Plug in to Exertis 2019
13th February 2019
The ‘Plug In To Exertis’ channel event returns on Thursday 16th May at the Silverstone Circuit.
The distributor is offering up the opportunity for resellers and retailers to spend a day immersed in technology with four dedicated exhibition areas focused on business, AV, enterprise and consumer solutions.
“This promises to be an even bigger and better event for our customers. More products and more solutions from more vendors, and more opportunities to find out what’s trending and emerging across a wide spectrum of technologies that can be utilised from the living room to the datacentre,” said Paul Bryan, UK & I managing director at Exertis.
Plug in to Exertis 2019 – PCR
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Dr. Peter Hershock is the director of the center’s Asian Studies Development Program and recently released a book about artificial intelligence, Buddhism and Intelligent Technology: Toward a More Humane Future.
Hershock says our development of artificial intelligence will eventually lead to the ethical singularity, a point at which evaluating competing value systems and conceptions of humane intelligence take on infinite value/significance.
In his book, he looks back at historic schools of thought such as Confucianism, Buddhism and Socrates to find insight, to help navigate the conflicting values of artificial intelligence.
He spoke with The Conversation’s Russell Subiono about the perils and promises of artificial intelligence in our current lives and in the future. Here are some highlights:
CASE STUDY
Sea Machines Autonomy Enables DEA Marine Services to Increase Operational Productivity
May 4, 2021 Share
DEA Marine Services, a division of David Evans and Associates, Inc. (DEA), of Vancouver, Wash., has invested in and utilized Sea Machines Robotics’ autonomous command and remote helm control system aboard DEA survey vessels to more efficiently fulfil a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) contract to survey more than 60 square nautical miles of the West Galveston Bay. Approximately 15% of the total survey mileage was acquired autonomously. The Texas survey, a prototype mission for unmanned operations, posed numerous challenges to marine surveyors, including a large geographic area, variable shallows, numerous obstructions and unpredictable sea conditions. For DEA, Sea Machines’ innovative technology increased the operational productivity of the vessels involved.