Watch Mark Zuckerberg’s incredible AI assistant voiced by Morgan Freeman shoot his t-shirts from a wardrobe cannon and make his family toast for breakfast
It’s not clear whether the Facebook founder is familiar with Wallace and Gromit...but the similarities are uncanny
THIS incredible video offers a sneak peak inside billionaire Mark Zuckerberg’s home and artificially intelligent butler that runs it for him.
Jarvis, who is styled on Iron Man legend Tony Stark's AI bot J.A.R.V.I.S (just a rather very intelligent system) can recognise Zuckerberg's friends, control lights, doors, windows and music.
It took the Facebook founder a year to create his virtual assistant, he revealed in a blog post yesterday.
But now Zuckerberg is keen to show the world his creation, and created not one, but two videos detailing exactly how Jarvis works.
In the first, the social media mogul can be seen leaping from under the covers as Hal, sorry, Jarvis, makes the Saturday morning wake-up call.
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Already dressed his usual grey t-shirt and jeans combo, Zuckerberg explains how after a “year of coding” he can now control most things in his home using a mobile app.
It can even help him get ready in the morning, he reveals, as a t-shirt shoots from a cannon in his wardrobe.
The system is voiced by Morgan Freeman, but Zuckerberg said he tried a few famous voices to get the right tone.
A second video, narrated by Zuckerberg's wife and mum to his tot, Max, reveals how Arny seemed a bit "aggressive" for the family home.
It appears the muscly film-star turned mayor was a bit miffed by the comment.
Clearly hurt, the Austrian star later commented on the clip, writing: "Too aggressive?"
Zuckerberg used Facebook’s tools to create the home help.
It connects to a Crestron system for his lighting, thermostat and doors, a Sonos system with Spotify for music, a Smansung TV and a Nest camera to monitor baby Max.
Facebook’s face recognition tools - the kind that suggests who you should tag in your pictures - came in handy for home security, too.
The video shows how Jarvis monitors a security camera to identify friends and let them in automatically.
Zuckerberg said: "'To do this, I installed a few cameras at my door that can capture images from all angles.
"AI systems today cannot identify people from the back of their heads, so having a few angles ensures we see the person's face.
"I built a simple server that continuously watches the cameras and runs a two step process: first, it runs face detection to see if any person has come into view, and second, if it finds a face, then it runs face recognition to identify who the person is.
"Once it identifies the person, it checks a list to confirm I'm expecting that person, and if I am then it will let them in and tell me they're here."
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