Submit newsAdvertise & rates  18°C Johannesburg Contact us
Press offices
IT & Telecommunications company news

IBM head to give talk on five coming innovations

30 Jan 2013 13:28Submit a commentBizLike
Welcome to the era of cognitive computing. IBM has unveiled its 5 in 5 - five predictions about technology innovations that will change the way we work, live and interact within the next five years.
The ideas come from thousands of IBM biologists, engineers, mathematicians and physicians who predict that computers will begin to mimic and augment the five senses, in their own way, to see, smell, touch, taste and hear. These innovations will be the underpinning of a new generation of cognitive computers that will learn, adapt, sense and begin to experience the world as it really is.

Dr John E. Kelly III, Senior Vice President and Director of IBM Research, will be giving a public talk titled "Big Data and Cognitive Computing" on Monday, 4 February 2013, from 16:30 to 18:00 (the lecture commences at 17:00), in Room WSS3, Science Stadium, West Campus, Wits University.

Kelly directs the worldwide operations of IBM Research, with approximately 3 000 scientists and technical employees at 12 laboratories in 10 countries around the world, and helps guide IBM's overall technical strategy.

He will discuss IBM's annual 5 in 5 predictions, which this year include the following:

You'll be able to touch through your phone: The sensation of touch will come to mobile shopping through apps with tactile and infrared technologies. Shoppers will be able to "feel" the texture and weave of a fabric or product by brushing their finger over an image displayed on a device.

A pixel will be worth a thousand words: Systems will view and recognise visual data, such as online photos, medical diagnostic images and traffic camera video and turn the pixels into meaning, beginning to make sense out of them much like the way a human views and interprets images.

Computers will hear what matters: Sound pressure, vibration and sound waves of all different frequencies will not just be recognised, but used for predicting when a tree might fall or if a mudslide is imminent. Machines will translate "baby talk" so parents understand if a baby's fussing indicates hunger, tiredness or pain.

Digital tastebuds will help you eat smarter: A computer that experiences flavour will determine the precise chemical structure of food and why people like it. Not only will it make healthy foods more palatable - it will also suggest unusual food pairings designed to maximise our experience of taste and flavour.

Computers will have a sense of smell: Your phone will detect if you're coming down with a cold or illness by detecting and analysing the millions of molecules in your breath. Computers will "smell" for chemicals in urban environments to monitor pollution or analyse the soil condition of agricultural crops. Simple sensing systems will measure right down to a single molecule.

 
More options
More from Wits University's press office
Wits University
Wits University, situated in Johannesburg, the commercial and industrial heartland of Africa, is internationally renowned for its academic and research excellence. It is one of only two universities in Africa, and the only university in Johannesburg to feature in the top 400
LEGAL DISCLAIMER: This Message Board accepts no liability of legal consequences that arise from the Message Boards (e.g. defamation, slander, or other such crimes). All posted messages are the sole property of their respective authors. The maintainer does retain the right to remove any message posts for whatever reasons. People that post messages to this forum are not to libel/slander nor in any other way depict a company, entity, individual(s), or service in a false light; should they do so, the legal consequences are theirs alone. Bizcommunity.com will disclose authors' IP addresses to authorities if compelled to do so by a court of law.

Subscribe to industry newsletters


Bizcommunity has over 400 industry contributors and we always welcome further contributions and contributors.

Subscribe

Receive free email newsletter

Make us your homepageAdd us to your favoritesRSS feedGet biz on your phoneFollow us

Invite

Tell a friend about us