The Singularity Summit is going on in NYC this weekend. Ā This will be an open thread for comments or questions about the talks (or any related subject.)
The Singularity Summit is going on in NYC this weekend. Ā This will be an open thread for comments or questions about the talks (or any related subject.)
20 Years of Moving Atoms, One by One | Gadget Lab | Wired.com. It’s the 20th anniversary of the famous Eigler “IBM”.
Back in my Moral Railroads post I opined: Unless I am completely mistaken and deluded, there was and isĀ nobodyassociated with the DC train system who wanted the crash to happen. Itās not a question of morality at the level of bad intentions, either of people or machines. It was, in simple terms, a case of… Continue reading Moral Railroads again
There are those who worry about AIs or robots taking over the world. Ā Isaac Asimov famously worried about people worrying about it — what he called the Frankenstein Complex — and invented the Three Laws of Robotics to show, at a sort of literary level of understanding, that we could build machines that were safe… Continue reading Building Safe AI
With the Singularity Summit fast approaching, it’s worth spend a little time pondering the perennial question of nanotechnology vs AI: which will happen first, will they be independent, symbiotic, or synergetic, and so forth? I say perennial because this is a question that has been discussed at Foresight meetings ever since the first Conference 20… Continue reading Nanotech and AI
Josh Hall, on his way to catch a plane, sends us this news from Technology Review’s Katherine Bourzac: A California company is using silicon ink patterned on top of silicon wafers to boost the efficiency of solar cells. The Sunnyvale, CA, firmĀ Innovalight says that the inkjet process is a cheaper route to more-efficient solar power.… Continue reading Solar cells with nanocrystal ink reach 18 percent efficiency
More on the “is technological change accelerating front, from Ars Technica: High-tech adoption happening faster, driving economic growth – Ars Technica. Some economists have attempted to measure the spread of technology within various nations, and discovered it’s not just our imagination: newer tech is being adopted faster, and appears to account for some of the… Continue reading High-tech adoption happening faster, driving economic growth – Ars Technica
Koreans Show Feasibility of Room Temperature Version of IBM Millipede Super High Density Memory.
Accelerating Future Ā» World Future Society 20 Forecasts for 2010-2025. Michael A is mildly skeptical about World Future Society claim we’ll have “human-level AI” by 2025. This caused me to think about whether I believed it myself. I think the answer depends on how you define it. I think AI is going to be really… Continue reading Human Level AI
Five essential things to know about evolution – Ars Technica. John Timmer dispels some common misconceptions. An understanding of evolution is key to understanding technological change — we individual humans are the mutations and crossover, but the dynamics of the overall process is similar.