Tone down your AI expectations - Enterprise Irregulars
We have had many previous hype cycles around AI. As I wrote in Silicon Collar: "Since the 1950s! That is when Alan Turing defined his famous test to measure a machine's ability to exhibit intelligent behavior equivalent to that of a human. In 1959, we got excited when Allen Newell and his colleagues coded the General Problem Solver. In 1968, Stanley Kubrick sent our minds into overdrive with HAL in his movie, 2001: A Space Odyssey. We applauded when IBM's Deep Blue supercomputer beat Grandmaster Garry Kasparov at chess in 1997. We were impressed in 2011 when IBM's Watson beat human champions at Jeopardy! and again in 2016 when Google's AlphaGo showed it had mastered Go, the ancient board game. Currently, we are so excited about Amazon's Echo digital assistant/home automation hub and its ability to recognize the human voice, that we are saying a machine has finally passed the Turing Test. The good news is over the seven decades, the AI community has gifted us a wide range of big words like deep learning, neural networks, cognitive computing and natural language processing. Yale computer science professor David Gelernter thinks we have only scratched the surface. In his book The Tides of Mind, he calls it "the spectrum of consciousness," which is "essentially a range of mental states through which all humans cycle each day.
Dec-13-2017, 19:45:39 GMT
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