2017-02-06

The upcoming AI hackathon, which is being held on 18 and 19 February at TCD Innovation Academy in partnership with Microsoft, Atlantic Bridge and TCD, is the brainchild of Neill Gernon of machine learning start-up Atrovate.

Gernon is also the founder of the quarterly Dublin AI community, which is holding its second sold-out event for 120 AI enthusiasts this week (9 February) in collaboration with Aylien, Pointy and Artomatix.

‘We have some great start-ups playing across a variety of AI-related fields based in Dublin and around Ireland. Having successes like Movidius getting acquired by Intel is fantastic to see’
– NEILL GERNON

Gernon was formerly programme lead at the Launchbox technology start-up accelerator in Trinity College.

“We wanted to create a more defined and connected AI commuity for Dublin so I set up Dublin AI as Dublin’s quarterly applied AI event.

“This was the first step to connect and upskill the city’s talent.”



The Movidius effect



David Maloney, co-founder of Movidius, speaking at the first Dublin AI event in November. Image: Dublin AI

Gernon pointed out that Dublin is awash with the right talent to lead in the AI revolution.

“With research centres like Adapt and Insight and key universities like Trinity College, which is primarily known for technology and the sciences, based right in the middle of town there is no shortage of talent, which is the key enabler.

“The potential has been there but the right mechanisms at a foundational level perhaps we’re not as defined or didn’t enable the connectivity between multiple disciplines – including corporate, academic, investor, start-up – to accelerate the pace of community growth.

“There are great meet up groups in Dublin like Machine Learning Dublin, NLP Dublin and the newly formed CHAI Dublin, which all have seen significant growth in attendee numbers since starting up again in 2017.



The first Dublin AI event was a sold-out affair with over 120 people in the audience. Image: Dublin AI

“We have some great start-ups playing across a variety of AI-related fields based in Dublin and around Ireland and having successes like Movidius getting acquired by Intel is fantastic to see.

“This also showcases Dublin and Ireland as a destination with great talent, forward-thinking ideas and research which can form to create great AI startups.”

Gernon said the purpose of the AI hackathon is to enable both upskillig and facilitate experimentation.

“The hackathon is open to data scientists, researchers and engineers currently working on or interested in AI-related fields such as machine learning, speech recognition, computer vision, natural language processing and bots.

“We expect a mix of skillsets from beginners, intermediate to advanced.

“The great thing about technically focused hackathons is that you really never know the output. We want talented people to connect, explore the application of intelligent technologies, learn and develop new use cases.

“What you can be sure of is that talented people will show up, we’ll help them to connect and its always fun if you have gadgets like Movidius Fathom Neural Sticks, Microsoft Hololens, Oculus Rift and drones that will be there to play with throughout the two days.

“Core to the weekend is learning about the application of these intelligent technologies that participants may choose to apply to an industry such as finance, cyber security, healthcare or an emerging technology area like AR, VR and internet of things,” Gernon said.

The post Dublin AI founder: ‘It is time to upskill Dublin for the AI revolution’ appeared first on Silicon Republic.

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