-
Boston Red Sox fire coach Alex Cora
-
Highway bomb attack kills 10 ahead of Colombia election
-
Rampant Gilgeous-Alexander fuels Thunder win, Magic hold off Pistons
-
Korda's lead shrinks to five at LPGA Chevron
-
Favored Renegade draws inside post for Kentucky Derby
-
Barcelona on brink of La Liga triumph, Atletico build confidence
-
Trump cancels Pakistan talks trip, says Iran war on hold
-
Atletico build confidence before Arsenal but Barrios hurt
-
Reiss edges Wiley for Drake title in year's best outdoor mile
-
Magic hold off Pistons for 2-1 series lead
-
Trump orders new, blue surface for Washington's Reflecting Pool
-
Guardiola hails 'extraordinary' Man City reaction to make FA Cup history
-
Arteta in red card rant after Arsenal regain top spot
-
Jihadists, Tuareg rebels, claim attacks across Mali
-
Cummins back as Hyderabad overcome Sooryavanshi's IPL century
-
Man City late show sinks Southampton to reach FA Cup final
-
PSG shrug off Angers to edge closer to Ligue 1 title
-
Al Ahli beat Machida Zelvia to retain Asian Champions League title
-
Barcelona held at Bayern in Women's Champions League semi-finals
-
Arsenal back on top of Premier League, Spurs win
-
Eze rocket fires Arsenal back into top spot in Premier League
-
Man City late show beats Southampton to reach FA Cup final
-
De Zerbi hails Spurs win as key to survival fight
-
Swiatek retires with illness in Madrid Open third round
-
Germany blames Russia for Signal phishing attacks on MPs
-
Barcelona on brink of La Liga triumph with Getafe win
-
Barca on brink of La Liga triumph with Getafe win
-
Teen talent Seixas keen for Pogacar, Evenepoel test in Liege
-
Liverpool close on Champions League but may have seen last of Salah
-
Spurs, West Ham win in battle for Premier League survival
-
Bayern storm back to beat Mainz ahead of PSG clash
-
Late Carbonel penalty lifts Stade past Pau in Top 14
-
Lyon a different proposition for Arsenal this time round, says Giraldez
-
Marc Marquez wins chaotic rain-affected Spanish MotoGP sprint
-
Gunfire in Mali as army battles 'terrorist groups'
-
Gunfire rocks Mali districts, including junta stronghold: witnesses
-
Welsh football icon Ramsey takes on marathon challenge for charity
-
Aussie Rules fires appeals chair over ruling on anti-gay slur
-
Lakers' OT win puts Rockets on brink of NBA playoff elimination
-
From radiation to invasion: a Chernobyl worker's two wars
-
AI firms flex lobbying muscle on both side of Atlantic
-
First female Archbishop of Canterbury to meet Pope Leo
-
Hundreds of firefighters battle Japan forest blazes
-
Lakers down Rockets in overtime for 3-0 series lead, Celtics hold off Sixers
-
US envoys heading to Pakistan for uncertain Iran talks
-
'Hockey is religion': Montreal fans pack church for playoff push
-
Billionaire Elon Musk enters courtroom showdown with OpenAI
-
Crunch nuclear proliferation meeting at UN amid raging global wars
-
Awkward debut for Trump at correspondents' dinner
-
Under blackout threat, Wikimedia reaches compromise with Indonesia
German industry grapples with AI at trade fair
Artificial intelligence is set to bring sweeping change to modern life, but at an industrial fair in Germany many companies wonder how they fit into the tech revolution.
"We use ChatGPT a bit," shrugged one business representative, from a metals processor based in southern Germany, at this week's Hannover Messe.
The expo grouping 4,000 firms promised visitors ways to "experience the future" and explore AI's "practical applications in areas such as production, robotics and energy, all at their own pace".
One eye-catching display -- a gigantic Rolls-Royce aircraft engine whose production was optimised by AI from Microsoft and German company Siemens -- drew many curious onlookers.
But on the sidelines, the small and medium enterprises (SMEs) that are the backbone of Germany's economy -- the so-called Mittelstand -- often had less to say on the subject.
Andrea Raaf of Herz Aetztechnik, which uses lasers to make vehicle and electronics parts, said AI was not up to the job.
"The parts we manufacture are very individual, so we can't really see the point of AI," she told AFP.
Others have been more engaged, including family-owned Koerner Electric, which said it has been using AI for the past three years.
Standing in front of custom-built circuit boards, its technical director Dennis Koerner said AI had helped with the manufacturing process and to analyse optical and electrical measurements.
"We have written a small AI with which we can generate programming much faster," said Koerner.
"It was necessary to get faster and more stable results without needing several employees for the job."
- Lagging behind -
Once a byword for high technology, German industry knows that it is lagging behind US and Chinese competition when it comes to the digital technologies that will dominate the next century.
Many German firms remain unsure how to use the rapidly evolving technology in the kind of high-end engineering they specialise in.
"It's important not to shy away from introducing AI," said Agnes Heftberger, managing director of Microsoft Germany. "Otherwise Germany will find itself lagging behind in the face of international competition."
Also featured at the fair were so-called "AI agents", systems which autonomously perform tasks from writing code to assisting with conversations.
Microsoft offers systems to put machine data into simple language and identify maintenance needs in advance.
But Loke Olsen, an automation engineer at Confirm A/S, a Danish subcontractor to the pharmaceutical industry, was somewhat sceptical about AI's potential errors and ability to correct itself.
"We have to be sure that AI works 100 percent because we have to comply with very strict health regulations," he told AFP.
For some, cost is an issue. Koerner said that it seems like "we can hardly afford" some of the AI products being showcased at the fair.
- 'Game changer' -
Almost half of German industrial firms use AI for some business functions, a Microsoft survey found, but most are far more reluctant to use it to develop their products.
Only seven percent of machine builders plan to adopt generative AI to help with product design, said a study by the machinists' association VDMA.
"There are some initial attempts, but investment is still too low," said Guido Reimann, VDMA's deputy managing director of software and digitalisation.
The study found that GenAI, by optimising efficiency and boosting sales, could raise the sector's annual profits by many billions of euros.
But although 52 percent of managers saw AI as a potential "game changer", it said, "its use has so far often been limited to experimental or proof-of-concept projects".
The top concerns listed were a lack of data quality, shortages of AI specialists and technical challenges.
Germany's Fraunhofer research institute has been touring Germany since 2023, showing manufacturers concrete AI applications from carpentry to healthcare.
"It often helps to network smaller companies with each other because AI always works with data," said institute spokeswoman Juliane Segedi.
"The more data you have, the better an AI can become. And if you have a similar problem that needs to be solved, you can pool the data to come up with a solution that is good for everyone."
Other challenges remain. Many people fear AI will one day steal their job.
An important step, Segedi said, will be convincing labour unions to not "see AI as a threat but as something that can contribute to their ideas".
M.Fischer--AMWN