Just saw this blog post by Simon over at Betterhumans. I am sure some people around these parts already knew of the timeframe, but I thought it was quite neat, and deserved a thread.
Six years until human-level AI is the premise. Go Bruce! [thumb]
Posted 02 June 2006 - 08:12 PM
Posted 03 June 2006 - 01:11 PM
Posted 03 June 2006 - 05:35 PM
Posted 03 June 2006 - 06:19 PM
Posted 05 June 2006 - 06:31 AM
Posted 05 June 2006 - 03:07 PM
Posted 05 June 2006 - 04:33 PM
Posted 06 June 2006 - 06:29 AM
Posted 06 June 2006 - 12:24 PM
If you could supplant many of the highly compensated CEOs of the world's companies, the financial benefits would be HUGE.
Posted 29 June 2006 - 07:07 PM
Posted 30 June 2006 - 06:57 AM
Posted 01 July 2006 - 02:29 AM
Posted 02 October 2006 - 07:37 PM
If you were to follow around an AGI project leader all day for a couple weeks, and watch exactly what they are doing, and see how much the software improves as a result of their programming, then you would agree that progress is slow and six years is slightly too optimistic.
Posted 02 October 2006 - 07:46 PM
Posted 02 October 2006 - 07:47 PM
http://www.agiri.org/emailPart of the process of the evolution of the game industry as a whole is the dialog of developers sharing what may seem like mundane details, but from which are derived a lot of insight and progress.
Is this happening in the AGI developer community and if so, where?
Posted 02 October 2006 - 07:51 PM
Posted 03 October 2006 - 03:06 AM
Posted 03 October 2006 - 03:54 AM
Posted 03 October 2006 - 03:55 AM
That was from my memory of the Singularity Summit at Stanford. Did I get that wrong? [:o]Hank, do you have a reference on the Thrun thing?
Posted 03 October 2006 - 02:33 PM
Brandon, I've sent you a PM with more information on this.How does the Novamente team structure milestones and internal deliverables? How are weekly objectives managed? What is the internal process of changelist review?
Posted 03 October 2006 - 02:53 PM
Posted 03 October 2006 - 05:42 PM
AGI is priceless and Novamente is keeping private the details of our design. However, there are benefits to be had from collaboration, as through our AGI-SIM project for example.Best idea is to keep it extremely quiet until your protection of the client is far superior to fort knox, because in the end, the value of AGI is basically priceless; unlike a building full of shiny gold bars.
Posted 03 October 2006 - 06:02 PM
Posted 03 October 2006 - 07:02 PM
Dr. Goertzel was instrumental in starting a similar company (WebMind) in the late 90's... a review of this project (and its demise) can be read via Waking Up from the Economy of Dreams.What generation would Novamente be considered in terms of AGI development (as opposed to the generation of the discipline of AI R&D, which is very old and focused on problems that aren't really related to general intelligence)? Second? Isn't Novamente based on a previous design by Dr. Goertzel?
0 members, 1 guests, 0 anonymous users