News

IBM Watson’s three new application program interfaces available to developers boost the supercomputer’s emotional and visual capabilities. The cognitive APIs are available to developers in beta form, ...
APIs for Watson are available through IBM's Bluemix cloud service, covering the likes of machine translation to rendering visualizations of data Those who have been chomping at the bit to use IBM’s ...
Strengthening its push into the Internet of Things, IBM is making a range of application programming interfaces (APIs) available through its Watson IoT unit and opening up new facilities for the group ...
Join the event trusted by enterprise leaders for nearly two decades. VB Transform brings together the people building real enterprise AI strategy. Learn more IBM is building a plugin that gives bot ...
The announcement was made by IBM during its forum on cognitive computing and Artificial Intelligence, where the company announced a new Watson location in San Francisco. IBM also previewed new ...
As part of IBM’s annual InterConnect conference in Las Vegas, the company is announcing a new machine learning course in partnership with workspace and education provider Galvanize to familiarize ...
The FINANCIAL — IBM on February 23 announced new and expanded cognitive APIs for developers that enhance Watson’s emotional and visual senses, further extending the capabilities of the industry’s ...
The video analyzing content enrichment service sounds similar to Google’s Cloud Video Intelligence API currently being tested as a way to use AI to automatically classify video. Being able to easily ...
The Watson Assistant combines two Watson services -- Watson Conversation and Watson Virtual Agent -- to offer businesses a more advanced conversational experience that can be pre-trained on a range of ...
Technology heavyweight IBM today is announcing that it has acquired AlchemyAPI, a startup with a service for making inferences on images and text using a form of trendy artificial intelligence called ...
Don't pick on Watson. IBM didn't mention Jefferies analyst James Kisner by name, but it was clear CFO Martin Schroeter was trying to knock down the analyst's critique of Watson point by point.