Samsung Introduces AI-Powered Recipe Service, Deloitte Establishes AI Market Incubator, and More AI Developments
Today, numerous companies have unveiled new offerings that utilize the potential of artificial intelligence, marking another significant day in this field. Samsung made a notable contribution by introducing Samsung Food, an AI-driven food and recipe platform available in 104 countries worldwide. Additionally, Deloitte has launched a global AI market incubator aimed at fostering innovation in generative AI and supporting businesses in India and beyond. These are just a few highlights from today’s AI roundup.
Samsung launches an artificial intelligence food and recipe service
Samsung announced the launch of a food and recipe service powered by artificial intelligence called Samsung Food. The company will launch this new service in eight different languages in 104 countries worldwide. “Samsung Food provides comprehensive food experiences through more than 160,000 available recipes, acting as a personal assistant to help users discover new foods, create customized meal plans and order ingredients online,” the company said in a blog post.
The smart food platform also helps users control their cooking devices while providing step-by-step cooking guidance and allowing users to share their favorite recipes on social media.
Deloitte announces artificial intelligence market incubator
Deloitte, a global consulting firm, has launched a global market incubator for generative artificial intelligence. This incubator aims to help companies learn how to innovate this technology in India and abroad, according to a Business Standard report.
In an official statement, the company said: “The AI incubator leverages the deep sector knowledge and AI/ML expertise of our professionals, including data scientists and engineers. They work through a design thinking-based cross-disciplinary model to ensure speed, faster time-to-market and immediate value creation on mission-critical projects.
China is developing its own artificial intelligence chips
According to Wion’s report, China, which has suffered from several Western sanctions, is now seeking to develop its high-bandwidth memory (HBM) sector and become independent. To source these chips, China is likely to enlist the help of the country’s largest dynamic random access memory (DRAM) maker, ChangXin Memory Technologies (CXMT), Wion quoted unnamed sources as saying.
GEDiCube joins Nvidia Inception to advance cancer detection in clinical trials
GEDiCube, an AI/ML platform that combines various molecular features for early cancer detection, has announced it will join Nvidia Inception, according to a report by BusinessWire. It is a program that supports startups by providing access to cutting-edge technology, technical resources and venture capitalists. This collaboration will help GEDiCube advance its activities in cancer detection in clinical trials. Initially, the focus is on pancreatic cancer.