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| Science and Technology "Somewhere, something incredible is waiting to be known." - Carl Sagan. |
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#91 | ||
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Commodore
Location: St. Paul, MN
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Re: Envisioning the world of 2100
Even assuming he meant an honest random generator, and not just an arbitrary method, his method would always come up with the right answer. Even though using a random number would increase overhead, the method would still work. The part that drives it to be correct is the iterations of checking run, not how the number is acquired. And some simple calculators do just that.
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#92 |
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Captain
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Re: Envisioning the world of 2100
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#93 | ||||||
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Captain
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Re: Envisioning the world of 2100
The other way is to try to simulate the biological activity in a living organism within a computer, and pick an organism to simulate that has a human level of reasoning skills, which would be a human. For a science fiction concept, I believe the bottom up approach is more interesting then the top down approach. With bottom up, you don't know what your going to get. For a top down approach, your still talking about a finite state machine, a machine that will yield a certain output when given a certain input. Its easier to program a top down machine to get a specific sort of behavior, you can load the information it needs directly into a data base, while an AI derived from a bottom up approach needs to be taught, though an educated AI can be copied as many times as possible becoming that many sentient individuals when this is done. |
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#94 | |||
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Captain
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Re: Envisioning the world of 2100
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#95 | |
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Cherry Chassis
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Re: Envisioning the world of 2100
No, I don't know how the future will look. Nor do any of us. In 1924, could anyone have imagined an extremely fast, global "telegraph" network with video screens and real-time cameras? Maybe, maybe not. Something that these discussions of technology tend to overlook is, aside from what technology we can actually invent, how much of it ends up being practical and affordable for most people? The Internet would not be what it is today without the glut of (relatively) cheap computer hardware available to almost everyone in the developed world. Likewise, let's make the leap that someone does create a generalized AI--but it requires a trillion dollars' worth of hardware and consumes a city's worth of electricity, and it makes decisions at a slower rate than a human. Is that ever going to be very broadly useful? I doubt it. "Simulate everything" isn't a solution or even any kind of answer, it's a total handwave with so many assumptions behind it as to be meaningless. A bit like the Singularity, actually.
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Your crash was, like, spectacular! My world simulation project! Also: Women and Men: Self-Image and Rape Culture |
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#96 | |||
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Rear Admiral
Location: I'm in your ___, ___ing your ___
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Re: Envisioning the world of 2100
Not so for computers, for whom even the underlying logical processes are expressed in pre-determined mathematical values before they are parsed. Moreover, the algorithm that computers use to process speech is based on statistical analysis and the degrees of probability that any two sounds will be heard together in the same word or the same sentence.
The other way is to try to simulate the biological activity in a living organism within a computer...[/quote] Not really. The top-down method, as you said, is basically the attempt to replicate the activity of a human brain on a software level, essentially the simulation you're describing. The "Bottom up" method attempts to arrive at a true AI by copying the HARDWARE of a working brain and letting the software emerge on its own. In other words, with a bottom-up approach it is not necessary to simulate consciousness, or even a working brain. It is necessary to BUILD a working brain and then experiment to see what level of consciousness, if any, it is able to sustain. Both techniques have had a lot of success in generating practical AIs for industrial and commercial use; the bottom-up approach takes a lot longer and is vastly more expensive, but its results are considerably more impressive. As for the longer term goal of self-aware thinking machines, the bottom-up approach has good prospects for that while the top-down paradigm is probably too limiting.
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It appears to be powered by some form of electricity... |
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#97 | |
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Rear Admiral
Location: I'm in your ___, ___ing your ___
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Re: Envisioning the world of 2100
On the other hand, some clever programming tricks and some refined algorithms turned Siri into a kind of wisecracking personal assistant just a couple of pods short of a HAL-9000.
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It appears to be powered by some form of electricity... |
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#98 | ||
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Captain
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Re: Envisioning the world of 2100
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#99 | |||
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Cherry Chassis
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Re: Envisioning the world of 2100
__________________
Your crash was, like, spectacular! My world simulation project! Also: Women and Men: Self-Image and Rape Culture |
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#100 | |
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Fleet Arse
Location: in the Frozen Wastes
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Re: Envisioning the world of 2100
__________________
They couldn't hit an elephant at this distance. |
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#101 | ||
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Cherry Chassis
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Re: Envisioning the world of 2100
__________________
Your crash was, like, spectacular! My world simulation project! Also: Women and Men: Self-Image and Rape Culture |
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#102 | |||
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Rear Admiral
Location: I'm in your ___, ___ing your ___
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Re: Envisioning the world of 2100
__________________
It appears to be powered by some form of electricity... |
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#103 | |||
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Captain
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Re: Envisioning the world of 2100
Voyager 2 is proof of principle that voyages out of the Solar System are feasible. Voyager would have taken 80,000 years to reach the nearest star if it were traveling in that direction, a fission powered ion drive only has to go a few times faster than that to arrive at the star in thousands of years rather than tens of thousands of years, and we need some intelligent entity to monitor the systems and raise the children that will grow up to be colonists of the new worlds. A somewhat faster ship can arrive ahead of time and terraform the planet, or the original ship can arrive there and do the same, before raising human children to adulthood. if things get boring for the AI, it can slow down its consciousnesses so that time seems to pass more quickly for it. Last edited by Mars; September 14 2012 at 04:47 PM. |
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#104 | |||
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Cherry Chassis
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Re: Envisioning the world of 2100
__________________
Your crash was, like, spectacular! My world simulation project! Also: Women and Men: Self-Image and Rape Culture |
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#105 |
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Fleet Arse
Location: in the Frozen Wastes
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Re: Envisioning the world of 2100
__________________
They couldn't hit an elephant at this distance. |
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