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We are crossing a new frontier in the evolution of computing and entering the era of cognitive systems. The victory of IBM's Watson on the television quiz show Jeopardy! revealed how scientists and engineers at IBM and elsewhere are pushing the boundaries of science and technology to create machines that sense, learn, reason, and interact with people in new ways to provide insight and advice. In Smart Machines , John E. Kelly III, director of IBM Research, and Steve Hamm, a writer at IBM and a former business and technology journalist, introduce the fascinating world of "cognitive systems" to general audiences and provide a window into the future of computing. Cognitive systems promise to penetrate complexity and assist people and organizations in better decision making. They can help doctors evaluate and treat patients, augment the ways we see, anticipate major weather events, and contribute to smarter urban planning. Kelly and Hamm's comprehensive perspective describes this technology inside and out and explains how it will help us conquer the harnessing and understanding of "big data," one of the major computing challenges facing businesses and governments in the coming decades. Absorbing and impassioned, their book will inspire governments, academics, and the global tech industry to work together to power this exciting wave in innovation. Review: Smart Book - Just some basic information about Watson and a few milestone events leading up to it, but gets your imagination going. Good read. Review: A thought-provoking exposé on IBM's efforts in cognitive computing - Kelly and Hamm do an excellent job of describing IBM's vision for the future of computing, both in terms of architecture and capabilities. The book leverages the popularity of Watson to gain attention, and then diverges into the other ground-breaking efforts underway in the company's research labs and business development sectors. While interesting and thought-provoking, this is more of a broad overview of the emerging technologies rather than a technical reference. Each chapter includes hypothetical scenarios for where the technologies can be applied, which comes across at times as idealistic and an aggressive sales pitch for IBM services. It's a quick read that is great for gaining a basic familiarity with the concepts and applications of cognitive computing, while realistically addressing the challenges and massive investments required to make these capabilities a reality.
| Best Sellers Rank | #5,328,086 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #330 in Computer Hardware Design #1,768 in Natural Language Processing (Books) #2,011 in Computer Neural Networks |
| Customer Reviews | 3.8 out of 5 stars 111 Reviews |
G**R
Smart Book
Just some basic information about Watson and a few milestone events leading up to it, but gets your imagination going. Good read.
C**.
A thought-provoking exposé on IBM's efforts in cognitive computing
Kelly and Hamm do an excellent job of describing IBM's vision for the future of computing, both in terms of architecture and capabilities. The book leverages the popularity of Watson to gain attention, and then diverges into the other ground-breaking efforts underway in the company's research labs and business development sectors. While interesting and thought-provoking, this is more of a broad overview of the emerging technologies rather than a technical reference. Each chapter includes hypothetical scenarios for where the technologies can be applied, which comes across at times as idealistic and an aggressive sales pitch for IBM services. It's a quick read that is great for gaining a basic familiarity with the concepts and applications of cognitive computing, while realistically addressing the challenges and massive investments required to make these capabilities a reality.
B**L
expensive for what you get
I enjoyed reading this and essentially getting an update on what happened to Watson after wining Jeopardy and a glimpse at some of the internal vision at IBM. The Jeopardy contests were a great PR vehicle for IBM but then news on how to use the Watson technology has been sketchy at best. This book answers what IBM has done since Jeopardy and what its vision of cognitive computing is. Google and Amazon seem to take most of the headlines on new tech, this shows that IBM is still a player and may have just as much to offer in the near future. Personally I hope they succeed at developing an affordable cognitive companion that will help me and others in a variety of daily decisions making tasks in addition to helping my doctor make good diagnostic decisions, one of the projected game changing uses of Watson. Regarding the cost of this book, this is essentially a promotion of IBM and I have no problem with that but a more fair price would be five or six bucks, but still a good read and I do hope IBM is soon bringing out products that are as stimulating and disruptive as what the other leading tech companies now offer
E**L
The broad context and awesome vision behind Watson
If you are a technology neophyte, this very nice overview is for you. It presents an almost sociological context for these recent breakthroughs vis-a-vis historical computing developments, thereby introducing a visionary outlook during these very exciting times. Yes, the authors are from IBM and therefore the book has a certain positive bias you would expect from the hawkers of Watson, but these two writers in particular are thought leaders -- and, besides, literature for non-technical readers on the Watson breakthrough is few and far between, so take what you can get! I mean it - read this. Two other such sources are "Final Jeopardy" by Stephen Baker and the chapter I devoted to the matter in my book (see below). I would note one issue with nomenclature: "Watson" was a very specialized system to compete on the TV Quiz show "Jeopardy!", and IBM's use of the same term/name to refer to a broader set of research areas is a bit more of a publicity tactic than a savvy use of buzzwords. However, there are meaningful relationships between the Jeopardy! demonstration (by far the most impressive demonstration of computer question-answering, ever!) and the technical approach IBM is driving for other application areas such as in healthcare. Enjoy! Eric Siegel, Ph.D. Founder, Predictive Analytics World Author, Predictive Analytics: The Power to Predict Who Will Click, Buy, Lie, or Die
L**K
More change coming, and faster
The book provides a view of our future. The view is from the perspective of IBM, and uses WATSON as a frequent example of how far we have come and the possibilities for the future. Current computers store and retrieve data in staggering amounts. Future computers will be able to analyze data as well as store it, and learn from each interaction that it has with its operator. Advances in health care is perhaps the best example. Twenty years ago, aspiring resident doctors carried Blackberry type devices with them containing medical texts. Future doctors can carry with them a few million pages of medical journals and multiple medical text books and produce suggested diagnoses and treatments.The computer system can learn from its mistakes. There are problems with all this, of course. One is the enormous power consumption of the computer servers. The books is fairly short. I wish it were longer, and had more references to non IBM machines and people.
H**A
Cognitive is the New Era of Computing
Excellent book! Highly recommend. Cognitive Era is the new era of computing and all organizations can benefit from identifying a portion of their business where cognitive can be applied. The possibilities are endless and the benefits to people and organizations are significant. Health care will greatly benefit from Cognitive Solutions.
M**R
Interesting primer about IBM's work in cognitive computing
A quick read that explains challenges, technology and the possibilities that are in development and to come as technological breakthroughs in computing enable new capabilities not previously possible. Those who are very technical may find it too elementary, but for an everyday business person or a student, it's a good introduction and basis for future learning.
D**L
Disappointing and simplistic...
Very disappointing. This book reads like a primer on 'computers' for non-technical people circa 1985. It is simplistic and filled with speculative use cases of the most cliched kind - they even have a varient of the 'find an italian restaurant' use case in there. My guess is that this essentially intended as a kind of brochure for IBM services aimed at technically illiterate government procurement people. The only good thing I can say about this book is that the term 'cognitive computing' is a brilliant label for this new world of machine learning, big data and sensors/apps that is just beginning - all that stuff is obviously very real but you won't learn much about it here. I really wish Kelly and Hamm had been able to break through the IBM rah-rah and give us some real insight into how IBM is contributing to this new world. </rant>
P**S
Fabulous reading.
Fantastic and fascinating. Great reading for not just techies but for anyone wanting to change the world.
S**S
Buen libro
Muy interesante, habla sobre los paradigmas en los que se construyó Watson. Sus inicios como IA... excelente para conocer más sobre IBM
A**O
Fantastico
Questo libro da una dettagliata spiegazione su cos'è il cognitive computing e una prospettiva di ampio respiro sulle sue applicazioni, in un momento in cui la collaborazione fra esseri umani e apparecchi cognitivi sta per diventare realtà.
A**A
Ok to understand Big Data/Distributed computing, does not talk much about Watson design.
This book left me a bit confused. While it talks about what Watson could do, an informed reader would find it difficult to understand where the author steps away from Watson capabilities and moves into the domain of Big Data. I picked it up to understand more about Watson and how it works but unfortunately did not get much out of it. If you are looking to understand the broad range of possibilities that distributed computing and Big data bring with them this is an OK to read. A major portion of the book talks about what IBM research is doing.
D**A
Very good
Comprehensive guide, from current situation to future opportunities. Deals with both software and hardware aspects of the technology. Not boring reading.
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