Let's talk about artificial intelligence. a lot of links and information provided
Options
Comments
-
make these ? and sell them.
create your own brand.
the hood aint targets by these people.....? in the projects want to be the cool ? ....well heres your chance to feed their ego and make a few dollars.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MhAH5rkChAk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_euxBkjfv0w
http://www.instructables.com/id/Touch-Screen-Coffee-Table-DIY-With-32-TV-and-Low-C/ -
an for the scumbag crew....you can incorporate ? recognition.
this can help you out when a chick comes over...it scans her face...says hello to her at all the mirrors and puts her picture up in your wifi connected picture frames.
if you going to play the game...play it right. -
........
-
-
-
Godseye from the fast movies is alexa and jarvis about to take steroids.
https://youtu.be/Tlgm65163-E -
-
https://www.theverge.com/circuitbreaker/2017/4/28/15475070/amazon-alexa-speech-synthesis-markup-language
Amazon’s Alexa can now whisper, bleep out swear words, and change its pitch
Amazon is trying to make its Alexa voice assistant sound more humanlike. Up until now, the female-sounding voice maintained an even, monotone cadence whenever speaking, but with Amazon’s new Speech Synthesis Markup Language that the company introduced this week, Alexa can whisper, vary its speaking speed, and bleep out words. Developers can also add pauses, change the pronunciation of a word, spell a word out, add audio snippets, and insert special words and phrases into their skill.
Amazon says this will allow Alexa to provide a “more natural voice experience.” Honestly, I never thought about why Alexa can’t whisper, but I can definitely see how it’ll make its vaguely robotic voice sound more believable and human. Unfortunately, we don’t have a preview of what Alexa will sound like when it whispers or emphasizes a word; we just have the code developers can include. Amazon says it’s hosting a webinar on May 18th on the new code, so maybe we’ll get a better idea then. The language markups are available to developers in the US, UK, and Germany.
Update 5/2, 11:14 AM ET: A reader named Roy has sent us a sample of Alexa whispering. Below is Alexa whispering this post about Alexa whispering. It hurts my ears, and definitely doesn’t make it sound more like a human, but what do you all think?
https://clyp.it/u1ab1gut -
Amazon Echo Owners in the U.S. Can Give Alexa a British Accent
https://www.groovypost.com/howto/amazon-echo-give-alexa-a-british-accent-or-speak-german/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dVMs04ndVuM -
-
an why cant we have a black sounding alexa?
-
Alexis
-
I'm just here for the android ?
-
I'm Tryin To Have Seccs With A Robo-Cardi B Or A 1999 Era Cyber Kim K...The Technology Isn't Advanced Enough Tho...Maybe A Couple Of More Decades
-
-
-
I do think about the advances in ai alongside nanotechnology.
-
heres the eyes
Google caters to the DIY crowd with an AI camera kit for Raspberry Pi
https://www.yahoo.com/news/google-caters-diy-crowd-ai-204200113.html
Google created its AIY Projects initiative -- "artificial intelligence yourself" -- to encourage developers and DIY enthusiasts to learn about artificial intelligence. The first project in the series, the ready-to-assemble Raspberry Pi-based AIY Voice Kit, was based on a project from MagPi magazine. Now Google has a second project ready for release this year: the AIY Vision Kit.
The camera kit comes with a cardboard shell, an AI-capable circuit board, a light-up arcade button, a tiny speaker, a lens kit with both macro and wide settings and various connection components, including a tripod mounting nut. You'll need to supply your own Raspberry Pi Zero W, Raspberry Pi Camera, an SD card and a power supply. The VisionBonnet circuit board has an Intel Movidius MA2450 low-power vision processing unit, which can run neural network models right on the device. You'll get software, too, which has three TensorFlow-based neural network models: one to recognize a thousand common objects, another that can recognize faces and expressions and a third that can detect people, cats and dogs. There's also a Python API that can adjust the arcade button colors and speaker sounds.
With this Raspberry Pi-based camera, Google says you can create a device that can identify different plant and animal species, be notified when your dog shows up at the back door, see if you left your car in the driveway, watch your holiday guests react to your decorations or even trip an alarm when your little brother enters your room. Of course, these are just examples. Developers and hackers will surely find even more exciting things to do with this device.
Google isn't the only company offering AI tools for developers to create solutions with. Amazon also just announced its own image recognition camera, too. Google's more DIY-centric AIY Vision Kit is available for pre-order now via Micro Center for $45, and will be available for delivery and store pickup December 31st. -
heres the speech and ears
https://blog.google/topics/machine-learning/aiy-voice-kit-inspiring-maker-community/
AIY Voice Kit: Inspiring the maker community
Recently, we launched AIY Voice Kit, a do-it-yourself voice recognition kit for Raspberry Pi-based maker projects. Our initial offering sold out globally in just a few hours, so today, we’re happy to announce that more AIY Voice Kits will be available for purchase in stores and online in the coming weeks. You can pre-order your kit today with Micro Center.
The Voice Kit includes the same VoiceHAT (Hardware Accessory on Top), mic board, speaker, components, connectors and cardboard form for easy assembly that we first made available in the initial offering of Voice Kit with MagPi #57 in May. (Creative makers have since responded with their own recipes while waiting for more inventory.)
The Google Assistant SDK is configured by default to bring hotword detection, voice control, natural language understanding, Google’s smarts and more to your Voice Kit. You can extend the project further with local vocabularies using TensorFlow, Google’s open source machine learning framework for custom voice user interfaces.
Our goal with AIY Projects has always been to make artificial intelligence open and accessible for makers of all ages. Makers often strive to solve real world problems in creative ways, and we're already seeing makers do some cool things with their Voice Kits. Here are a few examples:
Cool things makers are doing with Voice Kit
Martin Mander created a retro-inspired intercom that he calls 1986 Google Pi Intercom. He describes it as “a wall-mounted Google voice assistant using a Raspberry Pi 3 and the AIY Voice Kit.” He used a mid-80s intercom that he bought on sale for £4. It cleaned up well!