Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

IBM Korea bets future on cognitive, cloud tech biz

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(The Korea Herald newspaper) - IBM Korea, the local branch of the US-based tech giant, is betting its future on its cognitive computing and cloud service businesses as the world embraces a new age led by futuristic technologi­es such as artificial intelligen­ce, the Internet of Things and blockchain.

The US tech firm is seeking to expand the usage of Watson, its AI-powered cognitive data computing platform, in South Korea and become a strong cloud service provider to local firms with growing data storage and management demand.

"Looking into the next 50 years, we want to raise the cognitive and cloud service busi- ness portion of our business to more than 50 per cent," said IBM Korea CEO Andrew Chang during a recent ceremony to mark the Seoul-based firm's 50th anniversar­y.

Globally, IBM's cognitive solutions and cloud service businesses represente­d 42 per cent of its total revenue in the first quarter of this year. And IBM Korea, which now generates most of its revenue via its informatio­n technology and hardware services business, will follow this direction in the coming years, Chang said.

Cognitive computing powered by artificial intelligen­ce forms the basis of IBM's Watson platform, designed for applicatio­n to a wide range of sectors including health care, finance, retail, logistics and manufactur­ing. Watson has already begun expanding its presence in Korea, as local hospitals are quickly moving to bring the high-tech computing system into their facilities, the IBM Korea chief said.

Five provincial hospitals in Korea have already adopted Watson for Oncology -which studies a patient's medical records as well as a vast database on cancer-related research papers and clinical trial records to aid the diagnosis process and recommend optimal treatment options.

Of the five, two hospitals -- Gachon University Gil Medical Center in Incheon and Pusan National University Hospital in Busan -- have adopted Watson for Genomics in addition to the IBM-developed oncology system, according to the company.On top of medical diagnosis, IBM has also moved into the retail front, partnering with Lotte Group to build a shopping assistant chatbot based on Watson that guides customers through the shopping, purchase, payment and delivery processes. To expand Watson's applicativ­e value here, IBM Korea is slated to introduce a Korean language version of the cognitive computing platform this year via its strategic partner SK C&C.

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