In Phoenix, cars are self-denavig in the streets. In many houses, people are Amboyant commands on Tiny MachinesWith the machines that respond. On our smartphones, applications can now recognize faces in the photos and translate from one language to another.
Artificial intelligence is there – and it brings new possibilities, while raising questions. Are these gadgets and services really behaving as announced? How will they evolve in the years to come? What speed will they revise our way of life and change our way of doing business?
The Times explores these questions this week to our annual Summit of new workfeaturing technological executives, AI researchers, investors and others. Here are some of the key moments coming out of the conference, as well as an overview of some of our recent AI stories. – Cade Metz
Huawei always eager to do business in the United States
A month after the Chinese electronics giant Huawei suffered a large setback in his quest to sell his high-end smartphones to the Americans, the head of the company for consumer devices, Richard Yu, said that he was still optimistic about Huawei’s prospects in the United States.
“We have won world consumer confidence in more than 170 countries,” said Mr. Yu during the new job of work. “We very strictly protect consumers’ privacy.”
Huawei is the The third world smartphone seller And one of the largest suppliers of the planet’s telecommunications equipment. But he has had trouble entering the United States for years.