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freehe
freehe
5/23/2017 9:15:25 PM
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Platinum
Re: Differences between AI and Machine Learning
@dcawrey. I haven't heard about Apache in years. I thought the company went out of business. Glad to see that they are still in business and working on the latest technologies.

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freehe
freehe
5/23/2017 9:12:57 PM
User Rank
Platinum
Traffic
It is great that Level will be able to determine good and bad traffic on the internet. This will help them to be proactive versus reactive, save money on after-attack services, detect potential threats much earlier and use AI to continually search for new potential threats which will provide a much safer network.

 

 

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JohnBarnes
JohnBarnes
5/22/2017 10:18:43 PM
User Rank
Platinum
The relation depends on the definition ...
Some AI researchers cling to a model of human intelligence that is something like a master control room or switchboard with a little homunculus inside the skull, throwing switches and running the show -- I would say it's a hangover religious model and that little person inside is a barely disguised version of the "soul." For those people the AI challenge is some advanced version of the Turing Test -- a machine that you can't tell doesn't have a little person inside, like your little person.

More recent models point to consciousness as a kind of running log of what's actually being done by a vast congeries of capabilities in the form of instincts, habits, learned procedures, customs, hunches, guesses, heuristics, near and far transfers, analogies, etc.

In one version Mary works, possibly consciously and possibly not, toward becoming a good cook by adding skills. In another, Mary's self-vision of herself as a good cook is a way of organizing the enormous numbers of skills and bits of knowledge she has come to possess.

Now, if you're a "soul in the robot's control room" kinda person, you see AI as a distant goal toward which we are slowly making our way, theoretically interesting and possibly significant much later in history, and machine learning as just some useful tech coming along at the moment.  But if you're a "congeries of little skillsets, mindlets, and tricks" kind of person, you see machine learning as how the AI gets here, and you don't expect that it will ever resemble human intelligence (no matter how smart it gets) any more than airplanes have feathers and flap their wings.

And yep, I'm over in the "library of tricks" side of things.

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afwriter
afwriter
5/10/2017 11:29:14 PM
User Rank
Platinum
Re: Differences between AI and Machine Learning
That is an awesome way to clarify it, thank you!

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mhhf1ve
mhhf1ve
5/9/2017 2:33:54 PM
User Rank
Platinum
Re: Differences between AI and Machine Learning
Seems like these terms were introduced in order to avoid another "AI Winter" -- the overpromise of "Artificial Intelligence" and the constantly moving goalposts for AI makes the field of AI hesitant to use broad terms that imply some kind of science fiction realization.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AI_winter

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dcawrey
dcawrey
5/5/2017 11:47:24 AM
User Rank
Platinum
Re: Differences between AI and Machine Learning
I agree with @Kishore Jethanandani - machine learning is a component of how AI works. But it also requires things like data in order to work. 

AI is a big and complex subject. It's pretty interesting though. 

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mpouraryan
mpouraryan
5/4/2017 5:19:16 PM
User Rank
Platinum
Re: Differences between AI and Machine Learning
Thank you for this guidance--very interesting read as well!

Beyond the wikipedia citation, FYI:

http://www.apache.org/

 

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Kishore Jethanandani
Kishore Jethanandani
5/4/2017 2:15:21 PM
User Rank
Author
Re: Differences between AI and Machine Learning
AI is the category while machine learning algorithms are specific solutions for specific problems.

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Kishore Jethanandani
Kishore Jethanandani
5/4/2017 2:13:02 PM
User Rank
Author
Re: Differences between AI and Machine Learning
I am very surprised that you have not heard about Apache lately. Does Apache Spark or Apache Mesos sound familiar?

There is an entire community of Apache software developers. You can get an overview at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apache_Software_Foundation

I believe that Apache and Big Data analytics are virtually synonymous. 

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srufolo1
srufolo1
5/4/2017 11:56:25 AM
User Rank
Platinum
Re: Differences between AI and Machine Learning
@clrmoney I agree that the two, machine learning and AI, complement one another. I once wrote an article about name recognition, which I think is a good example of how machine learning is used. It is more based on algorithms. It was implemented to search for possible terrorists to see whether they were on a no-fly list. http://www.crn.com/features/channel-programs/50500044/have-we-got-a-match-for-you.htm

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