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A carregar... Artificial Intelligence Revolution: How AI Will Change our Society, Economy, and Culturepor Robin Li
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The co-founder of Baidu explains how AI will transform human livelihood, from our economy and financial systems down to our daily lives. Written by Baidu cofounder Robin Li and prefaced by award-winning sci-fi writer Cixin Liu (author of The Three-Body Problem), Artificial Intelligence Revolution introduces Baidu's teams of top scientists and management as pioneers of movement toward AI. The book covers many of the latest AI-related ideas and technological developments, such as: Computational ability Big data resources Setting the basic standards of AI in research and development An introduction to the "super brain" Intelligent manufacturing Deep learning L4 automated vehicles Smart finance The book describes the emergence of a "smart" society powered by technology and reflects on the challenges humanity is about to face. Li covers the most pressing AI-related ideas and technological developments, including: Will artificial intelligence replace human workers, and in what sectors of the economy? How will it affect healthcare and finance? How will daily human life change? Robin Li's Artificial Intelligence Revolution addresses these questions and more from the perspective of a pioneer of AI development. It's a must-read for anyone concerned about the emergence of a "smart" society powered by technology and the challenges humanity is about to face. Não foram encontradas descrições de bibliotecas. |
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Google Books — A carregar... GénerosSistema Decimal de Melvil (DDC)006.3Information Computing and Information Special Topics Artificial IntelligenceClassificação da Biblioteca do Congresso dos EUA (LCC)AvaliaçãoMédia:
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A long time ago I created a program to determine the location of concentrators in a particular type of network. I used an optimization technique called simulated annealing. The program was provided to an operational team that was in charge of deploying the network. Each member of the team was working on a particular district. Once I visited the team. They were eager to show me the result of my program. They were interpreting my program's results in terms of rules they used every day and they thought I had the expertise to appreciate the results when I had no expertise at all on the particular problem. With computers you can execute algorithms that perform millions of calculation in a matter of seconds. Human being do not proceed like that. They use other techniques to resolve problems and often cannot do as well as computers. You can use some machine learning algorithms to recognize (not that accurately by the way) faces. I don't think that human being can explain how they recognize faces, and what we know is that our brain certainly does not work in same the way Artificial Neural Network do.
I agree with Li. AI is not the problem. It is a nasty cocktail of military, industry, politics wanting the tech that comes from the mad scientists' experiments. They got cockroaches as robots (dread to think where that tech is now) being able to steer them with a joystick like a game. Imagine being able to do a John Malkovich! Ghastly business it all is. The Military have huge budgets and so many of our technological progress has come from their funding of research and development. The internet itself began life with the military.
Now the ball is rolling we have to keep up because if we do not then it's the metaphorical Stone Age for us. The Cold War was like that. America had to keep up with Russia and Russia with America. Competitive markets make an environment where everyone must keep scrambling to out perform the other. If China are trying to lead with AI that will give them the technological edge over the U.S industrially and militarily. The U.S are not going to let that happen. Note the U.S have brought Apple home from China. They already have Microsoft under wraps and Google, too, to all intents and purposes. Zooks has been reminded how good he is and who he must please politically. I have been watching all this happen. With the tough data laws in the EU now China and U.S are going to move quickly ahead I believe. It is possible the EU has caused itself a data desert. We got privacy, but lost out in terms of technological progress. The U.S don't have all the privacy and neither does China. Their access to all hat data will surely give them the edge if it is so high in demand and why Zooks sees it as such a treasure trove.
The programmers should have shut their stupid mouths about Maven and put in lots of well-hidden Trojan Horses and self-destructing functions. They should have used the "Trump Doctrine": fuck everything up so badly in the code that nothing can be done to fix it.
Software engineers have all the power. Unfortunately, they can't also keep quiet. ( )