SShortSingh.
Back to feed

Ford rehires veteran engineers after AI fails to meet quality standards

0
·1 views

Ford has rehired experienced senior engineers, internally referred to as 'gray beards', after the company found that artificial intelligence alone could not ensure high-quality vehicle production. The automaker had previously reduced its reliance on seasoned human expertise, expecting AI tools to fill the gap. However, Ford acknowledged the assumption was a mistake, as AI fell short of delivering the expected product quality. The company's reversal highlights the continued importance of human experience and judgment in complex manufacturing processes.

Read the full story at TechCrunch

This is an AI-generated summary. ShortSingh links to the original source for the complete article.

Discussion (0)

Log in to join the discussion and vote.

Log in

Related stories

0
TechnologyThe Verge ·

Suno Launches Artist Incubator Offering Grants, Mentorship, and Broad Music Licenses

AI music platform Suno has introduced Spark, an incubator program aimed at supporting independent artists through grants, mentorship, and marketing resources. The program is open to unsigned singers, songwriters, and producers who release music under their own name. Applicants must agree to terms that include making their songs available on Suno for remixing by other users. The licensing terms have drawn scrutiny from users on the Suno subreddit, who raised concerns about the breadth of rights granted to the company over participants' work. The initiative signals Suno's broader ambition to evolve beyond an AI music generator into a streaming and artist discovery platform.

0
TechnologyArs Technica ·

Academic Journal Retracts Two 1940s Papers by Nobel Physicist Max Planck

A scientific journal has retracted two papers originally published in the 1940s by renowned physicist Max Planck, the Nobel Prize-winning father of quantum theory. The retracted articles are no longer accessible, with their links now leading to blank pages and empty PDF files. The move has drawn criticism from academics, with at least one expert calling the decision intellectually unacceptable. The retraction of decades-old historical scientific work raises broader questions about the standards and ethics of removing legacy publications from the scholarly record.

0
TechnologyThe Verge ·

China reclaims world's fastest supercomputer title for first time since 2018

China's LineShine supercomputer, housed at the National Supercomputing Center in Shenzhen, has topped the TOP500 ranking, displacing the US-built El Capitan. This marks the first time China has held the top position since 2018. Notably, LineShine achieves this milestone without using GPUs, which are typically central to high-performance computing systems. The achievement comes despite US trade restrictions limiting the sale of advanced computing components to China. Analysts view the milestone not only as a technical feat but also as a geopolitical signal from Beijing to Washington amid ongoing technology tensions.

Ford rehires veteran engineers after AI fails to meet quality standards · ShortSingh