AI and the cloud - a match made in heaven
When it comes to technology trends, they don’t get much bigger than cloud computing and artificial intelligence (AI).
Together, they have the potential to deliver benefits to businesses that have previously been unimagined.
Separately, the two technologies are already well established.
The global AI market is expected to be worth almost $60 billion by 2025, up from $2.5 billion at the end of 2017.
Meanwhile, the cloud industry has shifted from hype to broad adoption. The public cloud sector alone already is worth more than $200 billion and forecast to top $1,250 billion by 2025.
The link between cloud and AI
It’s
25 years since Richard Stallman wrote the GNU General Public License
that spawned a generation of open source software projects.
Open
source and free software enabled the likes of Google and Amazon to
create vast server farms at a cost that would not have been possible had
they had to pay licensing fees.
Now, AI is taking off and this is in no small part due to such cloud platforms.
The
cloud is fundamental to the AI model in two ways. Firstly, the data
sets these companies are using would not be accessible if it was not for
the cloud.
Secondly, only the cloud can enable businesses to
cope with the phenomenal scale required by providing such data-intensive
services to multiple clients at an affordable cost.
Of course,
one of the biggest factors holding AI back from reaching critical mass
is the shortage of people within enterprises with the skills to program
it.
This means that, while businesses may know how they want to
use AI, they don’t have the means of building an application or
algorithm to produce the results they need.
The cloud changes
this as it means that years of research and tools are available to
developers tasked with creating AI solutions.
This can completely
change the way businesses scale as those start-ups were founded by
incredibly smart people that are building new and exciting AI
functionalities and have infinite resources waiting to be drawn upon in
the cloud.
Early success stories
There are already some success stories where start-up firms have used AI to find new solutions to existing problems.
For
example, Veritone has developed an operating system for AI using a
cloud-based cognitive computing platform that analyses a vast number of
datasets from different sources.
The company believes the full
potential of its “cognitive cloud” platform will only be unlocked when
it is open to all businesses, institutions, and individuals.
Meanwhile, Quantifi is a company using analytics software based on AI and machine learning to optimise digital advertisement placements for brands.
As
well as the ability to analyse datasets at a rate of knots, this model
unleashes the ‘test and learn’ capabilities of AI and the cloud.
Quantifi
clients can harness the power of data which has been collected from
thousands of other digital ad experiments, which means they can deliver
results quickly and grow at scale.
This would not be possible
without the cloud and enables Quantifi to continually add new
information to its existing pool of data.
The big players
As
well as start-ups creating new revenue drivers through AI and machine
learning, the big four cloud platforms have all declared an interest in
AI during the past couple of years.
AI requires a huge amount of
compute power, so the public cloud - with its near-infinite computer
and data processing power - is the ideal place for such applications to
be built.
The aim of companies such as Amazon, Microsoft,
Google and IBM is to create innovative AI applications that businesses
can use and thus drive increased traffic through their public cloud ecosystems.
The
explosion in investment by these ‘hyper-scalers’ in AI is almost
definitive proof that the technology is inextricably linked to the
cloud.
IBM Watson’s natural-language searches have been used to develop cognitive retail as well as DNA analysis in cancer patients.
At the same time, voice-recognition solution Amazon Echo has made the leap from the kitchen table to the enterprise R&D lab.
Partnerships
with the likes of Hive and Nest mean that you can use Alexa to turn
your heating up or down, and later this year Toyota drivers will be able
to ask Alexa for new updates, build shopping lists and control
connected smart home devices from their vehicle.
The number of
companies innovating with these AI-based platforms demonstrates the
desire to invest in the capabilities of cognitive technologies.
As
the power of AI continues to evolve, its links with the cloud will
continue to strengthen. Together, they will deliver business benefits
for organisations of all sizes in coming years.
This Article Source Is from : https://itbrief.co.nz/story/ai-and-cloud-match-made-heaven/
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