As AI is getting a foothold in pretty much every corner of the digital world, industries like manufacturing have a lot to gain by employing its perks. We at Authentise know very well the power of machine learning and the many other tools that enable our customers to get deeper, insightful looks into their production and save time in production. The next generation in Additive AI will likely be in-print monitoring platforms. The way these technologies are affecting every industry scared people into thinking that there’s going to be less room for human employees. Not only will there be value in the collaboration between humans and AIs, but new types of jobs will be created because of it. On a side note, it’s also interesting to see how 3D printing is enabling new computing paradigms to be researched, closing the loop beautifully.
Kansas State University Researchers Develop AI System For 3D Printing Process Monitoring
Researchers from Kansas State University’s Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Systems Engineering (IMSE) have developed a new quality monitoring system for the 3D printing process. With integrated supervised machine learning, a camera, and image processing software, the researchers created a production quality monitoring system for assessing 3D printed parts in real-time.
Read the full article here.
New Supply Chain Jobs Are Emerging as AI Takes Hold
Companies are cutting supply chain complexity and accelerating responsiveness using the tools of artificial intelligence. Through AI, machine learning, robotics, and advanced analytics, firms are augmenting knowledge-intensive areas such as supply chain planning, customer order management, and inventory tracking. What does that mean for the supply chain workforce? It does not mean human workers will become obsolete. In fact, a new book by Paul Daugherty and H. James Wilson debunks the widespread misconception that AI systems will replace humans in one industry after another. While AI will be deployed to manage certain tasks, including higher-level decision making, the technology’s true power is in augmenting human capabilities — and that holds true in the supply chain.
Read the rest at Harvard Business Review.
This AI Calculates at the Speed of Light
Researchers from UCLA on Thursday revealed a 3D-printed, optical neural network that allows computers to solve complex mathematical computations at the speed of light. […] researchers believe this computing technique could shift the power of machine learning algorithms, the math that underlies many of the artificial intelligence applications in use today, into an entirely new gear.
Read the full article at Discover Magazine.
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