Once a matter of parody, artificial intelligence judging will make its snowsports debut in a few short days at the 2025 Winter X Games in Aspen, Colorado, Snowboarder reports. X Games has partnered with Google Cloud to bring AI judging to SuperPipe competitions at this year's event.
NPR's Pien Huang speaks with X Games CEO Jeremy Bloom about the use of AI to judge snowboarding this year -- and whether the technology will expand to other sports.
By integrating brain and body data through wearable technology, the platform provides biomarker feedback, and leverages advanced AI to deliver tailored health protocols.
In a trial run, an AI judge will give its evaluations at this week’s winter X Games in Aspen. Read more at straitstimes.com.
X Games will experiment judging halfpipe runs this week in Aspen using artificial intelligence ... Using Google Cloud tools including Vertex AI, Bloom thinks this experiment has potential to change the game on halfpipes, then maybe on slopestyle courses ...
An AI judge gets a tryout during the X Games this week in Aspen, Colorado. The experimental Google Cloud-based tech will judge snowboarding superpipe.
The vision for X Games' future under new CEO Jeremy Bloom includes sports betting, AI judging, fantasy sports and the debut of its ambitious team-based X Games League.
The X-Games return to Buttermilk resort within the Aspen-Snowmass complex Thursday through Saturday. Conditions will be fairly dry with a couple inches of snow Saturday.
The X Games will experiment judging halfpipe runs this week in Aspen using artificial intelligence ... Using Google Cloud tools including Vertex AI, Bloom thinks this experiment has potential ...
At this week’s Winter X Games in Aspen, Colorado, judges will carefully cast ... another party will be unofficially weighing in as well: an AI judge. During the snowboard SuperPipe competitions ...
X Games Aspen wrapped up Saturday night with Chloe Kim winning yet another gold medal in snowboard superpipe. It was a symbolic year of the contest, a kind of beginning of the future. ESPN sold the rights of the X Games to MSP Capital,
“I am talking to a big ownership group in Denver,” X Games CEO Jeremy Bloom, the former Olympian, Loveland native and ex-CU Buff told The Denver Post recently. “They would want it to be the Denver — the ‘Colorado Somethings,’ fill in the blank. So (it’s) very possible.”