AI: Wild & Free (Demo) Mac OS

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  • Find out how well AI can understand your speech by reading out loud a few words and sentences! The test takes around 7 minutes. News From The Wild. August 28, 2017.
  • WILD.AI is building a knowledge base of female datasets, across all ages, life stages, and ethnicity. The company provides the knowledge, support, and power for women to perform at their best. WILD.AI was founded in 2017 and based in San Francisco, California. Lists Featuring This Company.

FemTech apps tracks women's fitness all the way to a $50 billion industry.

Running a startup is like getting fired a few times a day', says the CEO of WILD.AI, Hélène Guillaume. 'Between investors who pull out or strategic partners who don't come on board .. and being a founder is way less sexy than it sounds.'

Yet the 33-year-old's perseverance to change the lives of millions of women is paying off with an AI-powered app she founded. 'When I see people joining our team, or investing or athletes, like Paula Radcliffe, endorsing us, it makes the risks and all-nighters incredibly rewarding.'

A competitive rugby player who now does 100-km ultra runs, Half Ironman triathlons and ice swimming, Guillaume had little understanding about her own physiology and was training and eating like a man. 'I wanted to transform an industry through sports perfor- mance and female health.'

She combined a passion for sports with her busi- ness education, a Master's in Finance and Financial Risk Management, and scientific background as a management consultant optimizing internal risk models using AI to Fortune 500 companies, including Fannie Mae, to found WILD. AI in 2017 in San Francisco.

Although women make up nearly half of the popula- tion, a recent paper on 'Sex Bias in Neuroscience and Biomedical Research' shows that 80% of the animals used in research are male. 'These findings cannot be applied to women who are impacted daily by the 500 menstrual cycles they'll ex- perience over 40 years. More so, a 22-year-old taking the pill has different nutrition- al needs, physiology and digestion than a 47-year-old perimenopausal woman.'

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Using the catchphrase 'Unleashing the beast in female athletes,' Guillaume and her team want to radi- cally advance female health by building the largest record of female datasets— across all ages, life stages and ethnicities—to help women understand their bodies. 'Based on fitness trackers, blood tests and pap smears, women have vast amounts of data but it's not stored in one place. We understand our cars more than our own bodies.'

Through WILD.AI's research and algorithms, the app will not only be able to predict that in two days
a woman will experience bloating or menstrual pain, but how to alleviate these symptoms. It'll indicate that during ovulation, when the body is particu- larly strong, workouts can be pushed, and even be able to foretell a window of a higher sex drive.

According to Pitchbook, the 2018 FemTech market reaped $650 million in funding, nearly seven times more than five years ago and is esti- mated to get $1.3 billion worth of investments in 2020. Frost & Sullivan hails FemTech as 'the next big phenomenon
in the women's health' with a market potential of $50 billion by 2025.

The former Hedge Fund quant says angel investors and advisors have been critical to the startup's growth, enabling them to reach some of the most renowned researchers in female health, senescence, and human performance. They've been funded by the London-based deep tech incubator Entrepreneur First (which includes board member and Linkedin cofounder, Reid Hoffman, and is backed by Greylock Partners, Founders Fund and McKinsey), as well as The Refiners in San Francis- co, started by three French entrepreneurs, including Géraldine Le Meur (LeWeb).

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With a cosmopolitan up- bringing smattered across Monaco, Belgium, Hong Kong, Japan, Peru, the U.K. and the U.S, the bilingual entrepreneur says the Prin- cipality is home to a pool of successful entrepre- neurs, potential investors, athletes and organizations like the International Athletics Association Federation, a key player in sports and health. Sync or swim mac os.

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'People have been intrigued by our WILD.AI app, as well as the finan- cial upside of a $50 billion female health market, untapped until now.'

As technological advancements and the use of artificial intelligence (AI) is more frequently being used to fight climate change and global pollution, an interesting question arises: Should we attempt to avoid hyping AI as the earth's saviour?

Drones are using night vision to track elephant and rhino poachers in Africa's parklands whilst Smart Submersibles are navigating Australia's Great Barrier Reef to save coral from carnivorous starfish. Professor Peter Dauvergne argues that although AI is generating some environmental gains, powerful corporations and states are exaggerating the benefits, ignoring the risks and deploying AI in ways antithetical to sustainability.

In the third instalment of the QUT Global Law, Science and Technology Series, Peter discussed how the competition to profit from artificial intelligence has the potential to entrench technocratic management, rev up resource extraction, and turbocharge consumerism and therefore has the potential to generate new forces of inequality and injustice.

The presentation can be viewed online at The QUTUBE, the official YouTube channel for Queensland University of Technology (QUT).

Ai: Wild Animals

Guest presenter

Peter Dauvergne is a professor of international relations in the Department of Political Science at the University of British Columbia. A specialist in global environmental politics, his books include AI in the Wild: Sustainability in the Age of Artificial Intelligence (MIT Press, 2020), Will Big Business Destroy Our Planet? (Polity, 2018), Environmentalism of the Rich (MIT Press, 2016), Protest Inc.: The Corporatization of Activism (with Genevieve LeBaron) (Polity, 2014), and Eco-Business: A Big-Brand Takeover of Sustainability (with Jane Lister) (MIT Press, 2013).

About the series

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'People have been intrigued by our WILD.AI app, as well as the finan- cial upside of a $50 billion female health market, untapped until now.'

As technological advancements and the use of artificial intelligence (AI) is more frequently being used to fight climate change and global pollution, an interesting question arises: Should we attempt to avoid hyping AI as the earth's saviour?

Drones are using night vision to track elephant and rhino poachers in Africa's parklands whilst Smart Submersibles are navigating Australia's Great Barrier Reef to save coral from carnivorous starfish. Professor Peter Dauvergne argues that although AI is generating some environmental gains, powerful corporations and states are exaggerating the benefits, ignoring the risks and deploying AI in ways antithetical to sustainability.

In the third instalment of the QUT Global Law, Science and Technology Series, Peter discussed how the competition to profit from artificial intelligence has the potential to entrench technocratic management, rev up resource extraction, and turbocharge consumerism and therefore has the potential to generate new forces of inequality and injustice.

The presentation can be viewed online at The QUTUBE, the official YouTube channel for Queensland University of Technology (QUT).

Ai: Wild Animals

Guest presenter

Peter Dauvergne is a professor of international relations in the Department of Political Science at the University of British Columbia. A specialist in global environmental politics, his books include AI in the Wild: Sustainability in the Age of Artificial Intelligence (MIT Press, 2020), Will Big Business Destroy Our Planet? (Polity, 2018), Environmentalism of the Rich (MIT Press, 2016), Protest Inc.: The Corporatization of Activism (with Genevieve LeBaron) (Polity, 2014), and Eco-Business: A Big-Brand Takeover of Sustainability (with Jane Lister) (MIT Press, 2013).

About the series

The QUT Global Law, Science and Technology Seminar Series aims to bring together national and international speakers who will explore the personal, societal and governance dimensions of solving real world problems which are influenced by, and through the interactions of science, technology and the law.

The series will host speakers who think about ‘technology' and ‘science' as broadly construed to refer to methods of framing or interacting with the world, and that enable the critical and imaginative questioning of the technical, science, environmental and health dimensions of law and life.

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