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“Our smartphone is already outstanding at object recognition. We wanted to see if in a short space of time we could teach it to not only drive a car, but to use its AI capabilities to see certain objects, and be taught to avoid them,” said Andrew Garrihy, Chief Marketing Officer at Huawei Europe. According to a report in theinquirer.net on Friday, Huawei’s ‘RoadReader’ project “pushed the boundaries of its object recognition technology and put the learning capabilities, speed and performance of its AI-powered devices to the test”.
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During the test, the smartphone-driven car did not hit a real dog sitting right in the middle of the road and moved on from the side. The camera app on the “Mate 10 Pro” can tell the difference between food, pets, landscapes and more. Huawei will showcase its “RoadReader” project at the Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Barcelona, Spain on February 26-27.
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- artificial intelligence
- huawei
- Huawei Europe
- Huawei Mate 10 Pro
| Edited by: —
- artificial intelligence
- huawei
- Huawei Europe
- Huawei Mate 10 Pro
| Edited by: —