Artificial intelligence (AI) is a term that has become increasingly familiar to people around the world. It has the potential to revolutionize various industries and improve many aspects of our lives. However, not all AI is created equal. There are two types of AI: narrow and general. While general AI aims to create machines that can think and learn like humans, narrow AI focuses on specific tasks and is designed to perform them with precision and efficiency. In this blog, we will focus on narrow AI and explore its potential applications.
Artificial intelligence (AI) has found its way into many areas of our lives in recent years, and the technology is also being used more and more frequently in medicine. But what are the advantages of using artificial intelligence, what are the current and future application scenarios, and what challenges does medicine face on the hardware side in order to achieve them?
The Department of Defense (DoD) has a huge budget that companies want to tap into, but selling to the DoD is different from commercial sales. This article discusses the key differences and how to approach selling to the DoD.
The past two decades have seen an exponential growth in data generated because of increased digitization of the business processes, instrumentation of devices, and the need to capture, collect and process vast quantities of unstructured data such as video and images. This evolution has resulted in the development of new programming languages, new data storage architectures, and rapid advances in the infrastructure and chip architectures required to transform these new aggregated data sets into business insight and competitive advantage for businesses and governments.
In this video, we will walk you through the setup process for the OSS 4U Pro Gen5 PCIe System. We utilize the OSS Short Depth Server (SDS) as the host for the purposes of this video, but the OSS 4U Pro can be connected to any server with an open x16 PCIe slot.
Edge computing is loosely defined as enterprise or industrial computing outside of a datacenter. The environments which encompass edge computing pose a unique set of challenges, requiring hardware to be designed to have a broad set of thermal and structural characteristics. For example, an edge computing device designed for an outdoor telecommunications application may be exposed to an extensive range of operating ambient temperatures, but it will experience little to no structural vibration or shock forces.