tech:

taffy

A 3D-printed autonomous car with cognitive computing capabilities is now operational…

Arizona-based automaker Local Motors, a vehicle technology integrator and creator of 3D-printed cars, has introduced the first self-driving vehicle that comes with the cognitive computing capabilities of IBM Watson. The vehicle, called ‘Olli,’ can carry up to 12 people, and is being used on public roads locally in DC, says the company.

Passengers will be able to interact conversationally with Olli while traveling from point A to point B, discussing topics about how the vehicle works, where they are going, and why Olli is making specific driving decisions.  Yes, it can provide answers to “Are we there yet?”says the company. Passengers can also ask for recommendations on local destinations such as popular restaurants or historical sites.

Olli utilizes the cloud-based cognitive computing capabilities of IBM Watson IoT, says Local Motors. The vehicle can analyze and learn from transportation data, produced by the 30+ sensors embedded throughout the vehicle. The Olli platform also leverages four Watson developer APIs — Speech to Text, Natural Language Classifier, Entity Extraction, and Text to Speech — in interactions between the vehicle and passengers.

Olli will start operating in Miami-Dade County and Las Vegas later this year.

Just in

Vercel raises $250M

San Francisco-based Vercel, a frontend cloud platform provider, has secured $250 million in Series E funding, bringing the company's valuation to $3.25 billion.

Worky raises $6M (Mexico)

Mexico City-based Worky, a provider of HR and payroll software solutions for Mexican companies, has closed a $6 million Series A financing round.

Amazon announces $1.31B investment in France

Amazon has announced a new investment of about $1.31 billion (€1.2 billion) in France, which the company says will lead to the creation of over 3,000 permanent jobs in the country.

Amazon Web Services CEO Adam Selipsky to step down — CNBC

Adam Selipsky, CEO of Amazon’s cloud computing business, will step down from his role next month. Matt Garman, senior vice president of sales and marketing at Amazon Web Services, will succeed Mr. Selipsky after he exits the company June 3, writes Annie Palmer. 

Palo Alto Networks, Accenture expand alliance to offer generative AI services

Palo Alto Networks and Accenture have announced the expansion of their strategic alliance to provide new offerings that combine Palo Alto Networks' Precision AI technology with Accenture's secure generative AI services.