Get ready to get your hands on your first ever interaction
with Artificial Intelligence. In a bid to make AI more accessible to people who
don’t like to parse academic papers, Google has opened a new website this
Tuesday called A.I. Experiments. The website will entail many artificial
intelligence research cases done by Google through easy to use web apps which
will help everyone get a sense of what the technology is.
So you can visit the website and use a software that guesses
what you are drawing, a camera app that can tell what you are putting in front
of it, and a music app which can play “duets” with you just like a human.
One of the projects called “Quick, Draw!” is a game where
you are told to draw a certain thing at first, like a ceiling fan or a bat or a
bicycle, and then the software tries to guess what you are drawing.
Another experiment titled A.I. Duet, tries to mimic some
musical notes that you played using your keyboard to play a few of its own and
try to create some sensible music.
Giorgio Cam shows off Google’s AI vision technology, as it
aims to identify the object you place in front of your camera, and then turns
them into some lyrics of a song.
Another AI software called the Thing Translator utilizes the
Google Translate tech translates objects you point to in different languages.
And if you are interested in understanding how the magic
happens, you can go and dig into Google’s posted code for nearly all of the AI
projects A.I. on GitHub. They are also taking submissions from talented
developers who used Google’s tech to create similar applications.
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