I had the opportunity to attend the IBM “Watson in the Age
of Discovery” event last week at the Museum of Art & Design in NYC. IBM rolled out the red carpet for their top
brass, including IBM CEO Ginni Rometty and IBM Watson head Michael Rhodin to help tout their new cognitive computing
platform IBM Watson.
Watson: Not your Father's IBM. |
In plain English cognitive computing makes computers a
“learning partner” in discovery. It is unlike a simple web search that yields results
based on some mystical Google algorithm that focuses on simple popularity and relevance.
Rather, IBM Watson
can be fed a nearly infinite amount of data and it can be “taught” to seek out
distant connections between data points. It can read and understand natural language, meaning it can process unstructured data. Watson's mass data assessment process and analytic bandwidth goes
well beyond the ability of even the most caffeine-driven researcher or
dedicated professional.
The cases shown at the event ranged from clinical outcomes
for pharmaceutical trials with French Pharmaceutical giant Sanofi to engineering challenges outlined by David Goldstein Lead Director from The Institute for Electrical and Electronics Engineers. IBM Watson partnerships featured went on to help researchers discover disease-fighting proteins at Baylor University to concocting new food recipes with "Chef Watson." IBM Watson answers questions based on the
data it is fed, with statistical confidence in its stated results.
When IBM Watson Head / SVP Mike Rhodin promised “a new era of computing that will change the relationship between
computers and people” I was frankly very skeptical.
A tech-driven sea-change is at hand. |
The most compelling presentation came from
Roberto Villansenor – who is the Tucson, AZ Chief of Police. It also frankly presented IBM with its biggest potential challenge in terms of a “use case” for its IBM cognitive computing platform.
Roberto Villansenor – who is the Tucson, AZ Chief of Police. It also frankly presented IBM with its biggest potential challenge in terms of a “use case” for its IBM cognitive computing platform.
Chief Villasenor cited the need for police departments to
assimilate disparate databases to help solve crimes. He shared the thousands of
pages of data that related to a case concerning the disappearance of a young
girl last year in Tucson.
The most compelling use case. |
Most property related crimes go unsolved due simply to the
lack of resources to process the available information. Police departments are focused on
more life-threatening crimes / criminals. Imagine the IBM Watson Cognitive
computing system being able to sift through all that data at lighting speed to
get the police pointed in the right direction.
But here is the challenge for IBM: As a for-profit Fortune 100
corporation, do they need to mainly pay attention to large enterprise-level
applications for IBM Watson with big price tags hanging off them? Will IBM Watson be
“the next big thing” that will help them compete more effectively against H-P? Will Watson be used to tout their brilliant
business acumen to equity analysts in 2015 - as a long-term growth driving
initiative?
Or can IBM afford to “give it away” to some extent to
resource constrained municipal agencies like the Tucson Police Department or to
underfunded medical research hospitals. Will IBM use Watson to help improve the
safety and quality of life of millions of people? Will they be willing and able
to answer the higher social-welfare calling?
The obvious balance is somewhere in between. I hope that Ms.
Rometty gives Mr. Rhodin some leeway during the 2015 IBM Watson business plan
reviews, and that IBM will leverage the true power of IBM Watson cognitive
computing to do more than drive bottom-line results for the company.
That decision would truly usher in a new era of computing.
That decision would truly usher in a new era of computing.
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