AI

IBM intros a slew of new AI services, including generative models

Comment

BARCELONA, CATALONIA, SPAIN - 2019/02/25: The IBM logo is seen during MWC 2019.
Image Credits: SOPA Images / Getty Images

IBM, like pretty much every tech giant these days, is betting big on AI.

At its annual Think conference, the company announced IBM Watsonx, a new platform that delivers tools to build AI models and provide access to pretrained models for generating computer code, text and more.

It’s a bit of a slap in the face to IBM’s back-office managers, who just recently were told that the company will pause hiring for roles it thinks could be replaced by AI in the coming years.

But IBM says the launch was motivated by the challenges many businesses still experience in deploying AI within the workplace. Thirty percent of business leaders responding to an IBM survey cite trust and transparency issues as barriers holding them back from adopting AI, while 42% cite privacy concerns — specifically around generative AI.

“AI may not replace managers, but the managers that use AI will replace the managers that do not,” Rob Thomas, chief commercial officer at IBM, said in a roundtable with reporters. “It really does change how people work.”

Watsonx solves this, IBM asserts, by giving customers access to the toolset, infrastructure and consulting resources they need to create their own AI models or fine-tune and adapt available AI models on their own data. Using Watsonx.ai, which IBM describes in fluffy marketing language as an “enterprise studio for AI builders,” users can also validate and deploy models as well as monitor models post-deployment, ostensibly consolidating their various workflows.

But wait, you might say, don’t rivals like Google, Amazon and Microsoft already provide this or something fairly close to it? The short answer is yes. Amazon’s comparable product is SageMaker Studio, while Google’s is Vertex AI. On the Azure side, there’s Azure AI Platform.

IBM makes the case, however, that Watsonx is the only AI tooling platform in the market that provides a range of pretrained, developed-for-the-enterprise models and “cost-effective infrastructure.”

“You still need a very large organization and team to be able to bring [AI] innovation in a way that enterprises can consume,” Dario Gil, SVP at IBM, told reporters during the roundtable. “And that is a key element of the horizontal capability that IBM is bringing to the table.”

That remains to be seen. In any case, IBM is offering seven pretrained models to businesses using Watsonx.ai, a few of which are open source. It’s also partnering with Hugging Face, the AI startup, to include thousands of Hugging Face–developed models, datasets and libraries. (For its part, IBM is pledging to contribute open source AI dev software to Hugging Face and make several of its in-house models accessible from Hugging Face’s AI development platform.)

The three that the company is highlighting at Think are fm.model.code, which generates code; fm.model.NLP, a collection of large language models; and fm.model.geospatial, a model built on climate and remote sensing data from NASA. (Awkward naming scheme? You betcha.)

Similar to code-generating models like GitHub’s Copilot, fm.model.code lets a user give a command in natural language and then builds the corresponding coding workflow. Fm.model.NLP comprises text-generating models for specific and industry-relevant domains, like organic chemistry. And fm.model.geospatial makes predictions to help plan for changes in natural disaster patterns, biodiversity and land use, in addition to other geophysical processes.

These might not sound novel on their face. But IBM claims that the models are differentiated by a training dataset containing “multiple types of business data, including code, time-series data, tabular data and geospatial data and IT events data.” We’ll have to take its word for it.

“We allow an enterprise to use their own code to adapt [these] models to how they want to run their playbooks and their code,” Arvind Krishna, the CEO of IBM, said in the roundtable. “It’s for use cases where people want to have their own private instance, whether on a public cloud or on their own premises.”

IBM is using the models itself, it says, across its suite of software products and services. For example, fm.model.code powers Watson Code Assistant, IBM’s answer to Copilot, which allows developers to generate code using plain English prompts across programs including Red Hat’s Ansible. As for fm.model.NLP, those models have been integrated with AIOps Insights, Watson Assistant and Watson Orchestrate — IBM’s AIOps toolkit, smart assistant and workflow automation tech, respectively — to provide greater visibility into performance across IT environments, resolve IT incidents in a more expedient way and improve customer service experiences — or so IBM promises.

FM.model.geospatial, meanwhile, underpins IBM’s EIS Builder Edition, a product that lets organizations create solutions addressing environmental risks.

Alongside Watsonx.ai, under the same Watsonx brand umbrella, IBM unveiled Watsonx.data, a “fit-for-purpose” data store designed for both governed data and AI workloads. Watsonx.data allows users to access data through a single point of entry while applying query engines, IBM says, plus governance, automation and integrations with an organization’s existing databases and tools.

Complementing Watsonx.ai and Watsonx.data is Watsonx.governance, a toolkit that — in IBM’s rather vague words — provides mechanisms to protect customer privacy, detect model bias and drift, and help organizations meet ethics standards.

New tools and infrastructure

In an announcement related to Watsonx, IBM showcased a new GPU offering in the IBM cloud optimized for compute-intensive workloads — specifically training and serving AI models.

The company also showed off the IBM Cloud Carbon Calculator, an “AI-informed” dashboard that enables customers to measure, track, manage and help report carbon emissions generated through their cloud usage. IBM says it was developed in collaboration with Intel, based on tech from IBM’s research division, and can help visualize greenhouse gas emissions across workloads down to the cloud service level.

It could be said that both products, in addition to the new Watsonx suite, represent something of a doubling down on AI for IBM. The company recently built an AI-optimized supercomputer, known as Vela, in the cloud. And it has announced collaborations with companies such as Moderna and SAP Hana to investigate ways to apply generative AI at scale.

The company expects AI could add $16 trillion to the global economy by 2030 and that 30% of back-office tasks will by automated within the next five years.

“When I think of classic back-office processes, not just customer care — whether it’s doing procurement, whether it’s elements of supply chain [management], whether it’s elements of IT operations, or elements of cybersecurity … we see AI easily taking anywhere from 30% to 50% of that volume of tasks, and being able to do them with much better proficiency than even people can do them,” Gil said.

Those might be optimistic (or pessimistic, if you’re humanist-leaning) predictions, but Wall Street has historically rewarded the outlook. IBM’s automation solutions — part of the company’s software segment — grew revenue by 9% year over year in Q4 2022. Meanwhile, revenue from data and AI solutions, which focuses more on analytics, customer care and supply chain management, grew sales by 8%.

But as a piece in Seeking Alpha notes, there’s reason to lower expectations. IBM has a difficult history with AI, having been forced to sell its Watson Health division at a substantial loss after technical problems led high-profile customer partnerships to deteriorate. And rivalry in the AI space is intensifying; IBM faces competition not only from tech giants like Microsoft and Google but also from startups like Cohere and Anthropic that have massive capital backing.

Will IBM’s new apps, tools and services make a dent? IBM’s hoping so. But we’ll have to wait and see.

More TechCrunch

Welcome back to TechCrunch’s Week in Review — TechCrunch’s newsletter recapping the week’s biggest news. Want it in your inbox every Saturday? Sign up here. Over the past eight years,…

Fisker collapsed under the weight of its founder’s promises

What is AI? We’ve put together this non-technical guide to give anyone a fighting chance to understand how and why today’s AI works.

WTF is AI?

President Joe Biden has vetoed H.J.Res. 109, a congressional resolution that would have overturned the Securities and Exchange Commission’s current approach to banks and crypto. Specifically, the resolution targeted the…

President Biden vetoes crypto custody bill

Featured Article

Industries may be ready for humanoid robots, but are the robots ready for them?

How large a role humanoids will play in that ecosystem is, perhaps, the biggest question on everyone’s mind at the moment.

8 hours ago
Industries may be ready for humanoid robots, but are the robots ready for them?

VCs are clamoring to invest in hot AI companies, willing to pay exorbitant share prices for coveted spots on their cap tables. Even so, most aren’t able to get into…

VCs are selling shares of hot AI companies like Anthropic and xAI to small investors in a wild SPV market

The fashion industry has a huge problem: Despite many returned items being unworn or undamaged, a lot, if not the majority, end up in the trash. An estimated 9.5 billion…

Deal Dive: How (Re)vive grew 10x last year by helping retailers recycle and sell returned items

Tumblr officially shut down “Tips,” an opt-in feature where creators could receive one-time payments from their followers.  As of today, the tipping icon has automatically disappeared from all posts and…

You can no longer use Tumblr’s tipping feature 

Generative AI improvements are increasingly being made through data curation and collection — not architectural — improvements. Big Tech has an advantage.

AI training data has a price tag that only Big Tech can afford

Keeping up with an industry as fast-moving as AI is a tall order. So until an AI can do it for you, here’s a handy roundup of recent stories in the world…

This Week in AI: Can we (and could we ever) trust OpenAI?

Jasper Health, a cancer care platform startup, laid off a substantial part of its workforce, TechCrunch has learned.

General Catalyst-backed Jasper Health lays off staff

Featured Article

Live Nation confirms Ticketmaster was hacked, says personal information stolen in data breach

Live Nation says its Ticketmaster subsidiary was hacked. A hacker claims to be selling 560 million customer records.

1 day ago
Live Nation confirms Ticketmaster was hacked, says personal information stolen in data breach

Featured Article

Inside EV startup Fisker’s collapse: how the company crumbled under its founders’ whims

An autonomous pod. A solid-state battery-powered sports car. An electric pickup truck. A convertible grand tourer EV with up to 600 miles of range. A “fully connected mobility device” for young urban innovators to be built by Foxconn and priced under $30,000. The next Popemobile. Over the past eight years, famed vehicle designer Henrik Fisker…

1 day ago
Inside EV startup Fisker’s collapse: how the company crumbled under its founders’ whims

Late Friday afternoon, a time window companies usually reserve for unflattering disclosures, AI startup Hugging Face said that its security team earlier this week detected “unauthorized access” to Spaces, Hugging…

Hugging Face says it detected ‘unauthorized access’ to its AI model hosting platform

Featured Article

Hacked, leaked, exposed: Why you should never use stalkerware apps

Using stalkerware is creepy, unethical, potentially illegal, and puts your data and that of your loved ones in danger.

1 day ago
Hacked, leaked, exposed: Why you should never use stalkerware apps

The design brief was simple: each grind and dry cycle had to be completed before breakfast. Here’s how Mill made it happen.

Mill’s redesigned food waste bin really is faster and quieter than before

Google is embarrassed about its AI Overviews, too. After a deluge of dunks and memes over the past week, which cracked on the poor quality and outright misinformation that arose…

Google admits its AI Overviews need work, but we’re all helping it beta test

Welcome to Startups Weekly — Haje‘s weekly recap of everything you can’t miss from the world of startups. Sign up here to get it in your inbox every Friday. In…

Startups Weekly: Musk raises $6B for AI and the fintech dominoes are falling

The product, which ZeroMark calls a “fire control system,” has two components: a small computer that has sensors, like lidar and electro-optical, and a motorized buttstock.

a16z-backed ZeroMark wants to give soldiers guns that don’t miss against drones

The RAW Dating App aims to shake up the dating scheme by shedding the fake, TikTok-ified, heavily filtered photos and replacing them with a more genuine, unvarnished experience. The app…

Pitch Deck Teardown: RAW Dating App’s $3M angel deck

Yes, we’re calling it “ThreadsDeck” now. At least that’s the tag many are using to describe the new user interface for Instagram’s X competitor, Threads, which resembles the column-based format…

‘ThreadsDeck’ arrived just in time for the Trump verdict

Japanese crypto exchange DMM Bitcoin confirmed on Friday that it had been the victim of a hack resulting in the theft of 4,502.9 bitcoin, or about $305 million.  According to…

Hackers steal $305M from DMM Bitcoin crypto exchange

This is not a drill! Today marks the final day to secure your early-bird tickets for TechCrunch Disrupt 2024 at a significantly reduced rate. At midnight tonight, May 31, ticket…

Disrupt 2024 early-bird prices end at midnight

Instagram is testing a way for creators to experiment with reels without committing to having them displayed on their profiles, giving the social network a possible edge over TikTok and…

Instagram tests ‘trial reels’ that don’t display to a creator’s followers

U.S. federal regulators have requested more information from Zoox, Amazon’s self-driving unit, as part of an investigation into rear-end crash risks posed by unexpected braking. The National Highway Traffic Safety…

Feds tell Zoox to send more info about autonomous vehicles suddenly braking

You thought the hottest rap battle of the summer was between Kendrick Lamar and Drake. You were wrong. It’s between Canva and an enterprise CIO. At its Canva Create event…

Canva’s rap battle is part of a long legacy of Silicon Valley cringe

Voice cloning startup ElevenLabs introduced a new tool for users to generate sound effects through prompts today after announcing the project back in February.

ElevenLabs debuts AI-powered tool to generate sound effects

We caught up with Antler founder and CEO Magnus Grimeland about the startup scene in Asia, the current tech startup trends in the region and investment approaches during the rise…

VC firm Antler’s CEO says Asia presents ‘biggest opportunity’ in the world for growth

Temu is to face Europe’s strictest rules after being designated as a “very large online platform” under the Digital Services Act (DSA).

Chinese e-commerce marketplace Temu faces stricter EU rules as a ‘very large online platform’

Meta has been banned from launching features on Facebook and Instagram that would have collected data on voters in Spain using the social networks ahead of next month’s European Elections.…

Spain bans Meta from launching election features on Facebook, Instagram over privacy fears

Stripe, the world’s most valuable fintech startup, said on Friday that it will temporarily move to an invite-only model for new account sign-ups in India, calling the move “a tough…

Stripe curbs its India ambitions over regulatory situation