The chatbot with its own office and personal (human) assistant
Chatbots provide a way for customers to transact with companies from wherever they are at any hour of the day.
Chatbots provide a way for customers to transact with companies from wherever they are at any hour of the day.
NAB subsidiary UBank is soon to launch a virtual assistant to guide customers through the home loan application process.
John McEnroe, known for his on-court outbursts, would be in his element at next month's Wimbledon tennis tournament, where every fist-pump of elation and cry of angst will be analysed by artificial intelligence to compile video highlights.
Using cloud services to do the heavy lifting and full-wave inversion have led to better quality seismic imaging and a shorter time between data acquisition and data being made available to seismic interpreters at Woodside.
Trials now complete, the federal government agencies that were early adopters of IBM’s cognitive computing platform Watson are considering its future use.
Watson might schedule your meetings someday if a partnership between IBM and Cisco Systems bears the fruit they’re hoping to grow. In the meantime, the companies hope to save employees from some of the meaningless tasks they have to carry out just to work with their colleagues.
The result will be a cloud service called Watson for Cyber Security that's designed to provide insights into emerging threats as well as recommendations on how to stop them.
IBM has announced a new weapon in the battle against cancer that will put Watson to work in a new way.
IBM's Watson has been pushing ever further into the business world in recent months, and now it's helping online merchants analyse performance and make better merchandising decisions.
IBM has opened a Watson client experience centre in Melbourne so that enterprises can try out the vendor’s cognitive computing technology and tools.
These seven IBM Watson-powered apps are transforming the way work is done in industries ranging from healthcare and travel to entertainment and oil & gas.
Australian resources company Woodside will use IBM's 'cognitive computing' system Watson to extract historical data from project reports.
The Department of Immigration and Border Protection will employ IBM's Watson platform to analyse unstructured data.
IBM is investing $US1 billion in its IBM Watson Group with the aim of creating an ecosystem of startups and businesses building cognitive computing applications with Watson. Here are 10 examples that are making an impact.
"'Quiz show contestant' may be the first job made redundant by Watson, but I'm sure it won't be the last," Ken Jennings wrote.