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Sandy Carter, AWS | AWS Public Sector Online


 

>>from around the globe. It's the queue with digital coverage of AWS Public sector online brought to you by Amazon Web services. Everyone welcome back to the Cube's virtual coverage of Amazon Web services. Public sector Summit Online Virtual I'm John Furrier, your host of the Cube here in our Palo Alto studios were quarantined with our crew here. We're talking to all the guests, getting all the content I'm excited of. Sandy Carter Cube alumni's also the VP vice president. Worldwide public sector partners and programs. Sandy. Great to see you virtually. You look >>great virtually too. It's great to see everybody virtually. >>I love the sign behind you. Powered by AWS. I'm excited to have you on, but I really wanted to get jump right in because this is really an important conversation. Public sector is seeing a lot of activity around what's going on with covert 19 especially with all the public services that are needed. And people are now remote workers, remote consumers, public service and still needs to be delivered just like business. So it's a really had a big impact of the entire world. We're all seeing it. We're feeling it's not just tech thing. How are you seeing your community respond? Your partners are responding to covert. 19. Can you share what's happening? >>Yes, John, I have to say, I am so incredibly proud of the partners that we support and how they've stepped up in this time. That has no blueprint, right? It's brand new for everybody, whether we're talking about virtual call centers. We had so many states that said they had people waiting for hours waiting for calls to be answered about Covance for Take. For instance, West Virginia, West Virginia had collars waiting for hours 77,000 calls a day. They worked with one of our partners, Smartronix, and they got this new solution a ream or remote virtual call center, up in 72 hours. 72 hours later, Average wait. Time was 60 seconds. Amazing job by Smartronix or one of our other partners, Elektronik Caregiver who's based out of New Mexico, where my husband's from a great partner who's been looking at, um, telemedicine, how they can help those at risk in hospitals and rehabs, even just at their homes. Or another startup that's a partner of ours called Hello, Alice, that integrated with our AI and ML to create a small business platform to help those small businesses get access to funding. Answer questions During this really hard time and the last example, I'll give you his Inter vision, one of our newest premier partners, who had a customer that came to them and said, Look, I need to get a remote work solution up workspaces identity manager help desk And they thought it would take months and Inter Vision was able to do it in week. So I am so proud and so thankful of our partners and what they've done to really impact the world, not just for their own profit, but for purpose helping out states, governments and citizens >>and congratulations. And it's well needed. People are feeling the pain. One area I want to get your thoughts on is the agencies we talked to the Department of Defense general manager earlier today. Um, all of the agencies in in public sector are shifting, and obviously, with the limitations, they got a shift to the remote workforce. They got to be faster. They got to be agile. I know they've been trying to, but they can't just wait any longer. They're forced to. How are your public sector partners helping the agencies? >>Yeah, this is another just terrific story. I cannot brag about our partners enough with our agency work. So if you looked at all of the agencies, kind of had a tight title wave of this digital transformation, things that we're gonna take them years ended up taking them weeks and months. So whether it's Kansas with the Department of Labor, they had 8800 and 77,000 calls a day. 21 staff couldn't do. It worked with our partners to get a call center up and going or in New Mexico again with Accenture, they used Amazon Connect, which is one of my new favorite products from Amazon. It's a call center that leverages machine learning and AI. They were able to work with the New Mexico Human Services and get that up and going in two days, Um, or even in Montana, a great story with Deloitte, where they built a custom chat box in seven days, custom chat box and seven days to answer questions about food and medicine and even how to get cash. If you needed to get cash, our partners really stepped up with the agencies, and they did so much compelling work so quickly. I think speed was such a great component here, John. The speed of deployment, the speed of help. You know, working 24 by seven to deliver these solutions. Our partners really did an amazing job. >>Yeah, and it's really hard with virtual. I got, I got I wish I was in person with everyone because coming to the public sector summits, one of my favorite events reinvent in public sector. Some of the two big shows, I really think encapsulate all the activity because it's virtual. People might miss some news. What else is going on in the world of public sector partners? You? Can you elaborate more on what's going on around the edges? What's on the bleeding? Cutting edge? What's the pioneer and what are some of the blocking and tackling that you're doing? Share some of the news. What else is going on? >>Yeah. Thank you, John. There's so much going on. First of all, we just introduced a new partner solution portal. So all of these code that 19 solutions are featured there. We will provide a URL for any customer looking for a great solution by our partners. We also really honed in and helped our partners during this time around. Said Ramp. And you know that fed ramp is so crucial. Security cybersecurity Incredibly essential. During this time I know you talked to my good friend Casey from Salesforce. They were able to achieve their fed ramp I and we offer a lot of help to our partners to help them to achieve not just fed ramp, but GDP are as well as HIPPA too. Some other news on migrations. We've got a competency around migrations. We've got some new funding for our partners around map and we're seeing our migration's really accelerate, you know, once these agencies, once he states see the power of the cloud, they're like, give me more, I want to put more and so we're seeing migrations accelerate. I know that you saw the Navy speak about what they're doing with s AP and as to another one of my favorite partners 72,000 users now running in his two on AWS. Six different commands pretty powerful. And I would say last but not least, is PTP our program transformation program for our partners, which really is like 100 and 10 day session to help the partners become a cloud business themselves. So they're kind of drinking their own champagne before they go out and help others. They become a cloud business. It's really powerful. This program has helped to generate twice the revenue of a typical a PM program. >>You mentioned the Navy always having interesting chat about that. Migration was less than 10 months. >>Yes, again. Speed, speed, speed, right, John. I mean, it's incredible >>years, two months, and the other thing that you probably find interesting and this is something that's kind of not talked about. But it's felt just the basic stuff, like getting paperwork in some of these processes, like you mentioned Fed Ramp. There's a lot of things that go on around public sector. You just got to get done. You got a slog through it, if you will. You guys have have responded well there, and this is the benefit of the cloud. Having the streamlined processes elaborate more on that, because I think that's important. Benefit not only just started in the critical infrastructure, like call centers and things of that nature, but getting business done. That's a big thing. >>Yeah, And I would say, you know, if you look at it, we helped over 20 states with their insurance processes. I mean, it seems like a minor thing, but a lot of these things were manual before, Um, we've helped many states with unemployment, you know, very critical at this time, taking a manual process and getting it into the cloud. There's so many of these that we can go on and on about How do you get medical supplies? One of our partners cohesive down in Latin America has been helping around some of the supply chain issues that that we deal with there some of the things that we take for granted when you're in person now that your virtual, you really need to think them through in the cloud. So again, you know, our partners responded with speed. They responded with heart to John one of the other things, you know, hashtag tech for good. They responded with heart as well as they were looking at these projects and ensuring that states and agencies and governments around the world could take care of their citizens, which is all of us. >>You know, existing. We've talked in the past. We've talked on camera and off camera around our shared passion around tech for good. I've been a big proponent of as well as us of right of other folks. But with the crisis, the word impact means something. And social impact is actually social impact. Getting your unemployment check or, you know, this this is highlights the critical nature of why these services exist. I think it's a real testament. I think people should step back and saying why we should never go back to the old antiquated ways because this is now the new reality. These services can be agile, they can be faster. It takes a crisis, unfortunately, and I guess that could be the silver lining in all this. So props to you guys on giving the partnership there with the partners >>and to the governments and states, John, who have now, like they moved rapidly, right? All these states, all these agencies, all these governments move quickly to digital transformation. Now they've gotten a taste of it, and they're like, give me more. And so the great thing to me is that this wasn't a one time event or one time crisis driven movement. Now that they see the power of it much like what you're saying with your business, they're doing more and and that's what I really applaud for all of them. And the way that they're transforming the business is now longer term. >>I'm optimistic, and I hope when we come out of this when everyone gets settled and they re imagine and reinvent, there's a growth strategy and expansion could be for positive change. So you've >>got >>stuff. We're all for that, and we'll be watching that reporting on it. I >>want to >>ask you something. I've heard that you guys will be soon expanding your public safety and disaster response partner. Competency. Can you tell me more about that? >>Yeah, So we announced the This is a hard one is disaster response in public safety competency at re invent for our consulting partners? And that went over amazingly well. I mean, take, for instance, Max are who is probably the best at believing delivering data both pre and post data to a disaster. They helped Noah, for instance, where data was taking 100 minutes to get that data down. Not good enough in a disaster. They were able to achieve a 58% faster download of data so you can do something with that Use that data to make good decisions. So these consulting partners have really embraced are our disaster recovery and public safety response competency. And now what we want to do is introduce this for our technology partners. So we're announcing the coming of this program for our technology partners. Now who is a technology partner? Well, think about an AI is the or a SAS provider these type of partners who have great solutions that target this particular area, think about public safety right now and how important that is, or even disaster response. You know, we have cove it, but right after that, we have all these hurricanes and earthquakes and other things that are happening around the world. Killer hornets. Um and so we've got some great technology partners that have solutions here, and we'll be welcoming them into this confidence. He fold as well. >>Well, this brings up something I've been commenting on. I want to get your reaction is because you know, when you have that flywheel pattern, infrastructures of service platforms of service and sass that build cloud when we've seen the benefits over a decade. Plus, when you bring the business model, you start to see the same thing. Some foundational things like infrastructure as service would be like compliance. Instant auditing that the Navy seeing, for instance, I heard earlier and then that platform pieces to allow these new workloads. So these new applications are going to be coming on. Creative surge of application developers, new kinds of workloads, new kinds of workforces and and work work flows. So you're gonna start to see these new APS. That means you guys will probably be inundated with new things. How do people get involved? Do they join a PN? What are some of the benefits? What should someone do? I want to be a partner of AWS because I see a solution. I create something that may be unique and specialize in niche. But it solves a really important problem. I want to bring it to Amazon. How do I do that? >>And we want you as a partner to John. Um, so yes. I mean, if you're a partner, the very first place to start is to join our A p m r Amazon Partner Network. If you're a startup or an I s d a distributor or reseller consulting partner, any of those that would be the first place to start, And then based on what you're interested in, you would then select the types of help that you might get. So, for example, if you're a start up, we helped start ups with credits because a lot of startups need free credits as they're starting their businesses or even technologies. So if you think about Hello, Alice, uh, you know, really using tagging for her small business site during Cove it we were able to provide some technology expertise to get her moving and grooving. Um, other great programs that we have out there are things like 80 0 the authority to operate. And this is really important, John, because a lot of our our customers require fed ramp and fed ramp is very costly and not only costly, but takes a lot of time so we can dramatically reduce your time to market with fed ramp really help you through with all those best practices. In fact, today we have 110 fed ramp solution that have gone through our 80 or authority to hire authority to operate process. And that's four X. Our top two competitors combined four x the number of partners that have gotten through because of the amount of time that is reduced through this process as well as the best practices that we bring. We've done a slim down version, so if you're a start up and you're interested in it like we partner with the Joshua down at Capital Factory and they've got the Army future command, we got a lot of startups. You want it? We've also got a slim down version for for them as well. >>It's been a >>very powerful program, >>and being in the cloud you can fast track and learn from others. This >>is the >>whole point of cloud. >>Absolutely, And learning from others is, you know, one of the great things that we love to do. In fact, until I we're going to do a big partner meeting, you know, here at the summit we'll have partners that participate in the virtual online summit. We're going to do a separate meeting just for our partners in July as well to share with them some of the things that are important to them around programs and some of these AP and benefits and some of the changes that we've made to help support them during the Cove it crisis. >>And I think you know the partners or the channel or how you look at it. They're adding value and a great partner for Amazon. For you guys, It's a great city. >>Yeah, I mean, are we could not. We at Amazon could not do the business We do without our partners. They bring their expertise, their best practices, the skills and the relationships they have, the contracts they bring to the table. So we're so grateful for the partners that we have in our public sector partner program. It's one of the reasons I loved my job. Every day I get to talk to a new partner on a new technology area that they're working on. It could be, you know, spatial computing, or AI, and they're helping not just move for a business, but they're helping on a purposeful mission project usually which are so powerful in today's world, especially with all the different crisis, is that we've seen, >>you know, One thing I want to get just share with you is that I talk to a lot of partners, certainly on the Cube and in person. One of the things that resonates with partners is not only the optimism of Amazon and programs you run, but it's enablement. You guys really enable the partners to be successful on your behalf and you on their behalf. But ultimately the customer and I think, and there's money to be made so lucrative and profitable, and they could impact change. So this enabling capability is really the magic. And so I want to ask you on your final question. Here in the talk is what's the vibe now? Because also, we know it's pretty depressing with Cove it, um and we're gonna get through this, but so there will be a day we get through. This will be growth and strategies around. It will never be the same. Certainly, I believe the hybrid world. What's >>the >>vibe inside the Amazon Web services public sector partner team, the community, the ecosystem? Could you just give some insight into how people are doing? And what's the vibe? >>Yeah, I would say the vibe is hopeful um, we all see the difference and the impact that we're making on a daily basis. And because of that, um, we continue to stretch forward and really move mountains for our customers to help them deliver better services. Um, you know, our partners are jumping in and all kinds of areas. First of all, for example, they are jumping in on doing hackathons to help with covet 19. So, John, you know, girls and tech. We've got our partners and us as AWS jumping into happy on different solutions for some of these challenges that are facing there. That's all about hope. I hope that we can make a difference. We are jumping in and assisting on remote work and unemployment, um, to provide hope to the teams and the community. So I would say, you know, it's tough for all. In fact, one of my friends describes, this is a crisis cake, not one level of a crisis, but multiple levels of the crisis. And I have never been with a with a more optimistic and positive team in my whole life, one who's willing to do what it takes. And when I see team, I mean not just my AWS partner team, which is the best of the world, but our world class partner team as well, who is willing to jump in there and do what it takes to help our customers. Even this weekend, I had a part of my partner team and my partners working to solve a problem for an agency that was, you know, um, critical. And they jumped in on the weekend to make that happen. So I would say, if I could say one word, I would say My partner's are hopeful they are. They're learning. They're curious. They're stepping out into new areas like connect and remote work and remote learning. And they're doing things that they never thought was possible based on what's happening today. >>Critical infrastructure, critical software, services and processes gotta be maintained and this opportunity. So I think it's, you know, heads down with hope and growth, always great to chat with you. And of course, we'll be following and covering your event next month. So looking forward to it, exciting times. Sandy Carter, Thank you for joining me today for coverage. >>Thank you, John. It's always a pleasure to be here on the Cube Thank you guys for watching as well. >>Sandy Carter, vice president, worldwide public sector partners in program. Distinguished Cube Alumni. A tough job, great job at same time. A lot of opportunities and hope. I'm John Furrow, your host of the Cube. You're watching our coverage. Cube Virtual of Amazon public sector Online summit. Thanks for watching. Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Published Date : Jun 30 2020

SUMMARY :

AWS Public sector online brought to you by Amazon It's great to see everybody virtually. I'm excited to have you on, the last example, I'll give you his Inter vision, one of our newest premier partners, who had Um, all of the agencies in in public sector are shifting, So if you looked at all Some of the two big shows, I really think encapsulate all the activity I know that you saw the Navy speak about what they're doing with s AP You mentioned the Navy always having interesting chat about that. I mean, it's incredible You got a slog through it, if you will. They responded with heart to John one of the other things, you know, hashtag tech for good. So props to you guys on giving the partnership there with the partners And so the great thing to So you've I I've heard that you guys will be soon expanding your public safety and download of data so you can do something with that Use that data to make good decisions. So these new applications are going to be coming on. And we want you as a partner to John. and being in the cloud you can fast track and learn from others. Absolutely, And learning from others is, you know, one of the great things that we love to do. And I think you know the partners or the channel or how you look at it. the skills and the relationships they have, the contracts they bring to the table. And so I want to ask you on your final question. So I would say, you know, it's tough for all. So I think it's, you know, heads down with hope and growth, Cube Virtual of Amazon public sector Online

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Robert Scoble, Transformation Group - SXSW 2017 - #IntelAI - #theCUBE


 

>> Narrator: Live from Austin, Texas, it's the Cube covering South by Southwest 2017. Brought to you by Intel. Now, here's John Furrier. >> Hey, welcome back everyone. We're live here in the Cube coverage of South by Southwest. We're at the Intel AI Lounge, hashtag Intel AI. And the theme is AI for social good. So if you really support that, go in Twitter and use the hashtag Intel AI and support our cause. I'm John Furrier with Silicon Angle, I'm here with Robert Scoble, @Scobalizer. Just announcing this week the new formation of his new company, the Transformation Group. I've known Robert for over 12 years now. Influencer, futurist. You've been out and about with the virtual reality, augmented reality, you're wearing the products. >> Yup. >> You've been all over the world, you were just at Mobile World Con, we've been following you. You are the canary in the coalmine poking at all the new technology. >> Well, the next five years, you're going to see some mind blowing things. In fact, just the next year, I predict that this thing is going to turn into a three ounce pair of glasses that's going to put virtual stuff on top of the world. So think about coming back to South by Southwest, you're wearing a couple pairs of glasses, and you are going to see blue lines on the floor taking you to your next meeting or TV screens up here so I can watch the Cube while I walk around the streets here. It's going to be a lot of crazy stuff. >> So, we've been on our opening segment, we talked about it, we just had a segment on social good around volunteering, but what the theme is coming out is this counter culture where there's now this humanization aspect they called the consumerization of IT in the past. But in the global world, the human involvement now has these emersion experiences with technology, and now is colliding with impacting lives. >> Well, absolutely true. >> This is a Microsoft HoloLens first of all. And HoloLens puts virtual stuff on top of the real world. But at home, I have an HTC Vibe, and I have an Oculus Rift for VR, and VR is that immersive media. This is augmented reality or what we call mixed reality, where the images are put on top of the world. So I can see something pop off of you. In fact, last year at South by, I met a guy who started a company called iFluence, he showed me a pair of glasses and you look at a bottle like this and a little menu pops off the side of a bottle, tells you how much it is, tells you what's in the bottle, and lets you buy new versions of this bottle, like a case of it and have it shipped to my house all with my eyes. That's coming out from Google next year. >> So the big thing on the immersion the AR, you look at what's going on at societal impact. What are the things that you see? Obviously, we've been seeing at Mobile World Congress before Peelers came out, autonomous vehicles is game changing, smart cities, median entertainment, the world that we know close to our world, and then smart home. >> Oh yeah. >> Smart home's been around for years, but autonomous vehicles truly is a societal change. >> Yes. >> The car is a data center now. It's got experiences. And there's three new startups you should pay attention to, in the new cars that are coming in the next 18 months. Quanergy is one. They make a new kind of light R, a new sensor. In fact, there's sensors here that are sensing the world as I walk around and seeing all the surfaces. The car works the same way. It has to see ahead to know that there's a kid in front of your car, the car needs to stop, right. And Quanergy is making a focusable semiconductor light R, that's going to be one to watch. And then there's a new kind of brain, a new kind AI coming, and DeepScale is the one that I'm watching. The DeepScale brain uses a new third company called Luminar Technologies, which is making a new kind of 3D map of the world. So think about going down the street. This new map is going to know every pot hole, every piece of paint, every bridge on the street, and it's going to, the brain, the AI, is going to compare the virtual map to the real map, to the real world and see if there's anything new, like a kid crossing across the street. Then the car needs to do something and make a new decision. So 3D startups are going to really change the car. But the reason I'm so focused on mixed reality, is mixed reality is the user interface for the self-driving car, for the smart city, for the internet of things, the fields in your farm or what not, and for your robot, and for your drone. You're going to have drones that are going to know this space, and you can fly it right, I've seen drones already in the R & D labs at Intel. You can fly them straight at the wall, it'll stop an inch from the wall because it knows where the wall is. >> 'Cause it's got the software, it's got the sensors, the internet of things. We are putting out a new research report at Wikibound called IOT and P, Internet Things and People. And this is the key point. I want to get your thoughts on this because you nailed a bunch of things, and I want you to define for the folks watching what you mean by mixed reality because this is not augmented reality. >> Well it is. >> John: You're talking about mixed reality. >> It is augmented reality, it's just-- >> John: But why mixed reality? >> We came up with the new term called mixed reality because on our, we have augmented reality on phones. But the augmented reality you have on phones like the Pokemon's we've been talking about. They're not locked to the world. So when I'm wearing this, there's actually a shark right here on this table, and it's locked on the table, and I can walk around that shark. And it seems like it's sitting here just like this bottle of water is sitting on the table. This is mind blowing. And now we can actually change the table itself and make it something else. Because every pixel in this space is going to be mapped by these new sensors on it. >> So, let's take that to the next level. You had mentioned earlier in your talk just now about user interface to cars. You didn't say in user interface to cars, you didn't say just smart, you kind of implied, I think you meant it's interface to all the environments. >> Robert: Yes. >> Can you expand on what your thoughts on that? >> You're going to be wearing glasses that look like yours in about a year, much smaller than this. This is too dorky and too big for an average consumer to wear around right, but if they're three ounces and they look something like what you're wearing right now. >> Some nice Ray Bans, yup. >> And they're coming. I've seen them in the R & D labs. They're coming from a variety of different companies. Google, Facebook, Loomis, Magic Leap, all sorts of different companies are coming with these lightweight small glasses. You're going to wear them around and it's going to lay interface elements on everything. So think about my watch. Why if I do this gesture, why do I have to look at a little tiny screen right here? Why isn't the whole screen of my calendar pop up right here? They could do that, that's a gesture. This computer in here can sense that I'm doing a gesture and can put a new user interface on top of that. Now, I've seen tractors that have sensors in them. Now, using a glass like this, it shows me what the pumps are doing in the tractor on the glasses. I can walk around a factory floor and see the sensors in the pipes on the factory floor and see the sensors in my electric motors on the factory. All with a one pair of glasses. >> So this is why the Intel AI thing interests me, this whole theme. Because what you just described requires data. So one, you need to have the data available. >> Robert: Yes. >> The data's got to be a frictionless, it can't be locked in some schema as they say in the database world. It's got to be free to be addressed by software. >> Yes. >> You need software that understands what that is. And then you need horsepower, compute power, chips to make it all happen. >> Yeah, think about a new kind of TV that's coming soon. I'm going to look at TV like this one, a physical TV. But it's too small and it's in the wrong angle. So I can just grab the image off the TV and virtually move it over here. And I'll see it, nobody else will see it. But I can put that TV screen right here, so I can watch my TV the way I want to watch it. >> Alright so this is all sci-fi great stuff, which actually-- >> It's not sci-fi, it's here already. You just don't have it. I have it (laughs). >> Well, you can see it's kind of dorky, but I'm not going to say you're a dork 'cause I know you. To mainstream America, mainstream world, it's a bit sci-fi but people are grokking this now. Certainly the younger generation that are digital native all are coming in post-9/11, they understand that this is a native world to them, and they take to it like a fish to water. >> Yes. >> Us old guys, but we are the software guys, we're the tech guys. So continue to the mainstream America, what has to happen in your mind to mainstream this stuff? Obviously self driving cars is coming. It's in fleets first, and then cars. >> We have to take people on a journey away from computing like this or computing like this to computing on glasses. So how do we do that? Well, you have to show deep utility. And these glasses show that. Wearing a HoloLens, I see aliens coming out of the walls. Blowing holes in this physical wall. >> John: Like right now? >> Yeah. >> What are you smoking (laughs)? >> Nothing yet. And then I can shoot them with my fingers because the virtual things are mixing with the real world. It's a mind blowing experience. >> So do you see this being programmed by users or being a library of stuff? >> Some are going to be programmed by users like Minecraft is today on a phone or on a tablet. Most of it is going to be built by developers. So there's a huge opportunity coming for developers. >> Talk about the developer angle, because that's huge. We're seeing massive changes in the developer ecosystems. Certainly, open source is going to be around for awhile. But which friends do you see in open source, I mean, I'm sorry, in the developer community, with this new overlay of 5G connectivity, all this amazing cloud technology? >> There's a new 3D mapping and it's a slam based map. So think about this space, this physical space. These sensors that are on the front of these new kinds of glasses that are coming out are going to sense the world in a new way and put it into a new kind of database, one that we can put programmatic information into. So think about me walking around a shopping mall. I walk in the front door of a shopping mall, I cross geo fence in that shopping mall. And the glasses then show me information about the shopping mall 'cause it knows it's in the shopping mall. And then I say, hey Intel, can you show me, or Siri, or Alexa, or Cortana, or whoever you're talking to. >> Mostly powered by Intel (laughs). >> Most of it is powered by Intel 'cause Intel's in all the data centers and all these glasses. In fact, Intel is the manufacturer of the new kind of controller that's inside this new HoloLens. And when I ask it, I can say, hey, where's the blue jeans in this shopping mall? And all of a sudden, three new pairs of blue jeans will appear in the air, virtual blue jeans, and it'll say this one's a Guess, this one's a Levi's, this one's a whatever. And I'll say, oh I want the Levi's 501, and I'll click on it, and a blue line will appear on the floor taking me right to the product. You know, the shopping mall companies already have the data. They already know where the jeans are in the shopping mall and these glasses are going to take you right to it. >> Robert, so AI is the theme, it's hot, but AI, I mean I love AI, don't get me wrong. AI is a mental model in my mind for people to kind of figure out that this futuristic world's here and it's moving fast. But machine learning is a big part of what AI is becoming. >> Yes. >> So machine learning is becoming automated. >> Well it's becoming a lot faster. >> Faster and available. >> Because it use to take 70,000 images of something like a bottle to train the system that this is a bottle versus a can, bottle versus can. And the scientists have figured out how to make it two images now. So all I need is two images of something new to train the system that we have a bottle versus a can. >> And also the fact that computes available. There's more and more faster processors that this stuff can get crunched, the data can be crunched. >> Absolutely, but it's the data that trains these things. So let's talk about the bleeding edge of AI. I've seen AIs coming out of Israel that are just mind blowing. They take a 3D image of this table, they separate everything into an object. So this is an object. It's separate from the table that it's on. And it then lets me do AI look-ups on the object. So this is a Roxanne bottle of water. The 3D sensor can see the logo in this bottle of water, can look to the cloud, find all sorts of information about the manufacturer here, what the product is, all sorts of stuff. It might even pull down a CAD drawing like the computer that you're on. Pull down a CAD drawing, overlay it on top of the real product, and now we can put videos on the back of your Macintosh or something like that. You can do mind blowing stuff coming soon. That's one angle. Let's talk about medical. In Israel, I went to the AI manufacturers. They're training the MRI machines to recognize cancers. So you're going to be lying in an MRI machine and it's going to tell the people around the machine whether you have cancer or not and which cancer. And it's already faster than the doctor, cheaper than the doctor, and obviously doesn't need a doctor. And that's going to lead into a whole discussion-- >> The Christopher thing. These are societal problems by the way. The policy is the issue, not the technology. How do you deal with the ethical issues around gene sequencing and gene editing? >> That's a whole other thing. I'm just recognizing whether you have cancer on this example. But now we need to talk about jobs. How do we make new jobs in massive quantities. Because we're going to decimate a lot of peoples' jobs with these new technologies, so we need to talk about that, probably on a future Cube. But I think mixed reality is going to create millions of jobs because think about this bottle. In the future, I'm going to be wearing a pair of glasses and Skrillex is going to jump out of the bottle, on to the table, and give a performance, and then jump back into the bottle. That's only four years away according to the guy who's running a new startup called 8i. He's making a new volumetric camera, it's a camera 40 or 50 cameras around-- >> If you don't like Skrillex, Martin Garrix can come on. >> Whatever you want. Remember, this media's going to be personalized to your liking. Spotify is already doing that. Do you listen to Spotify? >> John: Yeah, of course. >> Do you listen to the discovery weekly feature on that? >> No. >> You should. It's magical. It brings you the best music based on what you've already listened and it's personalized. So your discovery weekly on your phone is different than the discovery weekly on my phone. And that's run by AI. >> So these are new collaborative filters. This is all about software? >> Yeah. Software and a little bit of hardware. Because you still need to sense the world in a new way. You're going to get new watches this year that have many more sensors that are looking in your veins for whether you have high blood pressure, whether you're a in shape for running. By the way, you're going to have an artificial coach when you go running in the morning, running next to you, just like when you see Mark Zuckerberg. He can afford to pay a real coach, I can't. So he has a real coach running with him every morning and saying hey, we're going to do some interval training today, we're going to do some sprints to get your cardio up. Well, now the glasses are going to do that for you. It's going to say, let's do some intervals today and you're going to wear the watch that's going to sense your blood pressure and your heart rate and the artificial coach running next you. And that's only two years away. >> Of course, great stuff. Robert Scoble, we have to close the segment. Quickly, how has South by changed in ten years? >> Well, 20, I've been coming for 20 years. I've been coming since it was 500 people and now it's 50,000, 70,000 people, it's crazy. >> How has it changed this year? What's going on this year? >> This is the VR year. Every year we have a year right. There was the Twitter year, there was the Foursquare year. This is the VR year, so if you're over at Capital Factory, you're going to see dozens of VR experiences. In fact, my co-author's playing the Mummy right now. I had to come on your show, I got the short straw (laughs). Sit in the sun instead of playing some cool stuff. But there's VR all over the place. Next year is going to be the mixed reality year, and this is a predictor of the next year that's coming. >> Alright, Robert Scoble, futurist right here on the Cube. Also, congratulations on your new company. You're going out on your own, Transformation Group. >> Yeah, we're helping out brands figure out this mixed reality world. >> Congratulations of course. As always, it is a transformational time in the history of our world and certainly the computer industry is going to a whole other level that we haven't seen before. And this is going to be exciting. Thanks for spending the time with us. It's the Cube here live at South by Southwest special Cube coverage, sponsored by Intel. And the hashtag is Intel AI. If you like it, tweet us at Twitter. We'll be happy to talk to you online. I'm John Furrier. More after this short break. (electronic music)

Published Date : Mar 10 2017

SUMMARY :

Austin, Texas, it's the Cube of his new company, the the world, you were just at the floor taking you to your But in the global world, the and have it shipped to my What are the things that you see? for years, but autonomous Then the car needs to do for the folks watching what John: You're talking it's locked on the table, So, let's take that to the next level. You're going to be wearing in my electric motors on the factory. have the data available. say in the database world. And then you need horsepower, So I can just grab the image I have it (laughs). Certainly the younger generation are the software guys, aliens coming out of the walls. the virtual things are Some are going to be in the developer ecosystems. And the glasses then show me information In fact, Intel is the Robert, so AI is the theme, it's hot, So machine learning And the scientists have And also the fact And it's already faster than the doctor, These are societal problems by the way. In the future, I'm going to If you don't like Skrillex, going to be personalized is different than the This is all about software? and the artificial coach running next you. to close the segment. and now it's 50,000, This is the VR year, so if futurist right here on the Cube. this mixed reality world. And this is going to be exciting.

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