Indy CIO Network Dinner

Avoiding False Starts with Artificial Intelligence

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Avoiding False Starts with AI 

Artificial Intelligence (AI) is no longer science fiction; it's here today, and it's here to stay. It is in the products you use every day: home automation, digital assistants, or credit card fraud detection, just to name a few.

All businesses will be affected by AI in the coming years, and the impact will be significant. The only remaining question is, how will you influence its effect on your company?

Getting started with AI is a daunting task, but necessary for businesses who want to stay competitive. During this session, we'll discuss:

  • How to determine if, where, and how to use AI effectively within your organization
  • When and how to build an AI team
  • Common early mistakes and pitfalls when getting started with AI
  • Typical misconceptions around AI and its application
  • What to look for in an AI partner or potential hire 

Tuesday, March 3, 2020

Time: 
5:00 PM Registration & Networking
6:00 PM Dinner
7:00 PM Presentation Begins

Location:
SEP Product Design Studio
836 S. Rangeline Road
Carmel, IN 46037

SESSION IS FULL -- Enter your name below to be added to the waitlist.

Speaker Bios

Robert Herbig is passionate about leading teams that can deliver products that users love.

He is a Lead Software Engineer at SEP, a software product design and development company. In his 10+ years in the software industry, he has worked on products ranging in size from small apps to enterprise systems; embedded, desktop, web, and cloud platforms; and in a variety of markets and domains including aerospace, medical, agriculture, construction, and secure communication.

He currently lives in Carmel, Indiana with his wonderful wife, three rambunctious sons, and two dogs.

 

Jordan Thayer received his PhD in Artificial Intelligence in 2012 from the University of New Hampshire. Ever since, he’s been applying artificial intelligence in academia and industry to problems including intrusion detection, planning, static analysis, and program generation.

As a thought leader at SEP, he's been proving  that AI isn't futuristic technology. Rather, it's a collection of techniques of varying levels of maturity that can often reliably solve problems they have today. He gives talks, runs workshops, visualizes algorithm behavior, and builds proofs of concept as well as products to show what AI can do already.