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AI

TechSee's AI Can Recognize Devices and Guide Users Through Setup (venturebeat.com) 9

TechSee, which describes itself as an "intelligent visual assistance" company, today announced the launch of Eve Cortex, a platform that teaches itself to recognize thousands of products, models, parts, and components by ingesting only a handful of data points. VentureBeat reports: TechSee claims that by leveraging a combination of AI and synthetic data, Cortex can train itself in a matter of hours, providing end users with step-by-step visual guidance via an augmented reality (AR) overlay. TechSee was founded in 2014 by Eitan Cohen, Amir Yoffe, and Gabby Sarusi. Cohen conceptualized the idea after struggling to walk his parents through an issue they were having with their cable service. The company's cross-platform apps employ computer vision to recognize products and issues and streamline warranty registration. Customer agents can see what customers see through their smartphone cameras and visually guide them to resolutions, using either live video or photos.

Cortex builds on TechSee's existing technologies to enable enterprises to custom-build their own visual self-service flows, without coding. With Cortex, companies can design journeys for product unboxing, billing, contracting, troubleshooting, warranty claims, product registration, technical repair, and more. Cortex can walk users through the unboxing of various consumer electronics, from security cameras to thermostats, and capture information for upselling while explaining invoices by reading water, gas, and electrical meters. Insurance policyholders can use Cortex to document damage to insured property or identify items they want to insure for virtual underwriting. Moreover, Cortex can certify that an on-site field technician has made a successful repair by examining work through the technician's smartphone or tablet camera or AR glasses.

One of the ways that Cortex learns to recognize products is by ingesting a company's existing contact center knowledge base. For every device, each article describing visual symptoms and issues, both from customers and field technicians, is extracted and normalized. Then, a computer vision model is trained on synthetic visual data gathered in the lab as well as other visual resources and images supplied by customers, enabling Cortex to analyze, time, and measure the success of each step of every resolution, shortening and optimizing them over time. According to Cohen, companies including Vodafone, Telus, Orange, and Hippo have already tapped Cortex to create new customer experiences. Moreover, tens of thousands of field service technicians in the U.S. are using the platform to install fiber optic boxes.

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TechSee's AI Can Recognize Devices and Guide Users Through Setup

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  • Can it fucking make systemd-timesync support... on-demand synchronization with NTP servers?

    No? Well fuck. I'm absolutely astounded, that, in 2021, the so-named systemd-timesync has no fucking option to..sync the time with NTP servers that have existed before 1985. When I asked about that, I got told, "no one needs that".

    No, seriously, for real. Read the man page. It does not exist. Why are we going backwards so fast in basic functionality? ServerFault replies just say to stop it, start it, wait several minu

    • Hate to say it, but a lot of Linux (not the Kernel) is like this. X is still a joke and trying to use a distro like Lubuntu, even today, is like playing Russian Roulette. In my testing the GUI would only load on sporadic reboots.

      Though my guess is that the primary reason for this is that most of Linux is contributed by corporations using an embedded version. In which case, there would be no need to work on a WindowManager or Graphics or Audio.

      Thus it makes a great server OS, but not much else
  • by quonset ( 4839537 ) on Wednesday June 23, 2021 @06:22AM (#61512358)

    Because companies are too lazy and cheap to provide real documentation outlining step-by-step instructions needed to assemble or configure a product, we have to create another layer of obfuscation. This is if the company bothers to provide any documentation to begin with.

  • If AI is so smart then why doesn't it just ask, "do you want to debug or do a device setup up? and upon "yes" it simply does it.

    Oh yeah, I forgot, Microsoft does that (not).
    Ok so AI has no training data to itself do this but somehow can tell you how to manually do it?

    I had a Dell computer problem of random blue screen of deaths. Went online to the dell forum and spent a weekend trying to resolve it, to no avail, following what instructions I found. I restored a just in case of fail, backup, and searched the

    • by qe2e! ( 1141401 )
      I worked in tech support and came up with a similar idea to this in 2016. I think this is more about using a smartphone and it's camera to guide absolute idiots through the first steps of setup and troubleshooting on stupid devices like Smart TVs, rather than catching every corner case in complicated systems. If you've never worked tech support for the public, you may not truly fathom how little technical understanding and critical thinking happens on the dummy side of the bell curve
  • Can EveCortex help me configure my router?

  • Like in this program that using the augmented reality, annotation and text on the screen, TECHSEE allows users to give clear instructions to show the client exactly how to solve the problem. https://pimion.com/buy-persona... [pimion.com]

An Ada exception is when a routine gets in trouble and says 'Beam me up, Scotty'.

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