Quote:
Originally Posted by 930addict
Meh. If the computers get out of line just unplug them. This also works for windows os. Haha.
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Funny but it unfortunately reminds me of some computer viruses that self replicate and control/change functions in the machine. The only answer would be to go without computers. Think The Matrix. There is no spoon...
I wonder how much modern man could survive without his (gasp) smart phone? How many businesses would crash and burn without the use of their database? I know the company I work for comes to a complete standstill when our system goes down.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Z-man
Memory (ie the capacity to store data) is only the starting point of intelligence. What actions are done based on the data is the next step, and the step after that is improving the actions. The first two - a computer can do. The third one -- improving the action (ie: cognitive learning) is where computers are inefficient in many respects.
Memory is a very interesting concept, and there are two main schools of thought on it -- take a simple object like a chair. In your mind, you can easily picture what a chair is. But what is stored in your mind? Is it a collection of all types of chairs that you have seen? Or is it more of a relational memory - you understand a chair to be something with 3-4 legs, a platform to sit on, and an optional backrest and armrests. Computers can be programmed to store memory in both ways: the former takes up more memory (storage), but the latter requires more computations to arrive at some conclusion.
So - let's say an AI robot is able to recognize a chair. Fine. And he is programmed to sit in a chair once he finds one. That is the total extent of his knowledge -- once he sees a chair, he sits in the chair. Great - this can be easily accomplished even today. However - it would be very difficult for this robot to learn other things: what if the chair is on its side? How does the robot sit in the chair then? If he is programmed to maneuver his body to the chair's location, then he will likely lay down and align his body to the chair, rather than stand the chair upright and then sit on the chair. What if the chair is in pieces? Unless programmed to recognize the pieces and assemble the chair, the robot would not be able to construct a chair. What if there is no chair? How would the robot learn to sit instead on a ledge, table, or stoop? These are types of simple intelligence that are not trivial to solve.
-Z-man.
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Well said. Now lets apply Moore's Law and figure out how long it will be before the above is possible. Probably not in my lifetime but...
And now for something completely different:
Artificial Intelligence
is no match for
natural stupidity
(a favorite quote)
__________________
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Joe
See Porsche run. Run, Porsche, Run:
`87 911 Carrera