Google has cool technology to recognize images and speech, and IBM’s hardware can diagnose diseases and beat humans in Jeopardy. Combine the two, and you get a powerful computer with serious brains. IBM is merging Google’s artificial intelligence tools with
AMD and Intel released the first 64-bit CPUs for customers back in 2003 and 2004. Now, more than a decade later, Linux distributions are looking at winding down aid for 32-bit hardware. Google already took this soar again in 2015,
IBM says it wants to make intelligent computers that can make decisions like humans. This week, it shipped the NS16e, its largest brain-inspired computer yet, and has big goals ahead. The company plans to create bigger versions of the NS16e—which