MAJOR SCALE
Alexandr Wang’s company, Scale AI, is fueling artificial intelligence for everyone from Airbnb to the U.S. Air Force.
He's sweating $7.3 billion worth of teeny-tiny details.
Alexandr Wang, 25
SCALE AI
As a student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Alexandr Wang was the casualty of a wickedness that plagues college campuses the world over: His roommates were stealing his food. Specifically, they were taking his yogurts. "Yogurt is one of the easiest foods to steal, because it's so perfectly contained," he says. "It's the perfect crime." So Wang put a camera on the inside of his fridge that he hoped would not just record the happenings of the fridge for him to review later, but know on its own that a yogurt had gone missing. He soon realized, though, that such a system would need to learn quite a lot to do what, for a human sentry, would be a relatively simple task. For one, the system would have to learn what a yogurt looks like-and, just as important, what it doesn't look like. After all, plenty of other things are also perfectly contained. It would also have to learn the numerous places the yogurt might be in the fridge, and the copious configurations of surrounding items. To gain this artificial intelligence, his system would not only need a wealth of images to learn from; it would need the important parts of those images to be labeled. This idea of labeling is key. Only then could the AI learn the nature of the relevant elements. Only then could the data become useful. Indeed, only then could his system spot yogurt theft.
Esta historia es de la edición September 2022 de Entrepreneur US.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 8500 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor ? Conectar
Esta historia es de la edición September 2022 de Entrepreneur US.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 8500 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor? Conectar
Charities Are Getting Down to Business
Nonprofits are struggling. That's why more charitable leaders are taking a page from their for-profit peers-and learning how to make money.
HOW TO ASK SOMEONE FOR A MILLION DOLLARS
Philanthropic fundraisers often get donors to give $1 million-and their tactics are useful for anyone trying to win over someone else's dollars.
MAKE YOUR FIRST TAX-FREE MILLION
It's legal, smart, and great for your long-term savings.
MAKE A MILLION DOLLARS IN A WEEKEND?
OK, you won’t earn it ina weekend. But serial entrepreneur NOAH KAGAN says you can start a thriving business quickly—if you’re willing to move fast and be uncomfortable.
THE MILLION-DOLLAR MEETING
Once your company hits a million dollars in revenue, many more investors (and private equity buyers) will start taking your calls. Here's why.
MILLION-DOLLAR UNLOCKS
New companies rarely get off the ground without some roadblocks, setbacks, and unforeseen decisions. Here, 10 founders describe the pivots that unlocked their growth and catapulted their profitability.
THE PATH TO MILLIONS STARTS HERE
A million dollars sounds sexy. But what is it, really? For some, a dream.
What SEO Insiders Know
Looking to boost your SEO? We asked a bunch of insiders: What do you know about your industry that most outsiders don't?
Pack These for Your Next Trip
Want to make your next business trip a pleasure? Gear expert and two-time Emmy Award winner Mario Armstrong has five items you'll want to make room for.
Finding Your Dimension X
Why do some people thrive, while others fall behind? As Google's first chief innovation evangelist, I believe I found the answer: Successful people harness what I call their \"Dimension X.\" Here's what it is.