Computer vision stories
Redundant questions could fall as voice AI starts using product images and listing data to tailor sales calls before they begin.
Users will be able to turn rough briefs into editable work as the platform broadens into office tasks and workplace software integration.
Legal and finance teams can now turn PDFs, images and spreadsheets into editable diagrams, cutting manual rebuilds as structures change.
Offline footage could become licensable AI training data as legacy tape archives are digitised, cutting storage costs for owners.
Investors overseeing more than USD $350 billion in assets joined a Singapore event where founders faced tighter scrutiny over scale, revenues and execution.
The patent could speed up moving estimates for customers, with the app generating inventories and quotes in minutes instead of days.
Search demand is surging as shoppers use AI tools to cut through crowded skincare choices, though experts warn they cannot diagnose serious conditions.
Operators can now rank drones by threat level as DroneShield’s latest software update aims to cut clutter and speed decisions in crowded airspace.
Consumers are using AI to narrow skincare choices, but experts warn the tools cannot replace proper diagnosis for serious skin concerns.
Rising demand for AI video tools helped Milestone lift net revenue 10% to USD $340 million, even as research spending climbed sharply.
Australian industrial employers gain AI monitoring meant to spot hazards earlier, as tighter scrutiny raises the stakes for safety compliance.
Missed scans can leave stock records out of step with goods on the floor, driving errors and write-offs in busy warehouses.
Mappedin will use fresh funding to extend its indoor maps beyond single buildings, giving responders and venues shared location data.
Trials at Thames Freeport are moving AI, 5G and tracking tools into live port operations, with productivity gains of at least 25% expected.
The seed round will help the Singapore startup expand its team and cut costly site miscommunication in a sector hit by S$1.1 billion in annual inefficiencies.
Investors overseeing USD $350 billion in assets will join more than 300 startups in Singapore as AI shifts towards industrial uses.
All Walmart Express stores in Mexico will be fitted with smart shelf tech by end-2026, in the first large-scale Latin American rollout.
The new CAD $1 billion tower is expected to ease post-pandemic backlogs and bring AI-guided surgery, imaging and trial matching into care.
The move gives Toronto AI startups access to senior academic and industry advice as they push research ideas towards commercial products.
The award highlights growing demand for biometric readers that add threat detection and watch-listing at entry points, beyond simple access checks.