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ROBO SPACE
IBM's Chef Watson shares his culinary artifcial intelligence
by Brooks Hays
New York (UPI) Jun 24, 2015


Google data center to rise in former power plant
San Francisco (AFP) June 24, 2015 - Google on Wednesday announced it will convert a former coal-burning power plant in Alabama into a data center using renewable energy.

It will be the first Google data center built on the site of a former coal-burning power plant.

"Data centers need a lot of infrastructure to run 24/7, and there's a lot of potential in redeveloping large industrial sites like former coal power plants," Google data center energy and location strategy manager Patrick Gammons said in a blog post.

The facility will be Google's 14th data center worldwide to feed a seemingly insatiable appetite for applications or services hosted in the Internet cloud.

Google said that it is working with the Tennessee Valley Authority to deliver electricity from renewable sources for the data center built on the site of the Widows Creek power plant in Alabama.

Some five years ago, Google became one of the first companies outside the utility industry to buy large amounts of renewable energy and has since become the largest corporate consumer of that kind of power in the world, according to Gammons.

The California-based Internet titan has a stated goal of being completely powered by renewable energy sources.

"Google's data center in Alabama is a poignant symbol of how quickly our energy economy can change for the better," said Greenpeace senior climate and energy campaigner David Pomerantz.

He pointed to Google's move as proof that major internet companies want to power facilities with renewable energy and called on US legislators and regulators to take notice.

"Unfortunately, Amazon's recent announcement of several new data centers in Ohio did not include the same commitment to power them with 100 percent renewable energy," Pomerantz said.

"Without a similar level of commitment as we've seen from Google, Apple, and Facebook, Amazon's data centers are more likely to keep coal plants running than to make the Internet a powerful force for renewable energy."

Watson is IBM's super-smart computer that out-competed human champion Ken Jennings on Jeopardy!. Chef Watson has the same artificial intelligence, but with a foodie bent.

Now, Chef Watson's culinary genius is available to the public in app form -- a collaborative project between IBM and Bon Appetit. After a year in beta testing, the technology is ready for the big time.

Type in a few ingredients as a starting point and Watson will spit out a list of edible possibilities, completed with an ingredients list, measuring suggestions and preparation guidelines.

Chef Watson's algorithmic brain relies on a database filled with recipes, as well as data on flavor profiles, ingredients, and the interplay between taste and psychology.

Watson's brain power can be harnessed using a variety of filters. Users can limit the creative possibilities to various styles of food, and also make dietary demands like "no gluten."

"Chef Watson demonstrates how smart machines can help people explore the world around them and discover new possibilities and new ways of getting things done, whether it's finding promising treatment pathways to fight diseases or helping law firms build courtroom strategies by discovering connections between their cases and earlier precedents," IBM Chief Storyteller Stephen Hamm wrote in a blog post.

But not all of Watson's suggestions are ideal.

"It's not perfect," Watson Group Director Steve Abrams acknowledged to Wired. "It doesn't know every chemical reaction when you cook, so there's definitely a role to be played by the human being."

But even when Watson makes a seemingly erroneous suggestion -- like recommending nuts in a punch -- there's culinary logic to be traced. A few weeks after the failed tip, Bon Appetit's digital director Stacey Rivera recalled seeing a cocktail sweetened with walnut syrup.

Its creators say Watson isn't meant to produce flawless recipes, at least not yet. The intention isn't to be exact or literal, but to help home chefs think creatively and take ingredients in new and adventurous directions.

"The thing that Watson does is force us to think outside of what we think things mean in terms of food," Rivera said. "It challenges us to not be so specific about what nuts mean."


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