Intel, Dell launch AI incubator lab at Arizona community college
Intel, Dell launch AI incubator lab at Arizona community college
San Rafael, CA (9 April) – Dell CEO Greg Bier will host an AI business incubator at Arizona community college, marking the first time the tech giant is collaborating with a community college.
The incubator, called AiAlpha, will provide $10,000 each partner from the California tech start-up incubator, according to Dell, which was awarded the $2 million grant from the Berkeley Business School.
The first IBM AI accelerator opened in March 2014 in the greater San Francisco area, where the largest public universities, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Microsoft, and Oracle are based.
Bier is one of the top executives in the Silicon Valley startup movement, and he’s the first to sponsor AI accelerators.
The 20th annual “Air Innovation Innovation Awards” will be held on July 9 and 4 at the Oak Ridge Energy Center in Chicago.
Both IBM and Dell are two of the hot tech companies in Silicon Valley vying to host the annual innovation awards.
According to the CES press release, IBM founder Richard Branson signed the IBM A/B test pilot contract for the startup on 4 July and he is hoping to launch a 1,000 square foot facility at his former Hewlett Packard campus in Palo Alto, California.
As such, IBM will host 3,200 AI accelerators at its next AI accelerator in Norwalk, New Jersey.
There are 20 universities in the Bay Area, 20 in California through the California university system.
Bier expects to expand the Jobs in AI space at AI incubators across the globe.
As he alluded to in the press release, a number of sensors and infrastructures at AI labs are being developed in order to detect and respond to states and their citizens.
“We are working on a number of new applications for AI, including cellular networks, adaptive neural networks, and full-scale robotic systems,” Bier said.
“We are also planning on expanding to AI with a large set of systems, with a variety of applications ranging from research on new technologies to high-volume advances in automotive design, health care products, and medical imaging.”
🔔ALL TEXT IN THIS POST IS COMPLETELY FAKE AND AI GENERATED🔔
Read more about how it’s done here.