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Artificial Intelligence Education Innovation Reading

Latest Read: The AI Dilemma

The AI Dilemma: 7 Principles for Responsible Technology by Juliette Powell and Art Kleiner.

The AI Dilemma: 7 Principles for Responsible Technology by Juliette Powell

Juliette holds a BA in Sociology from Columbia University. In 2021 Juliette joined the Faculty of New York University’s Interactive Telecommunications Program. Art Kleiner holds a MA in journalism from the University of California at Berkeley. He began his career at the Whole Earth Catalog and is a former managing director at PwC.

Juliette and Art outline seven principles certainly attempting to ensure AI supports humanity. They are describing how AI has turned into a double-edged sword. Like several books they address the promise of AI but also discuss pitfalls.

Their position is to show how AI can indeed become a very transformational tool. Yet, if not checked it can also be very damaging. So, managing AI is going to be very important right out the door. To some extent we have failed.

This is a good look at AI Risk Management. They are also exploring how to implement each principle with best practices, new developments, and a necessary approach with caution.

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Artificial Intelligence Education Innovation Reading

Latest Read: Rewired

Rewired: The McKinsey Guide to Outcompeting in the Age of Digital and AI by Eric Lamarre, Kate Smaje, and Rodney Zemmel.

Rewired: The McKinsey Guide to Outcompeting in the Age of Digital and AI by Eric Lamarre, Rodney Zemmel, Eric Lamarre

Rewired is certainly an insightful, addressing strategies organizations must address to successfully adopt AI as part of a digital transformation. The downstream impact cannot be neglected. Organizations will risk their future by not pivoting to AI as the key driver for their existing digital transformation.

There is a well outlined roadmap from McKinsey’s experience across all markets. Recently published (June 2023) this guidance will help organizations still addressing the impact of the pandemic, understand the need to adopt AI and the downstream impact upon their current state business model.

Based upon key insights, Rewired is further outlining that organizations must pivot to simply remain competitive. This is truly a ‘publish or perish’ moment for many organizations regardless of market. Organizations need only look at their competitors already adopting AI. The realization that you are already playing catch up hits home. Or perhaps looking deeper, long time competitors impacted by the pandemic’s economic downturn since 2020 have simply closed their doors.

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Artificial Intelligence Education Innovation Reading

Latest Read: Artificial Intelligence Basics

Artificial Intelligence Basics: A Non-Technical Introduction by Tom Taulli. He holds a Bachelor of Business Administration from California State Polytechnic University-Pomona. Tom has written for BusinessWeek, TechWeb, Bloomberg and AI articles for Forbes.

Artificial Intelligence Basics: A Non-Technical Introduction by Tom Taulli

With Artificial intelligence and subsets continuing to grow in capabilities and deployments, I am always pleased to find titles to share with organizational leaders to bring them up to speed on AI.

Tom is accurate in sharing that AI has in fact rapidly expanded beyond smart speakers and digital assistants to become a general-purpose technology. As such this has been echoing across virtually all industries and markets.

So understanding AI’s possibilities for your organization is more critical today. In less than six months, OpenAI launched Generative AI service ChatGPT into the stratosphere. But it also arrives with much needed safety measures.

Artificial intelligence touches nearly every part of your day. While you may initially assume that technology such as smart speakers and digital assistants are the extent of it, AI has in fact rapidly become a general-purpose technology, reverberating across industries including transportation, healthcare, education, government, financial services, use to identify a few. In our modern era, an understanding of AI and its possibilities for your organization is essential for growth and success in a fast changing and competitive marketplace.

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Artificial Intelligence Education Innovation Reading

Latest Read: The AI Factor

The AI Factor: How to Apply Artificial Intelligence and Use Big Data to Grow Your Business Exponentially by Asha Saxena. Asha holds a Masters in Data Science and Machine Learning from Southern Methodist University.

The AI Factor: How to Apply Artificial Intelligence and Use Big Data to Grow Your Business Exponentially by Asha Saxena

Asha is an Adjunct Professor in the Department of Health Policy and Management at the Mailman School of Public Health at Columbia University. Above all, Asha is the Founder and CEO of Women Leaders in Data and AI (WLDA). She has served as CEO and Chairperson of Future Technologies Inc., a data management firm that provided warehousing, analytics, and intelligence services.

The AI Factor is addressing a roadmap business leaders can understand while beginning their organization’s AI digital transformation. In fact, Asha provides a great introduction that will resonate with companies: Micheal Lewis’ Moneyball which tells the story of the Oakland A’s use of data analytics to find success as a small market baseball team competing against teams in huge metrpolitean areas across the country.

Asha is writing about AI transformations at Netflix and Starbucks. For instance, the key element for both companies was their extensive deployment of data analytics which provided a key advantage of their competitors. Netflix has fully embraced data analytics versus Blockbuster. Besides, this transition was at the right time. Broadband was beginning to deliver on the promise of the internet and tip the scales for amazon to continue launching into the giant they have become.

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Artificial Intelligence Education Innovation Reading

Latest Read: How Data Happened

How Data Happened: A History from the Age of Reason to the Age of Algorithms by Chris Wiggins and Matthew L. Jones.

How Data Happened: A History from the Age of Reason to the Age of Algorithms by Chris Wiggins and Matthew L. Jones

Chris is an associate professor of applied mathematics at Columbia University and the Chief Data Scientist at The New York Times. He holds a Ph.D. from Princeton in theoretical physics, and in addition, is a founding member of the executive committee of the Data Science Institute, and of the Department of Systems Biology. Chris is also co-founder and co-organizer of hackNY.

Matthew Jones is a professor of History at Princeton. He holds a Master in philosophy from Cambridge University and Ph.D. from Harvard. While at Columbia, Matthew and Chris taught a class regarding data. Their work is tracing the history of data back to the 18th century. At that time European states began manipulating physical resources.

They see the rise of data and early statistical methods were indeed used to justify eugenics. In fact, this misled some in the late 1800s to believe data could quantify race differences. Unsurprisingly those same European countries used data to develop military and industrial applications.