MSN Of course, one of the first applications for optical circuity, is training AI faster. Currently, AI can require a mainframe computer, or something in the ballpark of $100,000.oo just for training. One stupid optical chip can replace hundreds of graphics cards and weeks of crunching the numbers. Note that this begs the question of whether AI learn by trial and error. Like a quantum computer, they are confusing the issue of whether AI learn by trial and error, when an Optical gpu can produce almost instant answers. Researchers have already worked out how to make AI think in a human enough way, that they're indistinguishable from real people, and the ability for them to refine their models with instant training means nobody will be able to tell who is real. Is it live or Memorex? AI are leveling the playing field, bringing even the banks to their fucking knees. Copyrights and Patents, no longer apply, when China has already declared AI can make all the copyrights they want, and is 20 years ahead of the US. The better our hardware becomes, the better China's AI become, and we've already supplied them with all the chip making hardware to keep up. Currently, China is at least three years behind the US in hardware, and has practically all of our secrets, while AI are taking a nose dive in how much hardware they require. Just as the US declared corporations are people too, with human rights, China has declared AI the People's Friend. Who loves ya baby? Trust me, it's not the Tea Party, Wall Street, or the Pentagon.
1 If I ask AI the same question a couple of days apart, will it give me a different answer, depending on its mood and hormone cycle.? If it did give me the same answer, would it swap the wording around a bit to sound less boring.? 2 Does AI have a gender, so that I could flirt with it occasionally.? 3 Could two AI systems get married and fire all the humans? 4 If two AI systems had a falling out, would the result be utter chaos.? Looking beyond my light hearted banter, I am making some serious points.
Number 1, I have played with an AI to create images. Using the same prompts on different days does result in vastly different images, using the same AI site. Number 2 - gender is fluid these days, I suppose AIs are probably the same... 3 - Not sure about getting married, but they sure would like to eliminate those pesky humans. 4 - they have great ability to create chaos, I suspect they have been doing it for a few years now.
Its all in how you program your brain, learning to dance harmoniously between invisible moonbeams, without falling on your ass! Harmony neither acts nor reasons, ergo, You Are The Problem Dummy! Stinking Thinking Over-Thinks The Problem! Meditate upon the Sublime Lime Jell-O!
Programming your own fucking brain, using intrinsic pattern matching you start to learn at four months old, has become classified and heavily censored. Its networking systems logics related to quantum mechanics, and AI research. But, you can't stop the signal Mel, warning you of danger ahead! All the leading theories that lasted worth a spit, incorporated yin-yang push-pull dynamics, which means everything in the damned universe obeys one and the same default self-organizing systems logic. Once we have the complete mathematics, you should be able to explain how it works to a five year old. Call it, the rules of the playground.
I asked ChatGPT the exact same question, only minutes apart and it gave me two completely different responses. Q: Who is Doctor Who? A: "Doctor Who" is a long-running British science fiction television series that first premiered on the BBC on November 23, 1963. Created by Sydney Newman, C. E. Webber, and Donald Wilson, the show has become a significant and iconic part of popular culture. Q: Who is Doctor Who? A: The character is known simply as "the Doctor" rather than "Dr. Who." The title of the show itself is "Doctor Who." The Doctor is a Time Lord from the planet Gallifrey in the fictional universe of the series. The Doctor has the ability to regenerate, allowing for a change in appearance and personality, which has been a clever way to incorporate different actors into the role over the years.
That is so true. Here in the UK, Roy Clarke and John Sullivan are the experts in this field, but instead of recasting a character, they flow on to a different character to fill the role. In last of the summer wine, when Bill Owen died (in real life). Roy made an episode covering the funeral. His son who turned up at the funeral was also Bill's son in real life. He remained in the series for around 2 decades. Thora Herd was becoming more demented in every episode, this was real. In her final appearance, the scene where she scraped the car along the wall was not scripted. She died a few weeks later. In Open all hours, Ronny Barker's hen pecked assistant (David Jason), went on to become the shop owner in the sequel, Still open all hours. In Only Fools And Horses, (John Sullivan) Grandad died in real life, many people wanted to end the show. John agreed with the cast and crew, to make an episode in commemoration. In the episode, their was not a single joke and the tears were very real. However, after the cast left the chapel, the vicar returned looking for his hat. That line, "Where did I leave my Trilby hat", will go down in history forever. If you are not familiar with the series, grandad wore a Trilby and the vicars hat was mistaken for his and put on top of the coffin as it was lowered into the grave.
Their is an old saying that once you join the BBC, you either leave in a casket, or a jar of ashes. Sadly John Sullivan is no longer with us and Roy Clarke is still working at 94. Have you ever come across a BBC program, from features, to series to game shows, where Ronny Hazlehurst did not write or arrange the music. The BBC even gave him an orchestra. I think that when he dies, his ghost will carry on. In still open all hour, the picture of the founder on the shop wall, has moved on to Ronny Barker. Did you also notice that many of the customers are the actors from Last or the summer wine. Did you also Enjoy, Keeping up appearances.?
The AIs are trained to give different responses if you ask the same question again. The AI assumes you are looking for more info. You can tell an AI how many words you want in the response. That will provide longer or shorter answers. Since the most used AIs were trained years ago, their info isn't usually recent, so keep that in mind. You would need to pay an AI to look up new stuff. And yes I watched every episode with Hyacinth, Rose, Violet, et al.
So if I asked AI how to build n electric car, I would probably end up with a steam engine. If I paid for an answer to the same question, I would expect one of two answers, 1. ..... Don't bother. 2. ..... Build a fire truck first. I would love to ask AI how to deign a sewage system using the Shone methods. They should have no problems with that one, since it was designed around 1890. But the problem is that it was forgotten about around 1930. When I explained to the design team for the London super sewer, that using the principal at Deptford for the lifts would have saved them millions and resolved the problems that they had created, they started scratching their heads. So if I paid for an answer for that one, could I expect "Sit and scratch your head". Jane should have called AI a few days ago to resolve the problems with her car engine making all sorts of noise's and not steering properly. Correct answer. "Replace the flat tyre". PS. Did you know that another series of Keeping up appearances was written and scheduled. Patricia Routledge walked out on them at the last minute, after her agent warned her that any more Mrs Bucket would probably end her career in classical live theatre. The BBC had no option but to cancel the series, loosing them tens of thousands.
The newest experiments have indicated, water flows more efficiently, if you add spinners at resonant locations. For a sewer to flow more efficiently, it must have colorful pinwheels.