Thinking Machines, book review: AI, past, present and future ZDNet
The Future of Humanity Institute researcher Anders Sandberg has said that we talk about'artificial intelligence' only until it works; thereafter we call it'automation'. How smart, for example, is a computer that can win at chess, Jeopardy, or even Go when it can't extrapolate from its knowledge of those games to tackle something else? Our inner biological supremacists can smugly dismiss those computers as automation. At the beginning of Luke Dormehl's Thinking Machines: The Quest for Artificial Intelligence and Where It's Taking Us Next, 'computers' are people whose actuarial jobs require them to perform complex calculations. By the end, the scientists he interviews are discussing a future in which computers may be a lot like people.
Mar-21-2017, 13:15:12 GMT
- Genre:
- Summary/Review (0.40)
- Industry:
- Leisure & Entertainment > Games (0.73)
- Technology:
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence
- History (1.00)
- Issues
- Turing's Test (0.64)
- Philosophy (0.64)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence