Microsoft Forms New AI Research Group Led By Harry Shum (techcrunch.com)
An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch: A day after announcing a new artificial intelligence partnership with IBM, Google, Facebook and Amazon, Microsoft is upping the ante within its own walls. The tech giant announced that it is creating a new AI business unit, the Microsoft AI and Research Group, which will be led by Microsoft Research EVP Harry Shum. Shum will oversee 5,000 computer scientists, engineers and others who will all be "focused on the company's AI product efforts," the company said in an announcement. The unit will be working on all aspects of AI and how it will be applied at the company, covering agents, apps, services and infrastructure. Shum has been involved in some of Microsoft's biggest product efforts at the ground level of research, including the development of its Bing search engine, as well as in its efforts in computer vision and graphics: that is a mark of where Microsoft is placing its own priority for AI in the years to come. Important to note that Microsoft Research unit will no longer be its on discrete unit -- it will be combined with this new AI effort. Research had 1,000 people in it also working on areas like quantum computing, and that will now be rolled into the bigger research and development efforts being announced today. Products that will fall under the new unit will include Information Platform, Cortana and Bing, and Ambient Computing and Robotics teams led by David Ku, Derrick Connell and Vijay Mital, respectively. The Microsoft AI and Research Group will encompass AI product engineering, basic and applied research labs, and New Experiences and Technologies (NExT), Microsoft said.
Stop with the AI bullshit. There is no such thing and the way processor speed growth is declining there will never be. Algorithms are not AI. Siri is not AI. Deepblue is not AI. We don't have any AI. We never will.
It is the AI people who have declared that human minds follow rules and have internal representations, and that computers can be turned into intelligent machines. The philosophers critical of the AI program have looked closely at those definitions and found them full of contradictions and sleight of hand. Now of course there are philosophers on both sides, and there are good philosophers and clumsy philosophers, but it should be pretty clear that when a philosopher looks at what a specific group of AI researchers have claimed, in their numerous papers and publications, and they are able to find quite glaring problems with the arguments made, that is something more significant than just "thinking up definitions all day". But enjoy your scientism and your corporate artificial intelligence products and your robot cars that can't drive in the rain.