Episode Details
Back to EpisodesEncore Episode: OCI AI Services
Description
00:00
The world of artificial intelligence is vast and everchanging. And with all the buzz around it lately, we figured it was the perfect time to revisit our AI Made Easy series. Join us over the next few weeks as we chat about all things AI, helping you to discover its endless possibilities. Ready to dive in? Let's go!
00:33
Welcome to the Oracle University Podcast, the first stop on your cloud journey. During this series of informative podcasts, we'll bring you foundational training on the most popular
Oracle technologies. Let's get started!
00:46
Nikita: Welcome to the Oracle University Podcast! I'm Nikita Abraham, Principal Technical Editor with Oracle University, and with me is Lois Houston, Director of Innovation Programs.
Lois: Hi there! In our last episode, we spoke about OCI AI Portfolio, including AI and ML services, and the OCI AI infrastructure.
Nikita: Yeah, and in today's episode, we're going to continue down a similar path and take a closer look at OCI AI services.
01:16
Lois: With us today is Senior Principal Product Manager, Wes Prichard. Hi Wes! It's lovely to have you here with us. Hemant gave us a broad overview of the various OCI AI services last week, but we're really hoping to get into each of them with you. So, let's jump right in and start with the OCI Language service. What can you tell us about it?
Wes: OCI Language analyzes unstructured text for you. It provides models trained on industry data to perform language analysis with no data science experience needed.
01:48
Nikita: What kind of big things can it do?
Wes: It has five main capabilities. First, it detects the language of the text. It recognizes 75 languages, from Afrikaans to Welsh. It identifies entities, things like names, places, dates, emails, currency, organizations, phone numbers--14 types in all. It identifies the sentiment of the text, and not just one sentiment for the entire block of text, but the different sentiments for different aspects.
02:17
Nikita: What do you mean by that, Wes?
Wes: So let's say you read a restaurant review that said, the food was great, but the service sucked. You'll get food with a positive sentiment and service with a negative sentiment. And it also analyzes the sentiment for every sentence.
Lois: Ah, that's smart. Ok, so we covered three capabilities. What else?
Wes: It identifies key phrases in the text that represent the important ideas or subjects. And it classifies the general topic of the text from a list of 600 categories and subcategories.
02:48
Lois: Ok, and then there's