Tech-gadgets
Building a house that can hear (VIDEO)
Audio Analytic founder and CEO Chris Mitchell (left) tests the audio smart home system on a hungry, angry baby with Hello World host Ashlee Vance (right). u00e2u20acu201d Bloomberg pic

LONDON, Oct 3 — As artificial intelligence software continues to advance at an alarming rate, it keeps popping up in new places.

A startup based in Cambridge, England, called Audio Analytic, for example, has found a way to inject AI code into smart home devices such as the Amazon Echo and Nest’s smoke alarms. The software can detect the sound of a window breaking or a baby crying and notify the homeowner about the situation.

Hello World host Ashlee Vance recently travelled to Cambridge to find out how Audio Analytic trains its AI systems and how well they work. After setting off a few smoke alarms and smashing some glass, Vance tests the software on a hungry, angry baby. Have no fear. It’s all in the name of science, and TV. — Bloomberg


Audio Analytic founder and CEO Chris Mitchell (left) tests the audio smart home system on a hungry, angry baby with Hello World host Ashlee Vance (right). — Bloomberg pic

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