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  • Plan for manned spaceship controlled by AI
    DUKAS_186532774_FER
    Plan for manned spaceship controlled by AI
    Ferrari Press Agency
    AI 1
    Ref 16947
    30/06/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: NVIDIA
    The next generation of spaceships could be piloted by artificial intelligence, with minimal input from human crews.
    The aim is to create a new class of spacecraft capable of performing tasks like docking, servicing, and in-orbit repair with minimal astronaut input.
    US defence and aerospace company Northrop Grumman’s joining forces with AI pioneering company NVIDIA to develop autonomous space systems.
    The plan is for tailored AI to proactively plan missions, adapt to changing conditions, and carry out operations across all phases of flight.
    It will enhance Northrop Grumman’s space projects by improving technology performance, accelerating development, and boosting mission readiness.
    The AI will be provided by NVIDIA’s Omniverse version that lets engineers build and test systems in realistic virtual 3D environments before deployment.
    OPS: An example of NVIDIA’s Omniverse system which will be used for the new space AI programme. Omniverse lets engineers build and test systems in realistic virtual 3D environments before deployment.
    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Plan for manned spaceship controlled by AI
    DUKAS_186532773_FER
    Plan for manned spaceship controlled by AI
    Ferrari Press Agency
    AI 1
    Ref 16947
    30/06/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: NVIDIA
    The next generation of spaceships could be piloted by artificial intelligence, with minimal input from human crews.
    The aim is to create a new class of spacecraft capable of performing tasks like docking, servicing, and in-orbit repair with minimal astronaut input.
    US defence and aerospace company Northrop Grumman’s joining forces with AI pioneering company NVIDIA to develop autonomous space systems.
    The plan is for tailored AI to proactively plan missions, adapt to changing conditions, and carry out operations across all phases of flight.
    It will enhance Northrop Grumman’s space projects by improving technology performance, accelerating development, and boosting mission readiness.
    The AI will be provided by NVIDIA’s Omniverse version that lets engineers build and test systems in realistic virtual 3D environments before deployment.
    OPS: An example of NVIDIA’s Omniverse system which will be used for the new space AI programme. Omniverse lets engineers build and test systems in realistic virtual 3D environments before deployment.
    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Plan for manned spaceship controlled by AI
    DUKAS_186532772_FER
    Plan for manned spaceship controlled by AI
    Ferrari Press Agency
    AI 1
    Ref 16947
    30/06/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: NVIDIA
    The next generation of spaceships could be piloted by artificial intelligence, with minimal input from human crews.
    The aim is to create a new class of spacecraft capable of performing tasks like docking, servicing, and in-orbit repair with minimal astronaut input.
    US defence and aerospace company Northrop Grumman’s joining forces with AI pioneering company NVIDIA to develop autonomous space systems.
    The plan is for tailored AI to proactively plan missions, adapt to changing conditions, and carry out operations across all phases of flight.
    It will enhance Northrop Grumman’s space projects by improving technology performance, accelerating development, and boosting mission readiness.
    The AI will be provided by NVIDIA’s Omniverse version that lets engineers build and test systems in realistic virtual 3D environments before deployment.
    OPS: An example of NVIDIA’s Omniverse system which will be used for the new space AI programme. Omniverse lets engineers build and test systems in realistic virtual 3D environments before deployment.
    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Plan for manned spaceship controlled by AI
    DUKAS_186532771_FER
    Plan for manned spaceship controlled by AI
    Ferrari Press Agency
    AI 1
    Ref 16947
    30/06/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Northrop Grumman
    The next generation of spaceships could be piloted by artificial intelligence, with minimal input from human crews.
    The aim is to create a new class of spacecraft capable of performing tasks like docking, servicing, and in-orbit repair with minimal astronaut input.
    US defence and aerospace company Northrop Grumman’s joining forces with AI pioneering company NVIDIA to develop autonomous space systems.
    The plan is for tailored AI to proactively plan missions, adapt to changing conditions, and carry out operations across all phases of flight.
    It will enhance Northrop Grumman’s space projects by improving technology performance, accelerating development, and boosting mission readiness.
    The AI will be provided by NVIDIA’s Omniverse version that lets engineers build and test systems in realistic virtual 3D environments before deployment.

    OPS: Render of a Northrop Grumman satellte
    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Nvidia Headquarter In Shanghai
    DUKAS_184981384_NUR
    Nvidia Headquarter In Shanghai
    A general view of Nvidia headquarters is seen in Shanghai, China, on May 19, 2025, as Nvidia plans further investment for the Shanghai research center. (Photo by Ying Tang/NurPhoto)

     

  • Nvidia Headquarter In Shanghai
    DUKAS_184981380_NUR
    Nvidia Headquarter In Shanghai
    A general view of Nvidia headquarters is seen in Shanghai, China, on May 19, 2025, as Nvidia plans further investment for the Shanghai research center. (Photo by Ying Tang/NurPhoto)

     

  • Nvidia Headquarter In Shanghai
    DUKAS_184981374_NUR
    Nvidia Headquarter In Shanghai
    A general view of Nvidia headquarters is seen in Shanghai, China, on May 19, 2025, as Nvidia plans further investment for the Shanghai research center. (Photo by Ying Tang/NurPhoto)

     

  • Nvidia Headquarter In Shanghai
    DUKAS_184981372_NUR
    Nvidia Headquarter In Shanghai
    A general view of Nvidia headquarters is seen in Shanghai, China, on May 19, 2025, as Nvidia plans further investment for the Shanghai research center. (Photo by Ying Tang/NurPhoto)

     

  • Home chores robot
    DUKAS_173008118_FER
    Home chores robot
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Chores robot 1
    Ref 16064
    02/08/2024
    See Ferrari pictures
    Pictures must credit: Neura Robotics
    A humanoid robot for doing household chores has been revealed.
    The German team behind the general purpose h 4NE-1 has shown some of its capabilities to highlight joining forces with US tech services company NVIDIA.
    At the end of July NVIDIA announced it was providing the world’s leading robot manufacturers, AI model developers and software makers with a suite of services, models and computing platforms to develop, train and build the next generation of humanoid robotics.
    Among the offerings are microservices and frameworks for robot simulation and learning called NVIDIA NIM.
    An orchestration service called VIDIA OSMO that allows developers to train robots using small amounts of human demonstration data was also unveiled to accelerate humanoid development.
    The 4NE-1 by Stuttgart-based Neura Robotics has been under development since 2022.
    Video released by the firm shows it doing the ironing, prepping food tidying up a tabletop and at a Lego table with children.
    The 4NE-1 is 1.8 m tall and weighs 80 kg.
    It has 3D sensors in its torso for 360-degree vision capabilities, and it's able to move at up to 3 km/h.
    The head is also a status display, voice recognition is cooked in and the robot gets to grips with tasks via reinforcement learning.
    It can work autonomously or be operated remotely, and is capable of lifting and carrying objects up to 15 kg.

    OPS: The newly released video of Neura Robotics humanoid 4NE-1 performing a variety of chores.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Home chores robot
    DUKAS_173008117_FER
    Home chores robot
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Chores robot 1
    Ref 16064
    02/08/2024
    See Ferrari pictures
    Pictures must credit: Neura Robotics
    A humanoid robot for doing household chores has been revealed.
    The German team behind the general purpose h 4NE-1 has shown some of its capabilities to highlight joining forces with US tech services company NVIDIA.
    At the end of July NVIDIA announced it was providing the world’s leading robot manufacturers, AI model developers and software makers with a suite of services, models and computing platforms to develop, train and build the next generation of humanoid robotics.
    Among the offerings are microservices and frameworks for robot simulation and learning called NVIDIA NIM.
    An orchestration service called VIDIA OSMO that allows developers to train robots using small amounts of human demonstration data was also unveiled to accelerate humanoid development.
    The 4NE-1 by Stuttgart-based Neura Robotics has been under development since 2022.
    Video released by the firm shows it doing the ironing, prepping food tidying up a tabletop and at a Lego table with children.
    The 4NE-1 is 1.8 m tall and weighs 80 kg.
    It has 3D sensors in its torso for 360-degree vision capabilities, and it's able to move at up to 3 km/h.
    The head is also a status display, voice recognition is cooked in and the robot gets to grips with tasks via reinforcement learning.
    It can work autonomously or be operated remotely, and is capable of lifting and carrying objects up to 15 kg.

    OPS: The newly released video of Neura Robotics humanoid 4NE-1 performing a variety of chores.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Home chores robot
    DUKAS_173008116_FER
    Home chores robot
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Chores robot 1
    Ref 16064
    02/08/2024
    See Ferrari pictures
    Pictures must credit: Neura Robotics
    A humanoid robot for doing household chores has been revealed.
    The German team behind the general purpose h 4NE-1 has shown some of its capabilities to highlight joining forces with US tech services company NVIDIA.
    At the end of July NVIDIA announced it was providing the world’s leading robot manufacturers, AI model developers and software makers with a suite of services, models and computing platforms to develop, train and build the next generation of humanoid robotics.
    Among the offerings are microservices and frameworks for robot simulation and learning called NVIDIA NIM.
    An orchestration service called VIDIA OSMO that allows developers to train robots using small amounts of human demonstration data was also unveiled to accelerate humanoid development.
    The 4NE-1 by Stuttgart-based Neura Robotics has been under development since 2022.
    Video released by the firm shows it doing the ironing, prepping food tidying up a tabletop and at a Lego table with children.
    The 4NE-1 is 1.8 m tall and weighs 80 kg.
    It has 3D sensors in its torso for 360-degree vision capabilities, and it's able to move at up to 3 km/h.
    The head is also a status display, voice recognition is cooked in and the robot gets to grips with tasks via reinforcement learning.
    It can work autonomously or be operated remotely, and is capable of lifting and carrying objects up to 15 kg.

    OPS: The newly released video of Neura Robotics humanoid 4NE-1 performing a variety of chores.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Home chores robot
    DUKAS_173008115_FER
    Home chores robot
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Chores robot 1
    Ref 16064
    02/08/2024
    See Ferrari pictures
    Pictures must credit: Neura Robotics
    A humanoid robot for doing household chores has been revealed.
    The German team behind the general purpose h 4NE-1 has shown some of its capabilities to highlight joining forces with US tech services company NVIDIA.
    At the end of July NVIDIA announced it was providing the world’s leading robot manufacturers, AI model developers and software makers with a suite of services, models and computing platforms to develop, train and build the next generation of humanoid robotics.
    Among the offerings are microservices and frameworks for robot simulation and learning called NVIDIA NIM.
    An orchestration service called VIDIA OSMO that allows developers to train robots using small amounts of human demonstration data was also unveiled to accelerate humanoid development.
    The 4NE-1 by Stuttgart-based Neura Robotics has been under development since 2022.
    Video released by the firm shows it doing the ironing, prepping food tidying up a tabletop and at a Lego table with children.
    The 4NE-1 is 1.8 m tall and weighs 80 kg.
    It has 3D sensors in its torso for 360-degree vision capabilities, and it's able to move at up to 3 km/h.
    The head is also a status display, voice recognition is cooked in and the robot gets to grips with tasks via reinforcement learning.
    It can work autonomously or be operated remotely, and is capable of lifting and carrying objects up to 15 kg.

    OPS: The newly released video of Neura Robotics humanoid 4NE-1 performing a variety of chores.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Home chores robot
    DUKAS_173008114_FER
    Home chores robot
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Chores robot 1
    Ref 16064
    02/08/2024
    See Ferrari pictures
    Pictures must credit: Neura Robotics
    A humanoid robot for doing household chores has been revealed.
    The German team behind the general purpose h 4NE-1 has shown some of its capabilities to highlight joining forces with US tech services company NVIDIA.
    At the end of July NVIDIA announced it was providing the world’s leading robot manufacturers, AI model developers and software makers with a suite of services, models and computing platforms to develop, train and build the next generation of humanoid robotics.
    Among the offerings are microservices and frameworks for robot simulation and learning called NVIDIA NIM.
    An orchestration service called VIDIA OSMO that allows developers to train robots using small amounts of human demonstration data was also unveiled to accelerate humanoid development.
    The 4NE-1 by Stuttgart-based Neura Robotics has been under development since 2022.
    Video released by the firm shows it doing the ironing, prepping food tidying up a tabletop and at a Lego table with children.
    The 4NE-1 is 1.8 m tall and weighs 80 kg.
    It has 3D sensors in its torso for 360-degree vision capabilities, and it's able to move at up to 3 km/h.
    The head is also a status display, voice recognition is cooked in and the robot gets to grips with tasks via reinforcement learning.
    It can work autonomously or be operated remotely, and is capable of lifting and carrying objects up to 15 kg.

    OPS: The newly released video of Neura Robotics humanoid 4NE-1 performing a variety of chores.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Home chores robot
    DUKAS_173008113_FER
    Home chores robot
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Chores robot 1
    Ref 16064
    02/08/2024
    See Ferrari pictures
    Pictures must credit: Neura Robotics
    A humanoid robot for doing household chores has been revealed.
    The German team behind the general purpose h 4NE-1 has shown some of its capabilities to highlight joining forces with US tech services company NVIDIA.
    At the end of July NVIDIA announced it was providing the world’s leading robot manufacturers, AI model developers and software makers with a suite of services, models and computing platforms to develop, train and build the next generation of humanoid robotics.
    Among the offerings are microservices and frameworks for robot simulation and learning called NVIDIA NIM.
    An orchestration service called VIDIA OSMO that allows developers to train robots using small amounts of human demonstration data was also unveiled to accelerate humanoid development.
    The 4NE-1 by Stuttgart-based Neura Robotics has been under development since 2022.
    Video released by the firm shows it doing the ironing, prepping food tidying up a tabletop and at a Lego table with children.
    The 4NE-1 is 1.8 m tall and weighs 80 kg.
    It has 3D sensors in its torso for 360-degree vision capabilities, and it's able to move at up to 3 km/h.
    The head is also a status display, voice recognition is cooked in and the robot gets to grips with tasks via reinforcement learning.
    It can work autonomously or be operated remotely, and is capable of lifting and carrying objects up to 15 kg.

    OPS: The newly released video of Neura Robotics humanoid 4NE-1 performing a variety of chores.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Home chores robot
    DUKAS_173008112_FER
    Home chores robot
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Chores robot 1
    Ref 16064
    02/08/2024
    See Ferrari pictures
    Pictures must credit: Neura Robotics
    A humanoid robot for doing household chores has been revealed.
    The German team behind the general purpose h 4NE-1 has shown some of its capabilities to highlight joining forces with US tech services company NVIDIA.
    At the end of July NVIDIA announced it was providing the world’s leading robot manufacturers, AI model developers and software makers with a suite of services, models and computing platforms to develop, train and build the next generation of humanoid robotics.
    Among the offerings are microservices and frameworks for robot simulation and learning called NVIDIA NIM.
    An orchestration service called VIDIA OSMO that allows developers to train robots using small amounts of human demonstration data was also unveiled to accelerate humanoid development.
    The 4NE-1 by Stuttgart-based Neura Robotics has been under development since 2022.
    Video released by the firm shows it doing the ironing, prepping food tidying up a tabletop and at a Lego table with children.
    The 4NE-1 is 1.8 m tall and weighs 80 kg.
    It has 3D sensors in its torso for 360-degree vision capabilities, and it's able to move at up to 3 km/h.
    The head is also a status display, voice recognition is cooked in and the robot gets to grips with tasks via reinforcement learning.
    It can work autonomously or be operated remotely, and is capable of lifting and carrying objects up to 15 kg.

    OPS: The newly released video of Neura Robotics humanoid 4NE-1 performing a variety of chores.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Home chores robot
    DUKAS_173008110_FER
    Home chores robot
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Chores robot 1
    Ref 16064
    02/08/2024
    See Ferrari pictures
    Pictures must credit: Neura Robotics
    A humanoid robot for doing household chores has been revealed.
    The German team behind the general purpose h 4NE-1 has shown some of its capabilities to highlight joining forces with US tech services company NVIDIA.
    At the end of July NVIDIA announced it was providing the world’s leading robot manufacturers, AI model developers and software makers with a suite of services, models and computing platforms to develop, train and build the next generation of humanoid robotics.
    Among the offerings are microservices and frameworks for robot simulation and learning called NVIDIA NIM.
    An orchestration service called VIDIA OSMO that allows developers to train robots using small amounts of human demonstration data was also unveiled to accelerate humanoid development.
    The 4NE-1 by Stuttgart-based Neura Robotics has been under development since 2022.
    Video released by the firm shows it doing the ironing, prepping food tidying up a tabletop and at a Lego table with children.
    The 4NE-1 is 1.8 m tall and weighs 80 kg.
    It has 3D sensors in its torso for 360-degree vision capabilities, and it's able to move at up to 3 km/h.
    The head is also a status display, voice recognition is cooked in and the robot gets to grips with tasks via reinforcement learning.
    It can work autonomously or be operated remotely, and is capable of lifting and carrying objects up to 15 kg.

    OPS: The newly released video of Neura Robotics humanoid 4NE-1 performing a variety of chores.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Home chores robot
    DUKAS_173008109_FER
    Home chores robot
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Chores robot 1
    Ref 16064
    02/08/2024
    See Ferrari pictures
    Pictures must credit: Neura Robotics
    A humanoid robot for doing household chores has been revealed.
    The German team behind the general purpose h 4NE-1 has shown some of its capabilities to highlight joining forces with US tech services company NVIDIA.
    At the end of July NVIDIA announced it was providing the world’s leading robot manufacturers, AI model developers and software makers with a suite of services, models and computing platforms to develop, train and build the next generation of humanoid robotics.
    Among the offerings are microservices and frameworks for robot simulation and learning called NVIDIA NIM.
    An orchestration service called VIDIA OSMO that allows developers to train robots using small amounts of human demonstration data was also unveiled to accelerate humanoid development.
    The 4NE-1 by Stuttgart-based Neura Robotics has been under development since 2022.
    Video released by the firm shows it doing the ironing, prepping food tidying up a tabletop and at a Lego table with children.
    The 4NE-1 is 1.8 m tall and weighs 80 kg.
    It has 3D sensors in its torso for 360-degree vision capabilities, and it's able to move at up to 3 km/h.
    The head is also a status display, voice recognition is cooked in and the robot gets to grips with tasks via reinforcement learning.
    It can work autonomously or be operated remotely, and is capable of lifting and carrying objects up to 15 kg.

    OPS: The newly released video of Neura Robotics humanoid 4NE-1 performing a variety of chores.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Home chores robot
    DUKAS_173008108_FER
    Home chores robot
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Chores robot 1
    Ref 16064
    02/08/2024
    See Ferrari pictures
    Pictures must credit: Neura Robotics
    A humanoid robot for doing household chores has been revealed.
    The German team behind the general purpose h 4NE-1 has shown some of its capabilities to highlight joining forces with US tech services company NVIDIA.
    At the end of July NVIDIA announced it was providing the world’s leading robot manufacturers, AI model developers and software makers with a suite of services, models and computing platforms to develop, train and build the next generation of humanoid robotics.
    Among the offerings are microservices and frameworks for robot simulation and learning called NVIDIA NIM.
    An orchestration service called VIDIA OSMO that allows developers to train robots using small amounts of human demonstration data was also unveiled to accelerate humanoid development.
    The 4NE-1 by Stuttgart-based Neura Robotics has been under development since 2022.
    Video released by the firm shows it doing the ironing, prepping food tidying up a tabletop and at a Lego table with children.
    The 4NE-1 is 1.8 m tall and weighs 80 kg.
    It has 3D sensors in its torso for 360-degree vision capabilities, and it's able to move at up to 3 km/h.
    The head is also a status display, voice recognition is cooked in and the robot gets to grips with tasks via reinforcement learning.
    It can work autonomously or be operated remotely, and is capable of lifting and carrying objects up to 15 kg.

    OPS: The newly released video of Neura Robotics humanoid 4NE-1 performing a variety of chores.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • dukas 167724120 fer
    DUKAS_167724120_FER
    dukas 167724120 fer
    Ferrari Press Agency

    AI Nurse 1

    Ref 15697

    25/03/2024

    See Ferrari text

    Pictures must credit: Hippocratic AI

    Patients could soon be getting medical advice from a virtual nurse equipped with artificial intelligence.

    A company called Hippocratic AI calls the medics “healthcare agents.”

    In testing they have already been shown to outperform human nurses in specific tasks.

    The nurses are being developed to cope with a worldwide shortage of medical staff.

    The nurse is designed to work in conjunction with a real doctor.

    The AI nurse is a support agent focused on healthcare tasks performed by real nurses, social workers, and nutritionists.

    A person seeking medical advice will be able to call up the nurse on a computer or mobile device and be able to have a conversation and ask questions about treatment.

    US-based Hippocratic AI has a range of virtual nurses who each specialise in a particular treatment medical sector.

    At the moment, they are limited to talking to patients by phone or video to assist patients with things like health risk assessments, management of chronic illnesses, pre-op check-ins, and post-discharge checkups.

    They also have different styles of interaction including “engaging” and “direct”.

    They are linked to a cloud based AI system called Polaris run by pioneering tech company NVIDIA.

    OPS: The Hippocratic AI nurse.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • dukas 167724119 fer
    DUKAS_167724119_FER
    dukas 167724119 fer
    Ferrari Press Agency

    AI Nurse 1

    Ref 15697

    25/03/2024

    See Ferrari text

    Pictures must credit: Hippocratic AI

    Patients could soon be getting medical advice from a virtual nurse equipped with artificial intelligence.

    A company called Hippocratic AI calls the medics “healthcare agents.”

    In testing they have already been shown to outperform human nurses in specific tasks.

    The nurses are being developed to cope with a worldwide shortage of medical staff.

    The nurse is designed to work in conjunction with a real doctor.

    The AI nurse is a support agent focused on healthcare tasks performed by real nurses, social workers, and nutritionists.

    A person seeking medical advice will be able to call up the nurse on a computer or mobile device and be able to have a conversation and ask questions about treatment.

    US-based Hippocratic AI has a range of virtual nurses who each specialise in a particular treatment medical sector.

    At the moment, they are limited to talking to patients by phone or video to assist patients with things like health risk assessments, management of chronic illnesses, pre-op check-ins, and post-discharge checkups.

    They also have different styles of interaction including “engaging” and “direct”.

    They are linked to a cloud based AI system called Polaris run by pioneering tech company NVIDIA.

    OPS: The Hippocratic AI nurse.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • dukas 167724117 fer
    DUKAS_167724117_FER
    dukas 167724117 fer
    Ferrari Press Agency

    AI Nurse 1

    Ref 15697

    25/03/2024

    See Ferrari text

    Pictures must credit: Hippocratic AI

    Patients could soon be getting medical advice from a virtual nurse equipped with artificial intelligence.

    A company called Hippocratic AI calls the medics “healthcare agents.”

    In testing they have already been shown to outperform human nurses in specific tasks.

    The nurses are being developed to cope with a worldwide shortage of medical staff.

    The nurse is designed to work in conjunction with a real doctor.

    The AI nurse is a support agent focused on healthcare tasks performed by real nurses, social workers, and nutritionists.

    A person seeking medical advice will be able to call up the nurse on a computer or mobile device and be able to have a conversation and ask questions about treatment.

    US-based Hippocratic AI has a range of virtual nurses who each specialise in a particular treatment medical sector.

    At the moment, they are limited to talking to patients by phone or video to assist patients with things like health risk assessments, management of chronic illnesses, pre-op check-ins, and post-discharge checkups.

    They also have different styles of interaction including “engaging” and “direct”.

    They are linked to a cloud based AI system called Polaris run by pioneering tech company NVIDIA.

    OPS: The Hippocratic AI nurse.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • dukas 167724116 fer
    DUKAS_167724116_FER
    dukas 167724116 fer
    Ferrari Press Agency

    AI Nurse 1

    Ref 15697

    25/03/2024

    See Ferrari text

    Pictures must credit: Hippocratic AI

    Patients could soon be getting medical advice from a virtual nurse equipped with artificial intelligence.

    A company called Hippocratic AI calls the medics “healthcare agents.”

    In testing they have already been shown to outperform human nurses in specific tasks.

    The nurses are being developed to cope with a worldwide shortage of medical staff.

    The nurse is designed to work in conjunction with a real doctor.

    The AI nurse is a support agent focused on healthcare tasks performed by real nurses, social workers, and nutritionists.

    A person seeking medical advice will be able to call up the nurse on a computer or mobile device and be able to have a conversation and ask questions about treatment.

    US-based Hippocratic AI has a range of virtual nurses who each specialise in a particular treatment medical sector.

    At the moment, they are limited to talking to patients by phone or video to assist patients with things like health risk assessments, management of chronic illnesses, pre-op check-ins, and post-discharge checkups.

    They also have different styles of interaction including “engaging” and “direct”.

    They are linked to a cloud based AI system called Polaris run by pioneering tech company NVIDIA.

    OPS: The Hippocratic AI nurse.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • dukas 167724115 fer
    DUKAS_167724115_FER
    dukas 167724115 fer
    Ferrari Press Agency

    AI Nurse 1

    Ref 15697

    25/03/2024

    See Ferrari text

    Pictures must credit: Hippocratic AI

    Patients could soon be getting medical advice from a virtual nurse equipped with artificial intelligence.

    A company called Hippocratic AI calls the medics “healthcare agents.”

    In testing they have already been shown to outperform human nurses in specific tasks.

    The nurses are being developed to cope with a worldwide shortage of medical staff.

    The nurse is designed to work in conjunction with a real doctor.

    The AI nurse is a support agent focused on healthcare tasks performed by real nurses, social workers, and nutritionists.

    A person seeking medical advice will be able to call up the nurse on a computer or mobile device and be able to have a conversation and ask questions about treatment.

    US-based Hippocratic AI has a range of virtual nurses who each specialise in a particular treatment medical sector.

    At the moment, they are limited to talking to patients by phone or video to assist patients with things like health risk assessments, management of chronic illnesses, pre-op check-ins, and post-discharge checkups.

    They also have different styles of interaction including “engaging” and “direct”.

    They are linked to a cloud based AI system called Polaris run by pioneering tech company NVIDIA.

    OPS: The Hippocratic AI nurse.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

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