Anonymous ID: 3c6aac Jan. 19, 2019, 8:30 p.m. No.4829960   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9990 >>0000 >>0013 >>0139 >>0348 >>0395 >>0441

Oculus co-founder Palmer Luckey is making a ‘virtual’ border wall with A.I., and it’s already working

 

Virtual reality technology made Palmer Luckey a multi-millionaire. Now, the Oculus co-founder’s new company is using artificial intelligence technology to create a high-tech surveillance system that could be used to build a “virtual wall” on the southern US border. In fact, Anduril Industries, the defense technology start-up Luckey founded in 2017, has already tested its border control tech in Texas and San Diego. In those tests, Anduril’s surveillance technology helped US border agents catch dozens of people who were trying to cross the border into the US without authorization, US Customs and Border Protection told Wired in June 2018.

 

When Luckey was only 21 years old, he sold Oculus, the virtual reality headset company, to Facebook for over $2 billion just a few years after creating the first prototype as a teenager working out of his parents’ garage. Here’s how Luckey, now 26, describes his latest company’s AI-powered system, which is called Lattice, in an October 2018 interview with CNBC’s Andrew Ross Sorkin: “What Lattice is is an AI-powered sensor fusion platform that can take data from thousands of sensors and integrate it into a single cohesive, real-time 3-D model that has everything in it tagged using machine learning — so, all the people, all the vehicles, all the drones and the aircraft over very large areas.” Lattice uses a network of connected cameras and infrared sensors that can be set up along wide swaths of land (attached to towers, or even to small flying drones), potentially covering hundreds of miles of the US border. The system’s AI-powered technology can scan for movement miles away while analyzing the source to see if it has spotted a person, a vehicle, an animal, etc. Anduril’s technology has “a lot of applications,” Luckey tells CNBC. “We’re securing military bases, we have sites that are on the U.S. border, we’re doing some programs we can’t talk about,” Luckey says. “There’s a lot of applications for this in protecting oil pipelines, protecting airports, protecting power plants — basically, anywhere where you want to know everything that’s going on, so that you can have people focusing on responding to problems instead of looking for the problems.”

 

In the case of border security, Lattice could make it easier for US border agents to monitor for unauthorized border crossings. Rather than agents scanning surveillance systems themselves, poring over footage from hundreds of miles of land looking for people and vehicles trying to cross the border without authorization, border agents would instead receive alerts from Lattice any time the system’s AI-powered technology identifies a potential unauthorized crossing in progress. Border control is an obvious potential application for Anduril’s Lattice technology, Luckey tells CNBC. The Lattice system lets border agents “know what they’re responding to [and] they can choose what the most important thing is to respond to, and they’re not going into every single situation treating it like it’s an elevated threat level because they have no idea what’s happening,” Luckey says.

 

After just a 10-week period of testing Lattice on a Texas ranch on the southern US border in 2018, Anduril’s technology helped border agents catch 55 people trying to cross into the US without authorization, US Customs and Border Protection told Wired last year. Those border agents also seized 982 pounds of marijuana in those arrests (though, Wired notes that 39 of the 55 individuals apprehended were not carrying drugs). While the company’s results in Texas were part of an informal test on a privately-owned ranch, the San Diego office of US Customs and Border Protection also tested the Lattice technology in 2018, which resulted in an additional 10 people apprehended at the US border in the program’s first 12 days, according to Wired. US Customs and Border Protection did not respond to CNBC’s request for updated information on tests of Lattice technology on the US border.

 

The US military has also tested Anduril’s Lattice system. In November, an official Twitter account for the US Marine Corps Base & Air Station Camp Pendleton near San Diego tweeted a video showing how the Marines use the Lattice system’s sensors, placed offshore of the oceanside military base, to detect unknown objects. Lattice drones can then relay live images back to the base in order to detect any potential threats. “This new system has the potential to ensure the safety of Camp Pendleton by monitoring its surrounding waters,” Lance Cpl. Drake Nickels says in the video.

 

https://www.cnbc.com/2019/01/15/oculus-co-founder-palmer-luckey-wants-to-build-a-virtual-border-wall.html?yptr=yahoo

 

Note: I believe this is part of what the Dem's have in mind. Of course it's Facebook owned! Repost from heel of last bread

Anonymous ID: 3c6aac Jan. 19, 2019, 8:49 p.m. No.4830189   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0208

Sony Brings Back Aibo Robot Dog—Now Powered by Qualcomm

 

Sony is bringing the Aibo robot dog back to America — this time powered by Qualcomm chips that facilitate the pet’s artificial intelligence. 'Officials at Sony Electronics, whose U.S. headquarters is in Rancho Bernado', said the robotic companion has been available in Japan since January and will go on sale here later this month. “This is artificial intelligence meeting robotics with a personality,” said Mike Fasulo, president and CEO of Sony Electronics North America.

 

The new Aibo can recognize up to 100 human faces and, just like a real puppy, develop a complex personality over a three-year period. It can detect words of praise and smiles, and react to being petted or scratched on the head. The Aibo was introduced in 1999 and discontinued in 2006, but retained a devoted fan base. The new model takes advantage of the developments in cloud computing over the past decade. Inside the dog is a Qualcomm Snapdragon 820, one of the San Diego-based company’s top-of-the-line chip sets for smartphones. The Aibo uses the Qualcomm technology to connect to cloud computing resources for memory and learning. What Sony is calling the “First Litter Edition” will be sold online and retail for $2,899.

 

https://timesofsandiego.com/tech/2018/09/06/sony-brings-back-aibo-robot-dog-now-powered-by-qualcomm/

 

I wonder if this could be applied to what Pelosi was wanting for Robot Dogs