Tuesday 9 February 2016

Artificial Intelligence is the next major wave of Computing, Android creator says

The next major phase of computing will be artificial intelligence, the creator of Google's Android software predicted Wednesday.

Andy Rubin, the father of Google's mobile software, also says the industry needs to start figuring out how to interact with devices that don't have a screen - like washing machines.
Andy Rubin, speaking at the Code Mobile conference, said mobile isn't going away as the main method of computing, but other methods will emerge, including technology to make regular devices smarter through artificial intelligence and robotics. AI is the practice of making a machine behave in a smart way, such as making a robot smarter or adding Internet connectivity to something like a washing machine.
"Your dishwasher is a robot," Rubin said. "It used to be a chore you did in the sink. There's a lot of definitions [of artificial intelligence]. The thing that's going to be new is the part of the cloud that's forming the intelligence from all of the information that's coming back."
Rubin, creator of the Android mobile operating system, joined Google in 2005 when the search giant bought Android. Before working on Android, Rubin ran a company called Danger, which made an advanced cell phone. It was purchased by Microsoft in 2008.
Most recently at Google, Rubin was the head of the company's nascent robotic efforts at its experimental Google X lab. But Rubin left the company a year ago to start Playground Global, a startup "incubator" that nurtures budding hardware companies.

He also added that the mobile market "can change anytime," and that's what has always interested him about the industry. Nokia's Symbian operating system once dominated the market, but it no longer exists. Today, Google's Android and Apple's iOS are the dominant mobile device software choices. Rubin added that "the last thing the world needed was another operating system" when Android hit the market. But the market needed an open software.

"What we have today that we didn't even have three years ago is consumer choice," Rubin said. "The consumer can choose, they can also do a lot with their phones they wouldn't be able to do with Symbian and different configurations of their phones. Android, because it's open source, there's just a ton of good ideas, but those good ideas need to basically be curated by the consumer."

Rubin also called Microsoft's recent steps to include its Office programs -like World and Excel - on competing devices running Android and iOS "revolutionary."

No comments:

Post a Comment