The X Games will experiment judging halfpipe runs this week in Aspen using artificial intelligence, the cutting-edge technology that could someday play a role in the way subjectively judged sports are scored.
Judging sports competitions is subjective. X Games CEO Jeremy Bloom believes artificial intelligence could lead to fairer outcomes.
This year the X Games has partnered with Google to roll out a new artificial intelligence (AI) technology to help judges inform their scores —
Once a matter of parody, artificial intelligence judging will make its snowsports debut in a few short days at the 2025 Winter X Games in Aspen, Colorado, Snowboarder reports. X Games has partnered with Google Cloud to bring AI judging to the snowboard SuperPipe competitions at this year's event.
Early in his tenure as the CEO of X Games, Jeremy Bloom is ready to show off some new tricks. Bloom and his charges have been preparing an "AI judge" powered by Google Cloud for the Superpipe competition at X Games Aspen on Jan.
teamed with Google founder Sergey Brin to build the technology. Using Google Cloud tools including Vertex AI, Bloom thinks this experiment has potential to change the game on halfpipes ...
A friend of Google cofounder Sergey Brin, he says the two workshopped the idea in December, and numerous Google AI engineers were tasked with putting it all together in time for the X Games’s ...
WATCH: X Games Aspen 2025 will air nationally on ABC and ESPN Friday through Sunday, but can also be streamed on fuboTV (free trial).
There’s no official ruling on the collective noun for a group of billionaires, but if ever we needed one it was this week, writes Ange Lavoipierre.
Chinese AI app not working properly amid huge interest in ChatGPT competitor - DeepSeek says its AI model is similar to US giants like OpenAI, despite fears of censorship around issues sensitive to Be
DeepSeek says its AI model is similar to US giants like OpenAI, despite fears of censorship around issues sensitive to Beijing
Owing to US tech stocks crash, billionaires like Nvidias Jensen Huang and Oracles Larry Ellison lost more than $20 billion wealth in a single-day. Popularity of DeepSeek resulted in a frenzy selling in US tech stocks,