News


From the editor's desk: SA’s focus on AI

18 April 2018 News

Artificial intelligence (AI) is working its way deeper into more and more aspects of our daily lives. The newest generation of smartphones are coming out with specialised processors dedicated to performing AI tasks.

Internet companies like Google and Facebook are using complex AI algorithms to tailor the content they deliver to suit each individual’s interests and preferences.

The more advanced AI becomes, the less likely we are to even notice it’s there, and the more the lines become blurred between ‘real’ and ‘artificial’ intelligence. The goal, as it should be with any technology, is ostensibly to make our lives better, but to many of us there is something fundamentally discomforting about the prospect of machines rivalling – or even surpassing – the power of human thought. There are also purely practical concerns about AI and the ways it can be used.

The first and most often talked about danger of AI is the risk that it will usurp people’s jobs. The more advanced the technology becomes, the better it will become at being able to automate many of the tasks performed by humans. Those who are working at the leading edge of advancing AI are quick to assure the public that it is meant as a way of augmenting, rather than replacing, the roles of people – but then they would, wouldn’t they? It wouldn’t do to have the populace becoming biased against the very thing they’re in business to develop.

Another danger comes in the form of actual physical harm. Military drones are at the extreme end of this spectrum, seeing as how inflicting damage is at the very core of their purpose. Perhaps more worryingly, though, is the prospect that even AI deployed with good intentions can either be manipulated or simply fail, with potentially lethal consequences. Autonomous vehicles – the poster child of the AI revolution – came under negative scrutiny for just such an occurrence recently, when an Uber self-driving car hit and killed a pedestrian in Arizona, USA.

Silicon Valley tech giants do not have a monopoly on AI development, however. CNN’s Marketplace Africa programme recently explored the potential impact AI could have on South African businesses and industry. In the televised segment, the work of the University of Johannesburg (UJ) was highlighted, with vice chancellor Tshilidzi Marwala boasting that the institution has the largest concentration of people with PHDs in AI, and is the leading centre for AI, on the African continent.

Cape Town, a city that is widely considered as a leader in South Africa’s adoption of ‘smart city’ technologies – a key area for AI – recently hosted an event welcoming SA into the global City.AI community. City.AI is a non-profit organisation that gathers AI practitioners on a quarterly basis across more than forty cities, to share challenges and lessons in applied AI.

Deep learning (while not quite the same thing as AI) has also been the subject of a major development at Johannesburg-based ASIC Design Services. The company has developed a framework for implementing deep learning on FPGAs, and exhibited the technology at this year’s FPGA Design Symposium in the USA as well as at Embedded World in Germany. Robert Green, who presented a paper on the framework at the FPGA Design Symposium, writes about its development in his article on ‘Embedded deep learning framework for FPGAs’.

AI will inevitably come to disrupt many industries in South Africa, just as it will across the rest of the world. We might as well embrace it.

Brett van den Bosch

Editor



Credit(s)



Share this article:
Share via emailShare via LinkedInPrint this page

Further reading:

From the editor's desk: Exciting times ahead?
Technews Publishing News
There are many subjects that excite me in this world, but two of the larger technical subjects are, firstly, renewable energy, and secondly, the idea of artificial intelligence as it continues to evolve ...

Read more...
Microchip expands partnership with TSMC
News
Microchip Technology has announced it has expanded its partnership with TSMC to enable a specialised 40 nm manufacturing capacity at Japan Advanced Semiconductor Manufacturing.

Read more...
Huge SA grid battery project
News
A standalone battery energy storage system (BESS) has won preferred bidder status under South Africa’s Energy Storage Capacity Independent Power Producer Procurement Programme (ESIPPPP).

Read more...
Mouser sponsors NCP Cup 2024
News
The NXP Cup is an EMEA-based autonomous car competition, presented by NXP Semiconductors, which is designed to provide students with real-world experiences in autonomous vehicle programming and building.

Read more...
TrinaTracker brings its smart solar tracking to SA
News
The Vanguard 1P is designed to provide customers with trackers that combine suitability for flat terrain, together with outstanding system stability and reliability, quick installation, and flexible external compatibility.

Read more...
Nordex adding 830 MW of wind generation
News
Nordex Energy South Africa will be adding 830 MW of wind energy generation capacity to the company’s already-installed 1 GW base.

Read more...
Invertek produces its three millionth drive
iTek Drives News
Invertek Drives Ltd, a global manufacturer of variable frequency drive (VFD) technology, has celebrated producing its three millionth VFD, just three years after its two-million milestone.

Read more...
Analog Devices’ digital storefront is live
News
Analog Devices has designed an improved digital experience with users in mind – a new analog.com website and eShop.

Read more...
Vicor Powering Innovation podcast
News
The episode explores electrification with Lightning Motorcycles, a company that produces the fastest electric motorcycle on the planet.

Read more...
ModusToolbox Workshop 3
News
This workshop will focus on enabling a PSoC development kit, connected over Wi-Fi and leveraging MQTT, to create the framework of an IoT application.

Read more...