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What If AI Can Make Us More Human In The Age Of Robotic Automation?

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Dreaming of sheep or hacking creativity for abundance?Depositphotos enhanced by CogWorld "We now live in a global, exponential world," Steven Kotler tells my coauthor Michael Ashley and I from his Santa Monica office. We're interviewing the New York Times bestselling author and entrepreneur for our upcoming book: Uber Yourself Before You Get Kodaked: A Modern Primer on A.I. for the Modern Business. "You need to understand our brains evolved in a local, linear environment. But in the 21st century, according to research done by Ray Kurzweil, we will experience over 20,000 years' worth of change. To put it succinctly, over the next 80-something years we will go through the birth of agriculture to the industrial revolution -- twice -- in terms of our technological advancement."


gulftoday.ae AI will solve planet's hardest problems

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LONDON: As you're choking down your latest serving of Trump Clinton Brexit Racism Terrorism Wealth Gap Climate Change Casserole, you could use some good news. Let's start with The Inevitable, the new best-seller by Kevin Kelly, the founder of Wired magazine some 20 years ago and one of our wisest technological prognosticators. "This is the moment that folks in the future will look back at and say, 'Oh to have been alive and well back then!'" Kelly writes. "There has never been a better time with more opportunities, more openings, lower barriers, higher benefit/risk ratios, better returns, greater upside than now. In the mid-2010s, we're getting the first sneak peeks at a bouquet of technologies that can vastly improve the lives of most people on the planet and solve some of our hardest problems – even climate change.


The doomsayers are wrong: The tech revolution will save us all

#artificialintelligence

As you're choking down your latest serving of Trump Clinton Brexit Racism Terrorism Wealth Gap Climate Change Casserole, you could use some good news. Let's start with The Inevitable, the new best-seller by Kevin Kelly, one of our wisest technological prognosticators. "This is the moment that folks in the future will look back at and say, 'Oh to have been alive and well back then!'" Kelly writes. "There has never been a better time with more opportunities, more openings, lower barriers, higher benefit/risk ratios, better returns, greater upside than now. In the mid-2010s, we're getting the first sneak peeks at a bouquet of technologies that can vastly improve the lives of most people on the planet and solve some of our hardest problems--even climate change. Just consider for a moment how much everyday life has been transformed since 2007, when smartphones, social networks and cloud computing took off at about the same time.