3 Companies Using Artificial Intelligence to Their Advantage

Artificial intelligence (AI) is already affecting our lives in many ways. From intelligent video curation on Alphabet's (NASDAQ: GOOG) (NASDAQ: GOOGL) YouTube and Google web search to Apple's (NASDAQ: AAPL) Siri personal assistant, AI is already making our lives easier. AI can also help corporations and customers fight against rapidly evolving cyberthreats. For instance, FireEye's (NASDAQ: FEYE) Helix cybersecurity platform is able to automate threat detection and prevention with the help of this emerging technology.

The early adoption of AI by Alphabet, Apple, and FireEye could help them steal a march over rivals. Let's see how.

Man holding a tablet projecting a brain depicting AI.
Man holding a tablet projecting a brain depicting AI.

Image Source: Getty Images.

Alphabet

Alphabet has been leveraging the power of AI to improve services across the board. As already mentioned, AI is helping the company suggest YouTube content based on the viewer's history, as well as making Android devices smarter with the help of Google Assistant.

Meanwhile, Google's 2014 acquisition of DeepMind, which was then worth $500 million, is already helping the company increase data center efficiency. DeepMind's machine learning tech has helped Google reduce the power required to cool data centers by 40%, which should lead to lower operational costs.

But if I were to point out one specific area where AI could help Google improve its business, I need not look beyond the public cloud infrastructure market. As it turns out, Google is currently a laggard in the cloud computing space. Amazon leads the market by a wide margin, while Microsoft is a distant second. Google's share of the public cloud market is just 6%.

But Google's Tensor Processing Unit (TPU) AI chip and TensorFlow algorithm, which is becoming the basis of its cloud infrastructure, could tilt the momentum in its favor. The company claims that its second-generation TPU is 15 to 20 times faster than the competing graphics processing units (GPUs) used to power AI applications in the cloud.

Google has traditionally used NVIDIA GPUs to power its data centers, just like the majority of its cloud rivals. But it will soon start offering cloud services based on the TPU to customers. The company has already made a smart move by giving developers free access to the TensorFlow algorithm so that they can create apps for Google's cloud platform, so it should be able to offer a wide range of cloud-based services to customers on launch.

In fact, Google believes that its cloud services revenue will overtake its advertising revenue in the next couple of years, which is a big deal, as advertising currently supplies 80% of its total revenue. In all, Google parent Alphabet could win big if its TPU and TensorFlow prove successful as the public cloud market is expected to generate $521.8 billion in revenue in 2026 as compared to $138.4 billion last year.