to a number of areas (e.g., self-driving cars, robot locomotion and manipulation), their success rests critically on the design of the distribution of environments. Moreover, policies that do well on average are not guaranteed to get high reward on every environment. The policy that gets the highest reward on average might get very low reward on a small fraction of environments. The second set of approaches, typically referred to as robust RL, focus on the worst-case scenarios. The aim is to find a policy that gets high reward on every environment within some set. Robust RL can equivalently be viewed as a two-player game between the policy and an environment adversary. The policy tries to get high reward, while the environment adversary tries to tweak the dynamics and reward function of the environment so that the policy gets lower reward. One important property of the robust approach is that, unlike domain randomization, it is invariant to the ratio of easy and hard tasks. Whereas robust RL always evaluates a policy on the most challenging tasks, domain randomization will predict that the policy is better if it is evaluated on a distribution of environments with more easy tasks.

Prior work has suggested a number of algorithms for solving robust RL problems. Generally, these algorithms all follow the same recipe: take an existing RL algorithm and add some additional machinery on top to make it robust. For example, robust value iteration uses Q-learning as the base RL algorithm, and modifies the Bellman update by solving a convex optimization problem in the inner loop of each Bellman backup. Similarly, Pinto ‘17 uses TRPO as the base RL algorithm and periodically updates the environment based on the behavior of the current policy. These prior approaches are often difficult to implement and, even once implemented correctly, they requiring tuning of many additional hyperparameters. Might there be a simpler approach, an approach that does not require additional hyperparameters and additional lines of code to debug? ... " 

Hw to Get Started in Quantum Computing

Pointers to lots of resources and simulators.

How to Get Started in Quantum Computing   By Nature  March 3, 2021

For those who want to see what the fuss is about, a growing collection of online tutorials, programming languages, and simulators are making it easier than ever to dip their toes into quantum computing.

Several online guides build up from the basics. Physicist Michael Nielsen and software engineer Andy Matuschak have produced a walk-through resource called Quantum Computing for the Very Curious. IBM has created an interactive toolkit to accompany its Qiskit quantum language.

For scientists who want to wrap their heads around quantum circuits, IBM Quantum Experience allows users to drag and drop logic gates to create circuits in a web browser and run them remotely on a real quantum computer.

Microsoft, IBM and Google have all created tools — Q#, Qiskit, and Cirq, respectively — that draw heavily on the Python programming language, and have built user-friendly development environments with ample documentation to help coders get started.

Rigetti Computing has released a quantum-software development kit called Forest, and Cambridge Quantum Computing has launched tket.

From Nature

Thursday, March 11, 2021

China Moves ahead to Digital Currency

China Charges Ahead with National Digital Currency   By The New York Times  March 4, 2021

China has charged ahead with a bold effort to remake the way that government-backed money works, rolling out its own digital currency with different qualities than cash or digital deposits.

China is forging ahead with a national digital currency called the electronic Chinese yuan (eCNY), with government presentations indicating the People's Bank of China recently expanded trials of the currency to major cities like Beijing and Shanghai.

Unlike decentralized cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin, national digital currencies are firmly controlled by the government.

People's Bank officials said the eCNY does not use the blockchain technology that most cryptocurrencies rely on, and recipients have only a few weeks to spend the digital currency before it disappears.

The eCNY could further empower China's government to monitor finance channels because a digital currency system can record all transactions.

Yaya Fanusie at the nonprofit Foundation for Defense of Democracy's Center on Economic and Financial Power think tank said China's initiative is "about developing new tools to collect data and leverage that data so that the Chinese economy is more intelligent and based on real-time information."

From The New York Times

Faster Linear Equations

 Like the aspect of guessing to solve, implies the useful introduction  of randomness. 

Algorithm Breaks Speed Limit for Solving Linear Equations

By Quanta Magazine

Grade school math teachers admonish students not to just guess the answer to a problem. But a new proof establishes that, in fact, the right kind of guessing is sometimes the best way to solve systems of linear equations, one of the bedrock calculations in math.

As a result, the proof establishes the first method capable of surpassing what had previously been a hard limit on just how quickly some of these types of problems can be solved.

The new method, by Richard Peng and Santosh Vempala of the Georgia Institute of Technology, is decribed in "Solving Sparse Linear Systems Faster Than Matrix Multiplication,"    which was presented at SODA21, the ACM-SIAM Symposium on Discrete Algorithms, where it won the best-paper award.  ... "

Article in Quanta

Just Walk Out: Cashierless Shopping

Being tested in a number of Amazon Go Stores.   Pushing convenience.   In my cook role would love to be able to 'just walk out' with an ingredient item or two.  Is it enough to get me to use Amazon Fresh or Amazon Go stores?

Amazon Quietly Began Building a Grocery Chain During Pandemic

The company has opened 11 Amazon Fresh stores around the U.S., with plans for at least 28 more, as it tries to lure mainstream shoppers. 

By Matt Day in Bloomberg  March 11, 2021, 5:00 AM EST

As many businesses struggled to survive the pandemic, Amazon.com Inc. was quietly building a national grocery chain.

The first Amazon Fresh store opened to the public in Los Angeles in September. Store No. 11 opened Thursday, and Amazon is working on at least 28 more, from Philadelphia to the Sacramento suburbs. The company is also testing the “Just Walk Out” cashierless shopping technology created for its Go convenience stores at an Amazon Fresh location in Illinois.  ... " 

Amazon Lookout spots Defects and Anomalies in Visuals

Had not heard of this particular AWS service, could have been useful on our industrial manufacturing and supply chain areas.  Just as we use our vision to scan for anomalies in representations of systems or data. 

Amazon’s Lookout for Vision spots defects and anomalies in visual representations  By Duncan Riley in SiliconAngle

Amazon Web Services Inc. today announced the general availability of Amazon Lookout for Vision, a cloud service that uses machine learning to spot defects and anomalies in visual representation using computer vision.

Designed with manufacturing companies in mind, the service can identify differences in images of objects at large scale, delivering the ability to identify manufacturing and production defects such as cracks, dents, incorrect colors and irregular shapes. The technology uses a technique called “few-shot learning” so it can train a model for a customer using as few as 30 baseline images.

Amazon Lookout for Vision can process thousands of images an hour to spot defects and anomalies with no machine learning experience required. Customers send camera images to Amazon Lookout for Vision in real-time to identify anomalies, such as damage to a product’s surface, missing components and other irregularities in production lines. In addition to enabling the service to detect anomalies without large amounts of training data, this capability allows the service to adapt to a wide range of inspection tasks within industrial settings.

Upon analyzing data, Amazon Lookout for Vision reports images that differ from the baseline via the service dashboard or the “DetectAnomalies” real-time application programing interface so that appropriate action can be taken.  ...  ' 

Soft Robots Turn Rigid on Demand

 Intriguing capability that addresses adding rigidity to allow robots to resist movement.   Had not thought of this as a useful function.

Helping Soft Robots Turn Rigid on Demand

MIT News, Daniel Ackerman, March 3, 2021

Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) researchers used computer models to design a soft-bodied, cable-driven robot that turns rigid on demand by simultaneously controlling its position and stiffness. MIT's James Bern said, "It's just encoding that idea [of on-demand rigidity] into something a computer can work with." Bern used this roadmap to model the tuning of movement and rigidity in robots of various shapes, and tested their ability, when stiffened, to resist displacement when pushed. In simulation, the robots generally remained rigid as intended, but were not equally resistant from all angles. Bern is constructing a prototype robot to test the control system, and said his hope is to "start making soft robots that are safe but can also act rigid on demand, and expand the spectrum of tasks robots can perform." ... '   

Web As We Know it Ending?

 Changing yes, but ending now.  We are too dependent on it for too many things.  No doubt using it is getting trickier.  Need to look closer at risks and Threats. 

The Worldwide Web As We Know It May Be Ending   By CNN in ACM   February 25, 2021

Over the last year, the worldwide web has started to look less worldwide.

Europe is floating regulation that could impose temporary bans on United States tech companies that violate its laws. The U.S. was on the verge of banning TikTok and WeChat. India is now at loggerheads with Twitter.

If such territorial clashes become more common, the globally-connected Internet we know will become more like what some have dubbed the "splinternet," or a collection of different Internets whose limits are determined by national or regional borders.

A combination of rising nationalism, trade disputes, and concerns about the market dominance of certain global tech companies has prompted threats of regulatory crackdowns all over the world. These forces are not just upending the tech companies that built massive businesses on the promise of a global Internet, but also the very idea of building platforms that can be accessed and used the same way by anyone anywhere in the world.

From CNN

Wednesday, March 10, 2021

Talk Tonight: A Thousand Brains: Jeff Hawkins

  Late to this, but of interest, talked to Jeff in our early AI exploration days.


Neuroscientist and engineer Jeff Hawkins unveils a new biological theory of intelligence that Richard Dawkins calls "exhilarating.".  Presented by Kepler's Literary Foundation.

About this Event, registration.  Registration required. 

Date And Time  Wed, March 10, 2021   9:00 PM – 10:00 PM EST  Online

In a book that biologist Richard Dawkins calls “exhilarating,” author, neuroscientist and engineer Jeff Hawkins unveils a new theory of intelligence with awe-inspiring implications. Get ready for a dynamic and exciting conversation about the brain with Kepler’s.

In a century rife with neuroscientific and biological advances, researchers have made little progress on one very big question: how do the simple cells of the brain create intelligence?

Hawkins, cofounder of the neuroscience research company Numenta, dares to answer with A Thousand Brains. In a compulsively readable book accessible even to the casual science reader, he lays forth a simple and yet mold-breaking theory: that intelligence arises from the interaction of maplike reference frames in the brain, which build hundreds of thousands of interconnected models of everything a person knows. These maplike reference frames can tell you how to achieve goals, how to get from one place to another, who you are and how you’re connected to the world.

Hawkins and his Silicon Valley based research team have studied the neocortex, the part of the brain we associate with everything responsible for intelligence. Now with his “thousand brains” theory of the structure that runs the show, Hawkins proposes answers to some of neurosciences most stubborn questions—including questions about the very nature of consciousness, false beliefs and more.

On March 10th, join us for an online conversation between Jeff Hawkins and award-winning science journalist Anil Ananthaswamy as they share with us A Thousand Brains. Starting with basic information on how the brain works for anyone to understand, they’ll discuss Jeff’s new theory and explore what it could mean not only for advancements in machine intelligence, but also its broader implications for all of us as people. This will be a smart, fun night celebrating a key moment in our understanding of the human brain: don’t miss it!

**Please consider joining with a book or donation to support the production of this event and make it possible for us to continue bringing you great conversations.

Registration will close one hour before the event; please reserve your spot early to guarantee access, as registrations are limited.**   .... 

Intel Works with Johnson Controls and Sensormatic for Digital Transformations in Retail.

We talked with Intel on their Movidius vision sensor systems for related applications. This appears to be a considerable advance and direction. 

“By leveraging Intel processors and accelerator cards based on Intel’s purpose-built Movidius™ vision processing units (VPUs), and OpenVINO™ toolkit to accelerate vision at the edge, Sensormatic Solutions enables retailers to make sense of granular data, creating growth opportunities and driving positive business outcomes.”  ... ' 

Sensormatic Solutions by Johnson Controls Collaborates With Intel to Digitally Transform Retail and Improve Shopper Experiences      

Johnson Controls’ innovation partnership with Intel now includes powering Sensormatic IQ

Sensormatic IQ, the new intelligent operation platform for retail, leverages Intel’s AI technology at the edge to deliver real-time insights across the enterprise

The collaboration enables customers to make informed business decisions that drive positive outcomes

NEUHAUSEN, Switzerland--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Johnson Controls, the global leader for smart, healthy and sustainable buildings, today announced that Sensormatic Solutions, its leading global retail solutions portfolio, continues to collaborate with Intel Corporation to deliver innovative solutions to retailers.

A key partner in powering Sensormatic IQ, the new intelligent operating platform for retail, Intel is helping Sensormatic Solutions deliver improved shopper experiences and retail outcomes for its customers. Through deep knowledge of the retail industry plus joint investments and developments in scalable, artificial intelligence (AI) and computer vision-based solutions, Sensormatic Solutions and Intel are helping retailers gain real-time insights into inventory, shoppers, associates and the retail environment. ... 

“As the retail landscape evolves, our technology evolves with it,” said Bjoern Petersen, President, Sensormatic Solutions. “Intel’s AI solutions for the edge paired with our Sensormatic IQ platform is helping to power the digital transformation of the retail industry. Through this partnership and shared commitment to innovation and engineering, we are pleased to deliver solutions to address our retail customers’ biggest challenges and confidently move into the future. ... ' 

Future of Logistics: Autonomous High Speed Transporting

New Efforts in the future of logistics:

An Autonomous High-Speed Transporter for Tomorrow's Logistics  By Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft (Germany)  March 9, 2021

Able to sort large quantities of packages, this high-speed transporter can serve booming online and mail-order businesses well.

A new generation of automated guided vehicles under development at the Fraunhofer Institute for Material Flow and Logistics includes "LoadRunners" that use artificial intelligence and communicate via 5G to organize themselves as a swarm and execute jobs independently.

Automated aerial vehicles guided by artificial intelligence (AI) are under development at Germany's Fraunhofer Institute for Material Flow and Logistics (IML) to enhance logistics.

LoadRunners use simulation-based AI and communicate via 5G to form swarms and sort large amounts of packages.

The 20-drone LoadRunner swarm mimics a flock of birds, with each drone taking cues from neighbors' behavior, continuously adjusting flight direction and speed to match other units' trajectory; the reciprocal action of drones' individual decisions give rise to swarm intelligence that requires no central coordination.

Fraunhofer IML's Moritz Roidl said the LoadRunner can turn in any direction without pausing to maneuver, while an onboard camera captures 400 floor images per second to navigate even at high speeds in tight formations.

AI enables the LoadRunner to assume and execute jobs independently, which can help logistics centers accommodate increasing parcel volumes.

From Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft (Germany)

Tuesday, March 09, 2021

Using Synthetic Data

Worked with elements of the idea for some time the enterprise. In fact after a while we learned that its often very useful to have synthetic data alongside 'real' data,  it can be used to tease out some less than  common patterns of interest and use.  New methods make it much easier to develop.

Synthetic Data: Even Better than the Real Thing?  By Karen Emslie  Commissioned by CACM Staff  March 9, 2021

Synthetic data can be useful in any real data-based context: researchers have demonstrated the use of synthetic data in object detection, in crowd counting, in machine learning for healthcare, and even in marine science for the detection of Western rock lobsters.

Our lives are inextricably intertwined with data. It is fundamental in software development, artificial intelligence (AI) training, and product testing; it is deployed across industry, social media, and in decision-making. According to a 2020 report by market research firm International Data Corporation, "More than 59 zettabytes (ZB) of data will be created, captured, copied, and consumed in the world this year."

This is a mind-boggling amount of data, but it is not always available to those who want to make use of it. Innovators working on emerging technologies, such as autonomous vehicles, may find relevant data rare and prohibitively expensive. Access to developers is often limited, due to confidentiality.

Synthetic data, generated from simulations based on real data, has emerged as an answer. It is not a new concept, but recent developments have boosted its accuracy and usability. Add societal issues such as privacy, the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), and even the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on data gathering and access, and the arguments on behalf of synthetic data appear even stronger.

Synthetic data can be useful in any real data-based context: researchers have demonstrated the use of synthetic data in object detection, in crowd counting, in machine learning for healthcare, and even in marine science for the detection of Western rock lobsters.

A group at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) led by principal research scientist and Data-to-AI group leader Kalyan Veeramachaneni, have launched an updated set of open-source tools for producing synthetic data. The work is part of the Synthetic Data Vault (SDV), an online ecosystem that allows users to create synthetic data from their own data sources.

Veeramachaneni first experimented with synthetic data back in 2012, to tackle data access bottlenecks in an online learning platform. He realized it could also provide a solution to a problem he had encountered in industry during conversations about data access for machine learning (ML).

"All those conversations come to a grinding halt when we say, 'How can we get access to the data? For that we have to go through this process, and then what do we do next?' It takes three to six months to actually get access to the data," explained Veeramachaneni.

His group set out to build general-purpose tools that would allow anyone to create synthetic data from real data. By 2016, they had succeeded in creating statistical models using datasets from Kaggle, and sampling from those to create synthetic data.

The next step was to take a "much, much more comprehensive" approach by simultaneously creating algorithms, software, and tools that could address any enterprise data type. The result was the Synthetic Data Vault.

The researchers use three types of modelling techniques to generate synthetic data: a classic technique based on Bayesian networks, a mathematical tool from economics called Copulas, and deep learning (DL).

"Deep learning-based synthetic data generation started for images, that's where you see all those deep fakes, and there was a very popular technique called generative adversarial networks (GANs)," said Veeramachaneni.

The MIT group adapted GAN methods used on pixel-based images to work on tabular data. The trick is to generate realistic-looking data, said Veeramachaneni, but it is a fine balancing act, "You don't want it to be so real that it can actually enable you to detect some personal information about someone if it belongs to humans."

The latest tools in the SDV ecosystem support scalability, testing, and interaction with data science teams. To prove the functionality of algorithms and software, users need to come up with edge cases. As Veeramachaneni explained, "Slowly and steadily, we have seen a lot of people coming to it, using it, telling us where it's working, where it's not working, and that's essentially driving us to make it much better."

When the Covid-19 pandemic shut down MIT's Data-to-AI labs, the group spotted another use case. Sensitive data is often housed on one or two computers. Veeramachaneni said the team had to work out how keep their own machines up and running, "Then we were like, 'wouldn't it help to just have synthetic data, so that everyone can have their data on their local machine at home?'"

Privacy and access make a solid case for synthetic data use, but there are others  ... " 

FHE Encryption Getting Support from DARPA

The approach is getting more support.    Will post quantum decryption threaten it?

Intel will develop a fully homomorphic encryption chip for DARPA  BY MARIA DEUTSCHER

Intel Corp. today announced that it has been entrusted by the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency to develop a chip that will enable applications to work with encrypted data without having to unscramble it first.

The chip will use an emerging encryption method known as fully homomorphic encryption to facilitate such processing. The project was announced today and is described as a multiyear program that will also include Microsoft Corp., which will assist with development. 

In the enterprise, it’s standard practice to encrypt data both when it’s sitting in storage and while it’s zipping across the network. Encryption can prevent hackers from reading records if they gain access to them in a breach. But current cryptography methods don’t block all eavesdropping attempts.

The weak point is that encrypted data has to be unscrambled by the applications that use it before they can carry out computations. That creates opportunities for hackers to access sensitive information while it’s kept in a readable form. With the chip it will develop for DARPA, Intel hopes to reduce the risks stemming from the requirement to unscramble data by harnessing fully homomorphic encryption, or FHE for short, which allows applications to process information without decrypting it.  ...'

Last Cortana Speaker is Recalled

 What seemed like a very credible assistant offering, the Harmon Kardan Intent Speaker, which included the Microsoft assistant Cortana, has left the field.  Further indication that Microsoft is not serious in voice assistants?

The only Cortana-powered speaker is about to lose Cortana

Harmon Kardan will disable the assistant on its Invoke speaker by tomorrow.

By S. Dent     @stevetdent  in Engadget  ... "

A Brain for Autonomous Mobile Robots

Brought to my attention with its specific applications in retail like inventory checking.

What is BrainOS?

BrainOS® is a pioneering AI software platform that powers the world’s largest fleet of autonomous mobile robots (AMRs) operating in indoor public spaces. Robots enabled by BrainOS navigate autonomously, avoid obstacles, adapt to changing environments, manage data, and seamlessly interact with end-customers.

OEM partners

Global manufacturing partners use BrainOS to successfully build, deploy, and support commercial robots at scale across industries and applications. Learn more about our partners.

End customers

We also deliver a cloud-based autonomy service that empowers end customers, including some of the largest brands in the world, to easily leverage the power of robotics to achieve mission critical tasks.

Making a machine move autonomously and safely is no easy feat. We don’t need to learn how to build them too. Our laser focus on creating the world’s best robotics AI platform means that we can deliver rapid innovation and bring more robotic applications to market than ground-up robot builders.

Best in class across the board

Combining our leading AI software technology with proven manufacturing equipment means customers get the performance they can count on day after day. This translates directly into enhanced productivity, reduced costs, and increased customer satisfaction.

Service & Support

Partnering with leading manufacturing partners means customers get access to the service and support networks that best fit their business needs. Other robotic vendors can’t match the type of comprehensive support that is available through our partner network.  ... "

Microserver Exchange Server Attack

The Web Continues to move into a More Dangerous State

Microsoft Exchange Server Attack Escalation Prompts Patching Panic

US government officials weigh in on the attacks and malicious activity, which researchers believe may be the work of multiple groups.

The critical Exchange Server vulnerabilities patched last week by Microsoft are being weaponized in widespread attacks against organizations worldwide. Attacks have escalated over the past two weeks, prompting responses from US government and the security community. 

News of the four vulnerabilities emerged on March 2, when Microsoft issued patches for CVE-2021-26855, CVE-2021-26857, CVE-2021-26858, and CVE-2021-27065. These flaws affect Microsoft Exchange Server versions 2013, 2016, and 2019, though the company notes Microsoft Exchange Server 2010 is being updated for Defense in Depth purposes. Exchange Online is not affected.

Microsoft, which learned of these vulnerabilities in early January, initially reported they were being exploited in "limited and targeted attacks" by Hafnium, a group it believes is state-sponsored and operates out of China. Officials said this was the only actor it had seen weaponizing these exploits, which it used to primarily target organizations in the US.  ... '

Starlink to Connect Vehicles as Well

Further general connectivity.

SpaceX plans to beam its Starlink internet to vehicles, not just homes   By Trevor Mogg

SpaceX wants to beam internet from its Starlink satellites to vehicles on Earth.

The revelation came via a recent SpaceX filing with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) requesting permission to install its internet terminals in moving vehicles — not just people’s homes.  ... ' 

Monday, March 08, 2021

Robots Could Save you From Drowning

Seems little end to what robots could do.

Autonomous Underwater Robot Saves People From Drowning  By Fraunhofer Institute (Germany)

March 8, 2021

A research team from Germany's Fraunhofer Institute for Optronics, System Technologies, and Image Exploitation developed an underwater rescue robot with the help of the city of Halles water rescue service.

A research team at Germany's Fraunhofer Institute for Optronics, System Technologies, and Image Exploitation has developed an underwater rescue robot with the help of the city of Halle's water rescue service. The autonomous system will aid lifeguards and lifesavers, and rescue swimmers from drowning. Surveillance cameras register the movements and position of a distressed swimmer and transmit coordinates to the robot, which is dispatched from a docking station on the pool floor.

Upon reaching the swimmer, the robot carries them to the surface, with a mechanism for fixing the swimmer in place preventing him/her from sliding down as they surface.

The robot requires acoustic sensors to rescue people in lakes with limited visibility; a test under such conditions showed the robot could successfully rescue a dummy swimmer in just over two minutes.

From Fraunhofer Institute (Germany)

Alexa Custom Assistant Announced

 Was expecting something like this, now here it is, will this be widely used?   Implications? Check out what Chrysler is doing.   Introduction below:

Announcing Alexa Custom Assistant

Learn how you can create intelligent assistants tailored to your brand personality and customer needs leveraging Alexa’s advanced AI today. ... 

For the first time, Amazon enables companies to access Alexa’s advanced AI to build their own intelligent assistants with Alexa Custom Assistant; Fiat Chrysler Automobiles is the first Automotive OEM to implement in vehicles

Today, Amazon announced Alexa Custom Assistant, a comprehensive new solution that lets device makers and service providers create intelligent assistants tailored to their brand personality and customer needs. The Alexa Custom Assistant is built directly on Alexa technology, providing companies access to world class, always-improving voice AI technology, customized with unique wake word, voice, skills, and capabilities. The brand’s assistant also seamlessly coexists and cooperates with Alexa, providing customers the benefits of an intelligent assistant that is their product and services expert, while Alexa provides the familiar experiences they already know and love. The Alexa Custom Assistant reduces the cost and complexity of building intelligent assistants into automobiles, consumer electronics, mobile applications, smart properties, video games, and a variety of other digital experiences.   

Global automaker Fiat Chrysler Automobiles (FCA) is the first Alexa Custom Assistant customer, and has already begun the planning process for the development of an FCA-branded intelligent assistant for integration in select vehicle models. The company’s work builds on existing Alexa integrations in its vehicles around the world.... " 

Small Business Exporters

From friend Steve King, who has run this blog on small business needs for years:

Barlow Research on Small Business Exporters

Barlow Research   is one of our go-to sources on all things related to small business use of financial services.

Their article Five Truths about International Business in the Middle Market covers survey research on the exporting and importing by U.S. firms with between $10 million and $500 million in sales (midmarket companies).

As shown in the Barlow chart below (click to enlarge), the key finding is that about one-third of firms in this size category conduct business internationally. ... ' 

Podcast: How Spies Think

At the link, podcast provided by Recorded Future, who we worked with long ago.  The link below leads you to the podcast.  Makes me think:  How do spies think differently, say since before computing?  Is that useful from a security perspective?   Will listen to the podcast, and likely read the book. 

A Call to Arms In Favor of Rationality   By  Caitlin Mattingly Recorded Future

Our guest this week is Sir David Omand. He is former director of GCHQ, one of the UK’s primary intelligence agencies, and is currently Visiting Professor in War Studies, King’s College London.

We’ll be discussing his career in intelligence and public service, the changes he’s seen along the way, and we’ll discuss his most recent book How Spies Think: 10 Lessons from Intelligence.  ... 

This podcast was produced in partnership with the CyberWire.  ... ' 

Microsoft Retracts Quantum Computing Paper

This seems to indicate the scientific method system is working. But don't retraction alerts get far less attention than the original paper?   I do note that Wired has following this closely, from the original claims, the objects, and now the withdrawal.  Good.  See in particular their simplified look at quantum computing.

Microsoft-Led Team Retracts Disputed Quantum-Computing Paper  By Tom Simonite in Wired

The 2018 report in Nature claimed to have found evidence of an elusive subatomic particle. A review found that the group had omitted key data. 

A MICROSOFT-LED TEAM of physicists has retracted a high-profile 2018 paper that the company touted as a key breakthrough in the creation of a practical quantum computer, a device that promises vast new computing power by tapping quantum mechanics.

The retracted paper came from a lab headed by Microsoft physicist Leo Kouwenhoven at Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands. It claimed to have found evidence of Majorana particles, long-theorized but never conclusively detected. The elusive entities are at the heart of Microsoft’s approach to quantum computing hardware, which lags behind that of others such as IBM and Google. ... " 

Explaining Reinforcement Learning

 Been recently involved with reinforcement learning, and found this interesting.   I see some advances in this space worth following.  Especially in RL, you need explanation regarding decisions, in order to support reasonable tuning.  

Dear Reinforcement Learning Agent, please explain your actions.

Explainable Reinforcement Learning for Longitudinal Control

Roman Liessner   in TowardDataScience

Here I present research with Jan Dohmen and Marco Wiering.

TL;DR: Reinforcement learning is promising for achieving new best performances in a variety of applications. However, as long as the learned actions remain intransparent, their use in security-relevant applications is unlikely. The new RL-SHAP Diagram presented here opens the black box and gives a new perspective to the Reinforcement Learning decision-making. ..."

Alexa Entities Build with Knowledge Graphs

Announcements in the Alexa Development blog about new means to connect knowledge graph data to voice interactions with Entities.    With code and Dev examples.   Technical.

Announcing Alexa Entities (Beta): Create More Intelligent and Engaging Skills With Easy Access to Alexa’s Knowledge  ....

Launch Productivity Build

We are excited to announce Alexa Entities (Beta), a new suite of tools that provides access to information about popular entities including people, places and things from Alexa’s Knowledge Graph. With Alexa Entities, you can now resolve strings in a customer’s utterance to common entities from a built-in catalog, using those entities as an entry point to traverse Alexa’s structured knowledge. Alexa Entities is currently supported for all customers with 15 Built-in Slot Types in English (US) and English (CA). Check out the technical documentation here to start building skills with Alexa’s knowledge.

Alexa Entities provides access to Alexa’s high-quality, continuously updated Knowledge Graph containing facts about popular entities including people (e.g. George Clooney’s birthday), places (e.g. the population and capital of Belgium) and things (e.g. the average weight of a hippo). 

Why Use Alexa Entities

Build More Intelligent & Engaging Skills: Alexa Entities makes Built-in Slot Types more useful by linking entities to Alexa’s knowledge, which can be used to build more engaging and intelligent experiences for customers. Connections between entities can be used to create more natural dialogues, for example “Add Alias Grace to my reading list”, “Got it. Have you thought about reading The Testaments, also written by Margaret Atwood in 2019?” Knowledge can also be used to easily disambiguate between similarly named entities, e.g. “Did you mean Anne Hathaway, born in 1556, or the actress in films such as Les Misérables?” or simply presented on-screen to create more engaging visual experiences. For example, the company Vocala recently used Alexa Entities to improve their new skill “Voice Blast”, which allows customers to compete against other players to guess celebrity voices. Alexa’s knowledge is used to provide additional facts about celebrities on-screen, complementing the spoken response with useful & interesting information. Simply say “Alexa, play Voice Blast” to see Alexa Entities in action.  ... "

Computational Complexity and Quantum

Computational complexity provides measures of how hard things are to compute.   Taught in many as part of analytics curriculum..   Which define classes of complexity.   Though we would like to define these for things like 'AI', turns out that is still quite difficult to say until we can appropriately define define it. .   So how well will quantum computing be able to solve different levels of complexity?  Another hard question.   Here is a starting look at that problem.   Technical.

The Power of Quantum Complexity   By Don Monroe

Communications of the ACM, March 2021, Vol. 64 No. 3, Pages 15-17  10.1145/3446875

For decades, computer scientists have compared the fundamental difficulty of solving various tasks, such as factoring a number or finding the most efficient route for a traveling salesperson. Along this way, they have described an alphabet soup of computational complexity classes and formal techniques for showing how various classes relate to each other.

The advent of quantum computers has introduced new flavors into such classification. It also has given urgency to understanding the potential of these still-limited machines, including the role of mysterious correlations of distant particles, known as entanglement. A recent manuscript concludes that incorporating entanglement into a well-known framework could allow verification of a staggering range of proofs, no matter how long they are.

The new result was first posted on a preprint server in January 2020, and immediately stimulated chatter in the vibrant computational-complexity blogosphere, but it has not yet been peer reviewed. Indeed, the authors already have identified a flaw in an earlier paper they built upon, although they later devised an alternate argument that left their conclusions intact.

If it stands up, the proof also will disprove a longstanding mathematical conjecture, with profound implications for both pure mathematics and physics. As a result, "Quite a few people take this to be true and are trying to follow up on it without really fully understanding it," said Vern Paulsen, a mathematician at the University of Waterloo, Ontario, who was not involved in the work. "It just shows how mainstream to the world of science computational complexity is."

"At some point, people who are working far away from computer science will find another proof of this result in their own language," said Henry Yuen of the University of Toronto. For now, however, "There's a lot of computer science concepts that lend themselves very naturally to putting the pieces together." Yuen co-authored the new paper with fellow computer scientists Zhengfeng Ji of the University of Technology, Sydney; Anand Natarajan and Thomas Vidick of the California Institute of Technology, and John Wright of the University of Texas, Austin. ... '

Sunday, March 07, 2021

On What Matters: Cornerstones

Below the intro, which links to the 'cornerstones',  good thoughts.   Certainly we discovered these in the enterprise, for new and older tech. 

Intelligent automation depends on these 4 cornerstones

By Andrew Spanyi, Spanyi International, March 7, 2021 

There has been more than a modicum of buzz around what IDC calls intelligent process automation and what Gartner calls hyperautomation. In both cases, these terms refer to the integrated deployment of digital technologies such as robotic process automation (RPA), intelligent business process management suites (iBPMS), artificial intelligence, process mining, etc. Integrating digital technologies is far from a new concept. MIT and Deloitte advocated this approach back in the day when everyone was focused on social, mobile, analytics, and cloud (SMAC).

Digital transformation is a complex undertaking. Frankly, the track record on digital transformation success is dismal, with as few as 30% of such initiatives succeeding. The integration of digital technologies may just be the lever that leads to more success. So it’s not surprising that a number of vendors have promoted this theme, including Appian, Automation Anywhere, Bizagi, ProcessMaker, and UiPath to name a few. However, no digital transformation effort will be effective if an organization doesn’t first have four key cornerstone practices nailed down: sequence, collaboration, scope, and mindset.  ... '   (click through from above for detail) 

Sidewalk Robots Get Rights

Coming changes in urban and suburban views.

Sidewalk robots get legal rights as "pedestrians"   By Jennifer A. Kingson in Axios

As small robots proliferate on sidewalks and city streets, so does legislation that grants them generous access rights and even classifies them, in the case of Pennsylvania, as "pedestrians."

Why it matters: Fears of a dystopian urban world where people dodge heavy, fast-moving droids are colliding with the aims of robot developers large and small — including Amazon and FedEx — to deploy delivery fleets. ... ' 

Saturday, March 06, 2021

Non-Fungible, Blockchained, Unique and Expensive

Don't fully understand this, but if someone is willing to pay for something provably unique?  The picture is shown at the link.

How a 10-Second Video Clip Sold for $6.6 Million   By Reuters, March 5, 2021  Reuters

An art collector who bought a 10-second video clip for $67,000 even though it was freely available to watch, recently sold it for $6.6 million.

In October, Miami-based art collector Pablo Rodriguez-Fraile bought a 10-second video clip by a digital artist for $67,000, even though it was freely available to watch; he recently sold it for $6.6 million.

Blockchain technology publicly authenticated the clip as unique, and its sale highlights the booming appeal of non-fungible tokens (NFTs) during the Covid-19 pandemic, as collectors spend vast sums on purely digital assets.

Non-fungible applies to items that cannot be exchanged on a like-for-like basis, as each one is novel.

NFTs' popularity could be fueled by the hype surrounding cryptocurrencies and blockchain, along with virtual reality's potential to create online worlds.

However, as with any emerging niche market, NFTs could suffer major losses if the hype dissipates, while there could be lucrative opportunities for fraud because many participants use aliases.

From Reuters    ... ' 

Quantum Effect in Erasing

Pondering the implications of this.

The Demon Is in the Detail—Trinity Team Discovers Uniquely Quantum Effect in Erasing Information

Trinity College Dublin (Ireland)   October 16, 2020

Researchers at Ireland's Trinity College Dublin and the U.K.'s University of Manchester discovered a uniquely quantum effect in deleting information that may have ramifications for the design of quantum computing processors. They found the quantum nature of information to be erased can give rise to significant deviations in heat dissipation not present in conventional bit erasure. The Trinity and Manchester scientists analyzed an experimentally realistic erasure process that permits quantum superposition, which results in rare events exhibiting heat dissipation far greater than the Landauer limit. Trinity's John Goold said, "This is a highly unusual finding that could be really important for heat management on future quantum chips—although there is much more work to be done, in particular in analyzing faster operations and the thermodynamics of other gate implementations."

Material AI Invention and Discovery

New directions in new material discovery.  As it mentions, AI-driven molecular driven platform that is said to invent new molecular structure

IBM launches AI platform to discover new materials

Kyle Wiggers  @Kyle_L_Wiggers   in Venturebeat

IBM today announced the launch of the Molecule Generation Experience (MolGX), a cloud-based, AI-driven molecular design platform that automatically invents new molecular structures. MolGX, a part of IBM’s overarching strategy that aims to accelerate the discovery of new materials by 10 to 100 times, uncovers materials from the property targets of a given product.

The chemical sciences have made strides in the discovery of novel and useful materials over the past decades. For example, in the area of polymers, the recent development of thermoplastics has had an influence on applications ranging from new paints to clothing fibers. But while the discovery of new materials is the driving force in the expansion and improvement of industrial products, the vastness of chemical space likely exceeds the ability of human experts to explore even a fraction of it.  .. " 


Stop Conversations Sooner?

Perhaps a guide for chatbots?  Or is the guide for them different?  Though like all such guides, and rules of thumb, depends highly on context.

When Should You End a Conversation? Sooner Than You Think, Harvard Research Shows In two experiments, more than 67 percent said they wanted out but the other person kept talking.

By Minda Zetlin     @MINDAZETLIN  in INC,   Harvard research 

Do you want people to enjoy talking with you? You should probably end your conversations more quickly than you do. Most people stay in conversations longer than they want to for fear of hurting the other person's feelings, new research shows. In fact, in about two thirds of conversations, whether between strangers or loved ones, at least one person wants out well before the exchange ends. Sometimes both people want to stop, but they keep on talking anyway, because neither wants to cause offense.

That's the finding from two recent experiments by a reearch team headed by Adam Mastroianni, a doctoral student in psychology at Harvard. In one, 252 strangers were paired up for conversations that could be as short or as long as they wished, up to 45 minutes. In the other, 806 online volunteers were asked to think about a recent conversation with someone they were close to. In both cases, more than two thirds of participants reported that the conversation had gone on longer than they wanted. Some participants thought the conversation was too short and wished they could have kept talking. How often were both people satisfied with the length of their conversation? Only 2 percent of the time.  ...  " 

Google to Stop Tracking Users for Targeted Ads

Has long been done with cookies.  More recently has been more dangerously proposed via  'CName Collusion'  See:  https://twit.tv/shows/security-now/episodes/808?autostart=false    https://www.grc.com/sn/SN-808-Notes.pdf  ... 

Google to Stop Tracking Users for Targeted Ads  By The Hill   March 5, 2021

Google says it will no longer track users across Internet searches to sell targeted advertising, and will not build alternative user-tracking models.

The search engine giant last year pledged to phase out the use of third-party cookies within two years, as part of its Privacy Sandbox initiative to develop standards to improve online privacy.

Google's David Temkin said this week that Google products will be powered by "privacy-preserving [application programming interfaces] which prevent individual tracking while still delivering results for advertisers and publishers."

Temkin cited data Google issued in January demonstrating a method to "effectively" remove third-party cookies from advertising, by "clustering" communities with similar interests, rather than specific individuals.   ... '

Friday, March 05, 2021

Imaginary Numbers Essential for a Quantum Reality

Good piece, math-technical, worth a skim regardless.   Intro below.  

Imaginary Numbers May Be Essential for Describing Quantum Reality

A new thought experiment indicates that quantum mechanics doesn’t work without strange numbers that turn negative when squared.

Charlie Wood   Contributing Writer  Quanta Magazine

Mathematicians were disturbed, centuries ago, to find that calculating the properties of certain curves demanded the seemingly impossible: numbers that, when multiplied by themselves, turn negative.

All the numbers on the number line, when squared, yield a positive number; 22 = 4, and (-2)2 = 4. Mathematicians started calling those familiar numbers “real” and the apparently impossible breed of numbers “imaginary.”

Imaginary numbers, labeled with units of i (where, for instance, (2i)2 = -4), gradually became fixtures in the abstract realm of mathematics. For physicists, however, real numbers sufficed to quantify reality. Sometimes, so-called complex numbers, with both real and imaginary parts, such as 2 + 3i, have streamlined calculations, but in apparently optional ways. No instrument has ever returned a reading with an i.

Yet physicists may have just shown for the first time that imaginary numbers are, in a sense, real.

A group of quantum theorists designed an experiment whose outcome depends on whether nature has an imaginary side. Provided that quantum mechanics is correct — an assumption few would quibble with — the team’s argument essentially guarantees that complex numbers are an unavoidable part of our description of the physical universe.

“These complex numbers, usually they’re just a convenient tool, but here it turns out that they really have some physical meaning,” said Tamás Vértesi, a physicist at the Institute for Nuclear Research at the Hungarian Academy of Sciences who, years ago, argued the opposite. “The world is such that it really requires these complex” numbers, he said.

In quantum mechanics, the behavior of a particle or group of particles is encapsulated by a wavelike entity known as the wave function, or ψ. The wave function forecasts possible outcomes of measurements, such as an electron’s possible position or momentum. The so-called Schrödinger equation describes how the wave function changes in time — and this equation features an i. ... ' 

Facebook's Seer Recognizes Images

Thinking the implications of this in business practice.

Facebook’s new AI model SEER can teach itself to recognize images  By Mike Wheatley in SiliconAngle

Researchers at Facebook Inc. have created an artificial intelligence-based image recognition model called SEER  (Technical) that’s able to describe what it’s seeing without being trained first on a labeled dataset.

Facebook said that SEER, which is an acronym for “Self-SupeERvised,” is a breakthrough that could lead to a “revolution” in computer vision.

The SEER model, outlined in a paper released March 2, was fed 1 billion publicly available images without annotations or labels from Instagram. It then worked through the dataset, learning as it progressed, and was eventually able to achieve extremely high accuracy in tasks such as object detection.

Self-supervised AI learning is already established in the AI field. It refers to AI systems that can learn directly from whatever information they are given without being trained on carefully labeled datasets that can teach them how to perform a given task, such as recognizing an object in a photo or translating a piece of text.  ... ' 

AI Changing Human Choice and Chance?

Perhaps it will, but its still in very small ways.  We are not even close to major changes.   .... 

AI is killing choice and chance—changing what it means to be human  by Nir Eisikovits and Dan Feldman  in Techexplore

The history of humans' use of technology has always been a history of coevolution. Philosophers from Rousseau to Heidegger to Carl Schmitt have argued that technology is never a neutral tool for achieving human ends. Technological innovations—from the most rudimentary to the most sophisticated – reshape people as they use these innovations to control their environment. Artificial intelligence is a new and powerful tool, and it, too, is altering humanity.  ... '

Syncing time on Smartphones for Measurements

Can be useful for synchronization of measurement.

Twist-n-Sync: Skoltech Scientists Use Smartphone Gyroscopes to Sync Time Across Devices

Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology (Russia)

February 19, 2021

A software-based algorithm developed by scientists at Russia's Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology (Skoltech) and Saint Petersburg State University can synchronize time across smartphones for practical tasks requiring simultaneous measurements. Their clock synchronization method is based on micro-electro-mechanical systems (MEMS) gyroscopes, standard equipment in smartphones. The algorithm was employed in two smartphones capturing simultaneous photos, which outperformed existing synchronization software to realize an accuracy of several microseconds. The technique involves grabbing the smartphones in one hand, twisting them slightly, and allowing the software to process and compute for clock synchronization. The team is adapting the method to systems that include not just smartphones but other sensors, like LiDAR and depth cameras. .. ' 

Thursday, March 04, 2021

AWS Enhances Amazon Managed Blockchain with Ethereum support

 This is interesting because it incudes ethereum support for Smart Contracts, being examined here.

AWS Enhances Amazon Managed Blockchain with Ethereum support  By Maria Deutscher  in SiliconAngle

Amazon Web Services Inc. has launched an enhanced version of its Amazon Managed Blockchain service that features support for the popular Ethereum blockchain platform.

Launched in 2015, Ethereum is the basis of Ether, the second most valuable cryptocurrency after Bitcoin by market capitalization. The blockchain platform features a technology known as smart contracts that makes it possible to automate tasks such as transferring funds.

Over recent quarters, the value of Ether has soared amid a surge of investor interest in cryptocurrencies. Meanwhile, enterprises such as insurance giant Aon PLC have started exploring ways of applying Ethereum’s smart contracts for tasks such as streaming the insurance underwriting process.

The new Ethereum support in Amazon Managed Blockchain, announced quietly Tuesday, will enable AWS to support such use cases for its customers. Amazon Managed Blockchain is a service launched in 2019 that allows companies to set up and run blockchain infrastructure. It abstracts away much of the technical heavy lifting involved in the task to simplify operations for customers.   ... "

https://ethereum.org/en/developers/docs/smart-contracts/

AI Finds Battery Materials

More detail about the method at the link.

Using AI to Find Essential Battery Materials

As battery demand soars, researchers are turning to artificial intelligence for more effective and sustainable methods    By Maria Gallucci in IEEE Spectrum

Demand for battery-making metals is projected to soar as more of the world’s cars, buses, and ships run on electricity. The coming mining boom is raising concerns of environmental damage and labor abuses—and it’s driving a search for more sustainable ways of making batteries and cutting-edge electronics.

Artificial intelligence could help improve the way battery metals are mined, or replace them altogether. KoBold Metals is developing an AI agent to find the most desirable ore deposits in the least problematic locations. IBM Research, meanwhile, is harnessing AI techniques to identify alternative materials that already exist and also develop new chemistries.

KoBold, a mining exploration startup, says its technology could reduce the need for costly and invasive exploration missions, which often involve scouring the Earth many times over to find rare, high-quality reserves. 

“All the stuff poking out of the ground has already been found,” said Kurt House, co-founder and CEO of the San Francisco Bay area company. “At the same time, we’ve realized we need to massively change the energy system, which requires all these new minerals.”

KoBold is partnering with Stanford University’s Center for Earth Resource Forecasting to develop an AI agent that can make decisions about how and where explorers should focus their work. The startup is mainly looking for copper, cobalt, nickel, and lithium—metals key to making electric vehicle batteries as well as solar panels, smartphones, and many other devices.... " 

AI Video Analysis in Athletics

An example of how AI pattern recognition can achieve fine grain pattern detection and matching.   Here in athletic training planning and evaluation.   Note links to an athletic tracking system that might be used to provide data to work with.    And simulate alternate situations.    An example of possible use in many domains.

NFL hopefuls are adding AI video analysis to their arsenal

Intel's 3D tracking could help guide athletes toward peak performance

By Chris Velazco  @chrisvelazco  in Engadget

More than 130 football players have been training under the watchful eye of the athletic performance development company EXOS in Arizona, all in hopes of landing a first-round NFL draft pick. As it turns out, though, the eyes they’ve been working in front of aren’t exclusively human. Intel today said that EXOS’s latest batch of NFL hopefuls have been training in front of video cameras that — with the help of the company’s 3D athlete tracking system — should give players and staff a finer sense of their “body mechanics or trouble spots.” ... ' 

Soft Robot Swims in the Mariana Trench

An example of extreme exploration, using a soft biomimicking design.  Considerable possibilities here.

Soft robot swims in the Mariana Trench  in Techexplore by Bob Yirka 

A team of researchers affiliated with multiple institutions in China has developed a soft robot that can successfully swim in the Mariana Trench. In their paper published in the journal Nature,, the group describes their soft robot and its capabilities. Cecilia Laschi and Marcello Calisti with the National University of Singapore and the University of Lincoln, respectively, have published a News & Views piece in the same journal issue outlining the work by the team in China. ... " 

China Charges Ahead with National Digital Currency

Implications of these changes for US and Others? 

China Charges Ahead with National Digital Currency  By The New York Times,  March 4, 2021

China has charged ahead with a bold effort to remake the way that government-backed money works, rolling out its own digital currency with different qualities than cash or digital deposits.

China is forging ahead with a national digital currency called the electronic Chinese yuan (eCNY), with government presentations indicating the People's Bank of China recently expanded trials of the currency to major cities like Beijing and Shanghai.  Unlike decentralized cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin, national digital currencies are firmly controlled by the government.

People's Bank officials said the eCNY does not use the blockchain technology that most cryptocurrencies rely on, and recipients have only a few weeks to spend the digital currency before it disappears. ... '   The eCNY could further empower China's government to monitor finance channels because a digital currency system can record all transactions.

Yaya Fanusie at the nonprofit Foundation for Defense of Democracy's Center on Economic and Financial Power think tank said China's initiative is "about developing new tools to collect data and leverage that data so that the Chinese economy is more intelligent and based on real-time information."

From The New York Times

Quantum Wavelength Switch

Interesting direction outlines.   Note the number of users in the quantum network being key.

Quantum Internet Closer to Reality, Thanks to This Switch

By Purdue University News,  March 3, 2021

A new study has found that using a programmable wavelength-selective switch can help increase the number of users in a quantum network without increasing photon loss from the switching device.

Engineers at Purdue University and the U.S. Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory have overcome an obstacle in the development of a quantum Internet via a programmable switch that adjusts the amount of data sent to each user by selecting and rerouting wavelengths of light carrying data channels.

This could increase user numbers without incurring greater photon and data loss as the network expands. The approach removes the need to physically interchange many fixed optical filters tuned to individual wavelengths, by simply programming the switch to route data-carrying wavelengths to each new user.

The switch also can be programmed to modify bandwidth based on user needs.  ... " 


Wednesday, March 03, 2021

Amazon Launches tools to Manage Workflows

We were mainly looking at how to manage work flows in general,  but the same goal really.    Replace some of the resource components with robots, people, analytics external flows.  Like to see the examples of how and measures of results.  Reinforcement training would seem to be a natural approach.  

Amazon launches reinforcement learning tools to manage robots’ workflows  By Kyle Wiggers  @Kyle_L_Wiggers  in Venturebeat

Amazon today launched SageMaker Reinforcement Learning (RL) Kubeflow Components, a toolkit supporting the company’s AWS RoboMaker service for orchestrating robotics workflows. Amazon says that the goal is to make it faster to experiment and manage robotics workloads from perception to controls and optimization, and to create end-to-end solutions without having to rebuild them each time.

Robots are being used more widely for purposes that are increasing in sophistication, like assembly, picking and packing, last-mile delivery, environmental monitoring, search and rescue, and assisted surgery. In China, Oxford Economics anticipates 12.5 million manufacturing jobs will become automated, while in the U.S., McKinsey projects machines will take upwards of 30% of such jobs. As for reinforcement learning, it’s an emerging AI technique that can help develop solutions for the kinds of problems that are increasingly cropping up in robotics.  ... "

Google Cardboard VR is Gone

I used to recommend these in classes.   Still have some around, somewhere ....  Too bad.  Downward trend in VR signaled?   

Google stops selling its Cardboard VR goggles after seven years

The affordable headset helped bring virtual reality to the masses.

By Saqib Shah   S. Shah|03.03.21   @eightiethmnt  in Engadget

Google has officially bid farewell to Cardboard, its cheap gateway into the world of mobile virtual reality. The goggles are no longer available on the company's online store, reports Android Police. The writing was already on the wall for Cardboard back in 2019, when Google announced it was shifting to an open source model that would let developers create VR experiences that supported the $15 headset. By then, it had also abandoned its higher-tier Daydream View goggles, with Samsung following a similar route, that signalled to many that the tech giants were through with smartphone-based VR.  ... "   

Publix Pandemic Sales Increase

 Interesting numbers, starting with increased sales.   A kind of behavioral measure of interest.  Much more at the link.

Publix Super Markets: For the full fiscal 2020 year, Publix saw net earnings rise by $1 billion to $4 billion.   Publix says pandemic boosted fiscal 2020 sales by 12.1% ... 

By Russell Redman ... '  in Supermarket News

Publix Super Markets tallied big sales and earnings gains for its 2020 fourth quarter and fiscal year, fueled by booming consumer demand for food and groceries amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

For the quarter ended Dec. 26, sales climbed 14.8% to $11.2 billion from $9.8 billion a year earlier, with same-store sales rising 13.4% year over year, Publix reported yesterday. The Lakeland, Fla.-based grocer estimated that the pandemic’s impact lifted sales for the period by 8.7%, or about $850 million. ... ' 

Retrain Your Model, Update the Data

Such an obvious thing, but often forgotten. I make a point to include such updating instructions in everything I delivered.   No data, except from physics, is static.  Estimate, at least, the risk involved in not updating a model consistently.    It also applies to all analytical models, beyond AI/ML models.  We did it in common optimization models in the enterprise.  

Why is re-training ML Models Important?

A Product Manager’s Perspective  in Towards Data Science

By Humberto Corona (totó pampín)

As a product manager, you are responsible for measuring the continuous success of your product. That might include validation before launching, measuring uplifts in an A/B test while launching, and keeping track of core KPIs. If you are managing a Machine Learning product, the long-term success of your product will depend on keeping your models up-to-date. In this post I explain why this is important problem and how can you ensure that continuous success through model re-training.  ... "

A Security Problem with Common PLCs

We worked actively with PLCs, 'Programmable Logic Controllers' in the enterprise.    Small, dedicated computers used to control industrial process.  They reliably do both simple and complex tasks in the lab and plant.   I see that Steve Gibson in Twit has written about a security problem with these,  commonly used.  Notes on it are at the link below. Crucial if you use these, fix it.

Rockwell Automation's CVE-2021-22681 is a CRITICAL 10 out of 10  (Page 3) 

The security of nearly all of Rockwell Automation's “PLC”s — Programmable Logic Controllers — are affected by the use of a single globally shared static encryption key. Yes... Every one of the hundreds of thousands of their systems in the world is “protected” by the same single key ..... ' 

Detecting Earthquakes and Waves

A favorite topic, detecting pattern.  Its a big part of our intelligence.   Here using new kinds of sensor data. 

Google Uses Underwater Fiber-Optic Cable to Detect Earthquakes   By New Scientist

A submarine fiber-optic cable owned by Google was used by researchers at the search engine giant and California Institute of Technology (Caltech) to detect earthquakes and ocean waves generated by storms.

The investigators measured changes in pressure and strain using traffic data from the 10,000-kilometer (6,213-mile)-long cable on the floor of the Pacific Ocean, recording about 30 ocean storm swell events and roughly 20 quakes exceeding magnitude 5 over nine months. Caltech's Zhongwen Zhan described this approach as more flexible and scalable than other attempts to deploy fiber-optic sensors, as new infrastructure is unnecessary.   Anthony Sladen at the University Côte d’Azur in France says the study constitutes “a major step in exploiting the benefits of existing cables.”

From New Scientist

Tuesday, March 02, 2021

Wikibon Research

Brought back to my attention and of interest. 

Wikibon 2021 Research Focus

The Wikibon 2021 research focus is based on a community-based approach to deliver in-depth research and analysis across a broad range of enterprise technology topics. Our community has been built from the ground up using collaborative methods powered by Wikibon’s ethos of open content and theCUBE.

Wikibon was founded on the premise that practitioners collectively possess more knowledge than any one person or research entity. We have developed methods to package and curate that knowledge for our community. theCUBE is a digital offering that for more than ten years has operated TV productions at tech events. In addition, theCUBE operates digital studios on-premises and remotely from its offices in northern California and Massachusetts.

We also partner with several expert data providers, including Enterprise Technology Research (ETR), which publishes quarterly spending intentions data based on surveys of CIOs and enterprise technology buyers. Under our agreement, we can curate this survey data and selectively present data to support our research initiatives.

Our community comprises more than 50,000 individuals, many of whom have contributed their knowledge directly through interviews on theCUBE or in collaborative sessions with Wikibon Analysts.

Broadly, Wikibon’s topical coverage spans the following seven primary areas that have overlapping content vectors:

Cloud,  Infrastructure,  Data,   Security,  Enterprise Software,  Edge computing,  Emerging technologies

We provide selective market data, industry trends, customer spending patterns, key customer challenges, technology provider solutions, economic analysis, and analysis of relevant news within these sectors. ... ' 

Spending in a Solarwinds and COVID Context

Interesting to see the specific implications of security and supply chain contexts. 

Breaking Analysis: How the SolarWinds Hack & COVID are Changing CISO Spending Patterns By David Vellante  FEBRUARY 13 2021  in WikiBon

Top security pros say that the SolarWinds hack and the pandemic have accelerated a change in their cyber security spending patterns. Not only must CISOs secure an increasingly distributed workforce, but they now must also be wary of software code coming from reputable vendors, including the very patches designed to protect them against cyber attacks. Organizations are increasingly prioritizing zero trust approaches including simplified identity access management, better endpoint protection and cloud security. While leading solutions in these sectors are gaining momentum, traditional legacy offerings are being managed down from a spending perspective. 

In this Breaking Analysis, we’ll summarize CISO sentiments from a recent ETR VENN session and provide our quarterly update of the cybersecurity sector. In an upcoming episode we’ll be inviting Erik Bradley of ETR to provide deeper analysis on these trends. Here we’ll give you a first look and our initial take on what’s happening in the information security sector as we kick off 2021. 

The SolarWinds Attack was “Like Nothing We’ve Ever Seen”

It’s been covered in the press but in case you don’t know the details, SolarWinds is a company that provides software to monitor many aspects of on-prem infrastructure, including network performance, log files, configuration data, storage, servers, etc. Like all software companies, SolarWinds sends out regular updates and patches. Hackers were able to infiltrate the update and “trojanize” the software. Meaning when customers installed the updates, the malware just went along for the ride.   ... ' 

TripleBlind raises $8.2 million Encrypted Data Science Platform

 Most interesting Application here, note interaction of compliance.

TripleBlind raises $8.2 million for its Encrypted Data Science platform

Kyle Wiggers  @Kyle_L_Wiggers,  March 1, 2021 6:00 AM

TripleBlind, a Kansas City, Missouri-based startup developing a platform that enables companies to train models on encrypted data, today announced it has raised $8.2 million. The company says the funds will be put toward R&D as it looks to expand the international reach of its products.

In industries like financial services and health care, privacy regulations like the U.S. Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) prevent companies from sharing data. As a result, 73% of enterprise data goes unanalyzed, according to a recent analysis.

Earlier in his career, TripleBlind CEO Riddhiman Das was the product architect at EyeVerify, where he helped commercialize a software-only biometric method for verifying the identity of mobile users. EyeVerify was bought by payments giant Ant Financial, but it ran into privacy issues and wasn’t able to collect eye image data to improve its algorithms. Shortly afterward, cofounder Greg Storm and Das left Ant to devote themselves to creating TripleBlind to focus on market-driven and regulatory concerns with regard to data storage and auditability. 

TripleBlind claims to have developed “next-generation” cryptology that allows companies to provide and use sensitive data and algorithms in an encrypted space without compromising privacy. The startup aims to launch a marketplace that will let research institutes, businesses, and engineers collaborate around both sensitive data and algorithms.  ... ' 

Towards Decentralized Finance

Notable look at where this might be going.  Getting some reading that it is being much more broadly applied than expected.   But there remains some strongly based skepticism.  

Traditional Centralized Systems in Business & Finance

Blockchain is transforming the future of the financial industry, as well as many other businesses.

Posted by   Ryan Kh  January 19, 2021

Blockchain in finance

The Incredible Predictive Analytics Capabilities Of Blockchain

Blockchain is one of the most important technologies to shape the world. One of the biggest industries that has been affected has been finance.

The market for blockchain technology in the financial sector is expected to reach over $3 billion by 2024. The question many experts are asking is: “what factors are driving the growth in blockchain in the financial industry?”

Blockchain Transforms Financial Industry

The world constantly changes and evolves. Whether it is due to the environment or human innovation, life progresses. It is up to mankind to adapt and make the best out of the circumstances we experience. Life has its ups and downs, victors and victims, and challenges and opportunities.

In business, we learn about how the business cycle accurately imitates life. There are good times and bad times. There are even okay times. It is those times in business and life that people must embrace and learn from. They must learn to harness their strength to persevere through change to experience the beauty of it.

With all that being said, we are emerging in a period of evolution in a world plagued by troubling times. A time that will fully embrace the advancement of technology in all areas of life. A time that world leaders and innovators refer to as the fourth industrial revolution. The change that seems most prevailing in terms of technological advancement is in business and finance to kickstart this revolution. In the year 2009, a man under the alias of Satoshi Nakamoto invented the first digital currency called bitcoin and initiated the use of blockchains. ... ' 

Monday, March 01, 2021

Space Hotel being Planned for 2025

Cost details lacking but plans starting.   Still fairly speculative, but as I watch some of satellite deployments and other efficiency operations be experimented with, you have to consider it on the horizon.

World's first space HOTEL to begin construction in low Earth orbit in 2025 complete with restaurants, cinemas and rooms for up to 400 guests

Experts from Orbital Assembly Corporation plan to build the inner spinning wheel using robots in Earth orbit.   Individual pods will then be launched to attach to the outer edges of this spinning wheel.  The pods will include hotel rooms, cinemas, bars, a health spa and restaurants, and could be sold to NASA.   So far there have been no details of what it will cost to build or stay in have been revealed by the firm. 

 By  Ryan Morrison in DailyMail ... 

Work is due to start on the world's first 'space hotel' in low Earth orbit in 2025 - and it will come equipped with restaurants, a cinema, spa and rooms for 400 people.

Developed by the Orbital Assembly Corporation (OAC), the Voyager Station could be operational as early as 2027, with the infrastructure built in orbit around the Earth.

The space station will be a large circle and rotate to generate artificial gravity that will be set at a similar level to the gravity found on the surface of the Moon.    ...  '

IBM Cloud Satellites: Watson and the Edge

Towards more secure data via satellites.  Secure Data as a Service.

IBM Cloud Satellite Enables Clients to Deliver Cloud Securely in Any Environment Including at the Edge 

Lumen Technologies is a key edge compute partner to integrate IBM Cloud Satellite for 180,000 enterprise locations.  More than 65 ecosystem partners, including Cisco, Dell Technologies and Intel, to build hybrid cloud services

IBM Cloud Pak for Data as a Service with IBM Cloud Satellite extends Watson Anywhere AI

ARMONK, N.Y., March 1, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- IBM (NYSE: IBM) today announced that its hybrid cloud services are now generally available in any environment -- on any cloud, on premises or at the edge -- via IBM Cloud Satellite. Lumen Technologies and IBM have integrated IBM Cloud Satellite with the Lumen edge platform to enable clients to harness hybrid cloud services in near real-time and build innovative solutions at the edge.    ... "

Global Variances in Digital Trust

 Digital Trust, supposedly accurately measured.  Had not seen this before, probably useful if accurate.   The components of the measure also seem  they would be hard to generally measure.   And likely have   considerable variance over time, depending on the news.  Below a summary of a long article in the   HBR.   

How Digital Trust Varies Around the World  by Bhaskar Chakravorti, Ajay Bhalla, and Ravi Shankar Chaturvedi     February 25, 2021

Summary.   

As economies around the world digitalize rapidly in response to the pandemic, one component that can sometimes get left behind is user trust. What does it take to build out a digital ecosystem that users will feel comfortable actually using? To answer this question, the authors explored four components of digital trust: the security of an economy’s digital environment; the quality of the digital user experience; the extent to which users report trust in their digital environment; and the extent to which users actually use the digital tools available to them. They then used almost 200 indicators to rank 42 global economies on their performance in each of these four metrics, finding a number of interesting trends around how different economies have developed mechanisms for engendering trust, as well as how different types of trust do — or don’t — correspond to other digital development metrics.   ...' 

DigiDog Policing Dog and Privacy

Seems the outgrowth of the 'Spot' dog,  design from Boston Dynamics, which I have been following.  Here called DigiDog.  Not sure what this sure what this has to do with 'privacy', but clearly does have to do with the safety of everyone involved.   The DigiDog, as far as I know is unarmed. 

Digidog, a Robotic Dog Used by the Police, Stirs Privacy Concerns  By The New York Times,  March 1, 2021

The Digidog robot. 

The New York Police Department is using a 70-pound robotic dog with cameras and lights affixed to its frame and a two-way communication system to remotely assess dangerous situations.

Two men were being held hostage in a Bronx apartment. They had been threatened at gunpoint, tied up and tortured for hours by two other men who pretended to be plumbers to get inside, the police said.

One of the victims managed to escape and called the police, who showed up early Tuesday morning at the apartment on East 227th Street, unsure if the armed men were still inside.

The police decided it was time to deploy Digidog, a 70-pound robotic dog with a loping gait, cameras and lights affixed to its frame, and a two-way communication system that allows the officer maneuvering it remotely to see and hear what is happening.

The police said the robot can see in the dark and assess how safe it is for officers to enter an apartment or building where there may be a threat.

From The New York Times

Tezos and Wolfram for Blockchain

 New to me, and interesting, with quite a bit of detail and even sample code.  Will be examining smart contract implications.

Third-Generation Blockchain Functionality with Tezos and the Wolfram Language

As CEO of Wolfram Blockchain Labs (WBL), (John Woodard, CEO Wolfram Blockchain Labs)   I think one of the most exciting parts of my job is collaborating with other leaders in the blockchain space to expand tools for developers and business use cases. For several years now, we’ve been adding a steady stream of blockchain functionality into the Wolfram Language to enable development of knowledge-based distributed applications and computational contracts. You may have noticed the growing number of popular blockchains (ARK, Bitcoin, bloxberg, Cardano, Ethereum, MultiChain…) partnering with us and integrating into our platform. It’s already led to some cool explorations, and we have a lot more in the pipeline.

Today, WBL is happy to announce its latest such collaboration, a partnership with TQ Tezos. That includes Tezos blockchain integration in the Wolfram Language, which is great news for smart contract developers and enthusiasts. But that’s just the beginning. Our long-term plans include a lot of big ideas that we think everyone will be excited about!   ... " 

IBM Makes Encryption Paradox Practical in IEEE Spectrum

More on FHE and IBM.   From IEEE Spectrum ... 

IBM Makes Encryption Paradox Practical  in IEEE Spectrum

“Fully homomorphic” cryptography allows partial access to digital vaults without ever opening their locks    By Dan Garisto

How do you access the contents of a safe without ever opening its lock or otherwise getting inside? This riddle may seem confounding, but its digital equivalent is now so solvable that it’s becoming a business plan. 

IBM is the latest innovator to tackle the well-studied cryptographic technique called fully homomorphic encryption (FHE), which allows for the processing of encrypted files without ever needing to decrypt them first. Earlier this month, in fact, Big Blue introduced an online demo for companies to try out with their own confidential data. IBM’s FHE protocol is inefficient, but it’s workable enough still to give users a chance to take it for a spin. 

Today’s public cloud services, for all their popularity, nevertheless typically present a tacit tradeoff between security and utility. To secure data, it must stay encrypted; to process data, it must first be decrypted. Even something as simple as a search function has required data owners to relinquish security to providers whom they may not trust.

Yet with a workable and reasonably efficient FHE system, even the most heavily encrypted data can still be securely processed. A customer could, for instance, upload their encrypted genetic data to a website, have their genealogy matched and sent back to them—all without the company ever knowing anything about their DNA or family tree. 

At the beginning of 2020, IBM reported the results of a test with a Brazilian bank, which showed that FHE could be used for a task as complex as machine learning. Using transaction data from Banco Bradesco, IBM trained two models—one with FHE and one with unencrypted data—to make predictions such as when customers would need loans.

Even though the data was encrypted, the FHE scheme made predictions with accuracy equal to the unencrypted model. Other companies, such as Microsoft and Google have also invested in the technology and developed open-source toolkits that allow users to try out FHE. These software libraries, however, are difficult to implement for anyone but a cryptographer, a problem IBM hopes to remedy with its new service.           

“This announcement right now is really about making that first level very consumable for the people [who] are maybe not quite as crypto-savvy,” said Michael Osborne, a security researcher at IBM.

One of the problems with bringing FHE to market is that it must be tailor-made for each situation. What works for Banco Bradesco can’t necessarily be transferred seamlessly over to Bank of America, for example.   .... "