Francesca Bay Interpreter of Suburban Maladies Posted: 19 Jan 2018 11:48 AM PST Bay Area folk singer Lydia Joy Davis discusses her music, self censorship as a mother and artist, and her soon to be released album by Kimberly Wainscoat Lydia Joy Davis Photo: Aaron Wainscoat A Bay Area "busker" since the age of six, Lydia Joy Davis was reared by an Irish guitarist father and operatic mother. She is a folk singer chronicling the stories and troubles of modern day Bay Area life while raising a young family of her own. In her song "Perfect World", she delves into what many here seem to strive for, with our "perfect house, picket fence, perfect life" troubles. But s...
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Marilyn’s Artificial Intelligence
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On the pastoral campus of the University of California Santa Cruz, Professor Marilyn Walker is a force behind the burgeoning major of Artificial Intelligence. In fact her face, thirty feet tall, graces the wall of the International boarding terminal at San Jose International Airport as she screen writes formulas. It also dots areas around the campus itself. Clearly, there’s a new Marilyn in town. By Kimberly Wainscoat Professor Marilyn Walker We spoke at her picturesque home on the campus, where she is a tenured, Ivy and Stanford educated professor. As an early pioneer in Palo Alto technology companies such as Hewlett Packard and AT&T Bell Labs, Marilyn is also a sought after consultant in the booming area of Artificial Intelligence. Her body of work includes statistical methods for dialog optimization and expressive generation for dialog. To the layperson, think Alexa, Siri or Ok Google. Simply put, she is helping to lead the way for informative human-computer conversat...
The Extraordinary Claudia Villela
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Onstage , Brazilian jazz musician Claudia Villela is not just brave, she is well known for her willingness to go anywhere with her voice. Based in the Bay Area, Claudia lights up stages all over the country and abroad. We caught up with her at Kuumbwa Jazz in Santa Cruz and had the honor of toasting her brilliant talent with her very first dry martini. FrancescaBay: Claudia, the New York Times has described your voice as “Remarkable, beautiful, towering,” the Boston Globe has described you as “An extraordinary singer in any context,” Jazz Times has described you as, “A female Bobby McFerrin." Stylistically, your voice encompasses samba, bossa nova, jazz, scat and beyond. It is one of the most original voices in Brazilian Jazz. Where did you get this voice? CLAUDIA: My father gave me a pianola when I was one year old and my mother was always singing. My father played the harmonica, too. I went to piano lessons when I was five years old and I didn’t last long at al...