今年巴黎奥运会期间,当你在刷社交媒体或看电视频道时,你可能比平时更关注一些不太常见的比赛,例如紧张的击剑比赛,或者69岁的澳大利亚马术选手玛丽·汉娜为争夺金牌所付出的努力。
他们可能要感谢计算巨头英特尔(Intel)。在上一波科技浪潮之后,英特尔最终被微软(Microsoft)甩在了身后。
人工智能助力奥运会
作为生成式人工智能诞生以来的第一届奥运会,巴黎成为半导体厂商英特尔展示其技术实力的终极试验场。
英特尔一直使用“数字孪生”技术,该技术使其甚至早在奥运会开始之前,就能复制巴黎的各个场馆,以帮助巴黎进行规划。
英特尔还展示了一种人才识别网络,可根据敏捷性、耐力和力量将年轻运动员与理想的奥运项目相匹配。英特尔在法兰西体育场(Stade de France)内设立了一个互动展示厅,观众可以在那里发现他们的兴趣点。
但冷门项目的运动员可能会为英特尔的一种创新技术欢呼,那就是使用人工智能创建精彩集锦。
英特尔使用人工智能自动挑选奥运项目中的精彩瞬间,并发送给广播公司,以帮助他们快速整理出播出素材。这项技术主要通过观众的噪音来突出重要时刻,例如足球比赛中的进球或游泳比赛中的冲刺阶段等。
这项技术类似于IBM在温布尔登网球赛中使用的技术。IBM的技术可通过观众的噪音帮助快速找到精彩瞬间,使广播公司可以从大量视频中挑选出最佳片段。
这项技术可以帮助那些在远离中心球场的17号球场上拼搏的低排名选手,在得分时得到更多认可。
奥运会人工智能也是出于类似的初衷,只是它的任务更加艰巨,需要在40个不同项目长达数万小时的视频中挖掘精彩瞬间。
然而,这项技术的最大受益者可能是乒乓球、速度攀岩和马术等较冷门运动的选手。
英特尔欧洲、中东和非洲总裁德蒙特·哈加根对《财富》杂志表示:“传统上,无论是内容编辑还是精彩集锦的制作,甚至是跨平台的内容消费,都意味着它们只能覆盖一定数量的运动项目。”
“但现在,在人工智能的帮助下,它们能够扩大内容覆盖的范围。”
在四年一届的奥运会期间,冷门运动项目的选手争夺奖牌时,能够获得更多关注,这并不新鲜。甚至在游泳、田径和体操等更热门的项目中,运动员在奥运期间的媒体曝光率,也远高于平时。
然而,这种情况正变得越来越不确定。
近年来,奥运会为了保持吸引力引入了更多主流运动,如高尔夫,这导致一些传统冷门项目面临被排挤的风险。
再加上其他非主流项目的出现,比如在巴黎奥运会上首次亮相的霹雳舞等,争夺观众的竞争变得更加激烈。
哈加根表示:“我们与国际奥委会的一个目标是,让一些相对冷门的运动项目也能获得更多关注。与我们认为的重点项目相比,这些项目可能没有得到同样多的曝光时间。”
“我们不知道这是否意味着这些运动会变得更受欢迎或有更多观众。我们需要随着时间的推移进行观察,这也是我们的目的之一。”
哈加根重申,其目标是增加项目的曝光度,而不是增加或减少任何特定项目的观众数量。
灵感乍现
随着人工智能从案例研究进入广泛应用,许多公司仍在思考如何将这项技术为己所用。
对于英特尔而言,奥运会不只是其展现体育能力的机会,也可以借此机会向客户展示如何将人工智能应用到不同领域。
“当我们带客户参观技术沙龙时,你会看到人们当场恍然大悟:‘我从未这样想过。’”
哈加根认为,英特尔为奥运会提供的解决方案,在奥运会上有各种应用场景,可以应用于各行各业的企业面临的日常问题。
“我认为,企业可以从中学到的是,清楚你要如何应用人工智能,知道它并非单一的技术。然后你要开始明确人工智能的用例,以及你期待它能创造哪些效益。”
与此同时,如果人工智能可以帮助那些资金不足的业余运动员获得关注,那么巴黎奥运会不确定的遗产,至少还有一个新的受益者。(财富中文网)
译者:刘进龙
审校:汪皓
今年巴黎奥运会期间,当你在刷社交媒体或看电视频道时,你可能比平时更关注一些不太常见的比赛,例如紧张的击剑比赛,或者69岁的澳大利亚马术选手玛丽·汉娜为争夺金牌所付出的努力。
他们可能要感谢计算巨头英特尔(Intel)。在上一波科技浪潮之后,英特尔最终被微软(Microsoft)甩在了身后。
人工智能助力奥运会
作为生成式人工智能诞生以来的第一届奥运会,巴黎成为半导体厂商英特尔展示其技术实力的终极试验场。
英特尔一直使用“数字孪生”技术,该技术使其甚至早在奥运会开始之前,就能复制巴黎的各个场馆,以帮助巴黎进行规划。
英特尔还展示了一种人才识别网络,可根据敏捷性、耐力和力量将年轻运动员与理想的奥运项目相匹配。英特尔在法兰西体育场(Stade de France)内设立了一个互动展示厅,观众可以在那里发现他们的兴趣点。
但冷门项目的运动员可能会为英特尔的一种创新技术欢呼,那就是使用人工智能创建精彩集锦。
英特尔使用人工智能自动挑选奥运项目中的精彩瞬间,并发送给广播公司,以帮助他们快速整理出播出素材。这项技术主要通过观众的噪音来突出重要时刻,例如足球比赛中的进球或游泳比赛中的冲刺阶段等。
这项技术类似于IBM在温布尔登网球赛中使用的技术。IBM的技术可通过观众的噪音帮助快速找到精彩瞬间,使广播公司可以从大量视频中挑选出最佳片段。
这项技术可以帮助那些在远离中心球场的17号球场上拼搏的低排名选手,在得分时得到更多认可。
奥运会人工智能也是出于类似的初衷,只是它的任务更加艰巨,需要在40个不同项目长达数万小时的视频中挖掘精彩瞬间。
然而,这项技术的最大受益者可能是乒乓球、速度攀岩和马术等较冷门运动的选手。
英特尔欧洲、中东和非洲总裁德蒙特·哈加根对《财富》杂志表示:“传统上,无论是内容编辑还是精彩集锦的制作,甚至是跨平台的内容消费,都意味着它们只能覆盖一定数量的运动项目。”
“但现在,在人工智能的帮助下,它们能够扩大内容覆盖的范围。”
在四年一届的奥运会期间,冷门运动项目的选手争夺奖牌时,能够获得更多关注,这并不新鲜。甚至在游泳、田径和体操等更热门的项目中,运动员在奥运期间的媒体曝光率,也远高于平时。
然而,这种情况正变得越来越不确定。
近年来,奥运会为了保持吸引力引入了更多主流运动,如高尔夫,这导致一些传统冷门项目面临被排挤的风险。
再加上其他非主流项目的出现,比如在巴黎奥运会上首次亮相的霹雳舞等,争夺观众的竞争变得更加激烈。
哈加根表示:“我们与国际奥委会的一个目标是,让一些相对冷门的运动项目也能获得更多关注。与我们认为的重点项目相比,这些项目可能没有得到同样多的曝光时间。”
“我们不知道这是否意味着这些运动会变得更受欢迎或有更多观众。我们需要随着时间的推移进行观察,这也是我们的目的之一。”
哈加根重申,其目标是增加项目的曝光度,而不是增加或减少任何特定项目的观众数量。
灵感乍现
随着人工智能从案例研究进入广泛应用,许多公司仍在思考如何将这项技术为己所用。
对于英特尔而言,奥运会不只是其展现体育能力的机会,也可以借此机会向客户展示如何将人工智能应用到不同领域。
“当我们带客户参观技术沙龙时,你会看到人们当场恍然大悟:‘我从未这样想过。’”
哈加根认为,英特尔为奥运会提供的解决方案,在奥运会上有各种应用场景,可以应用于各行各业的企业面临的日常问题。
“我认为,企业可以从中学到的是,清楚你要如何应用人工智能,知道它并非单一的技术。然后你要开始明确人工智能的用例,以及你期待它能创造哪些效益。”
与此同时,如果人工智能可以帮助那些资金不足的业余运动员获得关注,那么巴黎奥运会不确定的遗产,至少还有一个新的受益者。(财富中文网)
译者:刘进龙
审校:汪皓
As you scroll through social media or channel surfing the Paris Olympics this year, you might find yourself more invested than normal in a tense round of fencing or 69-year-old Aussie equestrian Mary Hanna’s bid at gold.
They may have Intel, the computing giant eventually left behind by Microsoft in the wake of the last big tech wave, to thank.
The AI Olympics
As the first Olympics since the advent of generative AI, Paris serves as the ultimate testbed for semiconductor maker Intel to demonstrate its tech capabilities.
The group has been using “digital twins,” which allows it to create replicas of the various stadiums across Paris to help with planning before the Olympics even started.
It has also been showcasing a talent identification network, which pairs young athletes with their ideal Olympic sport based on agility, endurance, and power. The group has an interactive showroom at the Stade de France arena where spectators can identify their niche.
But one innovation professional athletes from less popular sports might be cheering on is Intel’s use of AI to create highlights.
Intel is using AI to automatically pick out highlight reels for Olympic sports, which go to broadcasters to help them quickly pull together a broadcast package. The technology mainly relies on the noise of crowds to highlight key moments, for example a shot on goal in football or the closing stages of swimming races.
The technology is similar to that implemented by IBM at Wimbledon, where crowd noise helps find big plays quickly so broadcasters can pick the best bits from a trove of footage.
That might help lower-ranked players, who are warring it out on Court 17, far from the cries of center court, for example, get more recognition for a winning point.
The aim of the Olympics AI is similar, but under the much more strenuous conditions of digging through tens of thousands of hours of footage across 40 different sports.
Its payoff, however, might be greatest for athletes in lower-profile sports like table tennis, speed climbing and equestrian.
“Traditionally, both the editing of that and the highlights, but also just the consumption of that across the different platforms, meant that they could only get to a certain amount of sports,” Dermot Hargaden, Intel’s EMEA president, told Fortune.
“But now, with the assistance that they’re getting, they’re able to widen that lens much more.”
It’s not new that obscure sports get a profile boost every four years as their athletes fight for a medal. Even at the more popular end, swimmers, track & field competitors, and gymnasts enjoy coverage levels of magnitude higher than outside the Olympic cycle.
However, this is increasingly less assured.
As the Olympics has introduced more mainstream sports, namely golf, to the calendar in recent years in a bid to maintain relevance, there is a risk of the more traditional, obscure sports being pushed out of the mix.
Add to that the arrival of other alternative sports, like Breaking’s debut at the Paris Olympics, and the fight for eyeballs becomes all the tougher.
“One of the objectives that we had with the IOC was that we’d have accessibility to perhaps some of the lesser in popularity sports, which maybe didn’t get as much time as what we might consider to be the key event,” added Hargaden.
“We don’t know whether it means that that sport gains more popularity or has increased viewership. We’ll have to see over time, but that was part of the intent.”
Hargaden reiterated that the goal was to increase accessibility rather than drive viewership to or from any particular sport.
Light bulbs going off
As the AI wave moves from case studies to wider rollouts, many companies are still determining how the tech will serve them.
For Intel, the games aren’t just a way to showcase its sporting acumen but also to show clients how they can adopt AI for various operations.
“As we bring customers through that tech salon, just in that room, you can see light bulbs going off with respect to, ‘I never thought of it that way.’”
Hargaden sees Intel’s solutions for the Olympics as analogous to everyday problems businesses face in all sectors, given the variety of use cases at the games.
“I think that’s what that’s transferable to businesses, is know what you’re going to do with it, know that it’s not one thing. And then you start to get really, really clear on the use case and what the benefit is that you’re trying to achieve.”
In the meantime, if AI can help turn the spotlight to part-time athletes in poorly-funded sports, Paris’s uncertain Olympic legacy will have at least one more benefactor.