younger self
How 'Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny' De-Aged Harrison Ford
Near the end of Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny, Nazis attempt to pull off one of the oldest tropes in entertainment: using the movie's titular dial, the Antikythera, to travel back to 1939 and assassinate Adolf Hitler. As their Luftwaffe aircraft bears down on a time warp, the scientist Jürgen Voller (Mads Mikkelsen), who hopes to install himself as the führer and win the war, turns to Indiana Jones and demands he witness "history's greatest moment--its end." To enter the past, then, is to end history. It's Voller's motto, but also the movie's--a nod to the de-aging technology that has made it possible. Thanks to several tools--AI, CGI, other acronyms--80-year-old Harrison Ford spends roughly 25 minutes of the film looking like the Indiana Jones of the early 1980s.
Woman talks to her past self in 'trippy' conversation
If we could talk to our younger selves, what would we say, what advice would we impart and how would it feel? Well, one woman has an idea after she created an artificial intelligence chatbot of herself as a child by training it to learn what she was like based on a diary written when she was young. 'Creative coder' Michelle Huang used source material from 10 years' worth of entries and combined it with the OpenAI language model Generative Pre-trained Transformer 3 (GPT-3). She told people on Twitter that she created the AI system so that she'could engage in real-time dialogue' with her'inner child'. Ms Huang (left) used source material from 10 years' worth of entries and combined it with the OpenAI language model Generative Pre-trained Transformer 3. Pictured right is her as a child AI creation: Michelle Huang created an artificial intelligence chatbot of herself as a child by training it to learn what she was like based on a diary written when she was young.
Yaniv Altshuler Uses Big Data and Artificial Intelligence to Predict Consumer Behavior
In this series called Member Showcase, we publish interviews with members of The Oracles. This interview is with Dr. Yaniv Altshuler, founder and CEO of Endor, which improves business decisions and revenue by predicting consumer behavior. It was condensed by The Oracles. Who was your biggest influence growing up? They taught me to believe in myself and my ability to achieve anything.