Surprise! Deep Learning may be the technology that saves us from extinction due to climate change! So for all those detractors, I would like to see your public apologies. wired.co.uk/article/deepmi…
Perhaps it took so long to create a sustainable fusion reactor because humanity did not have the automated cognitive technology to adjust the magnetic field on the fly. What if nuclear fusion was a similar problem to balancing a ball on a pole?
Researchers have thought the problem could be solved by bigger and more powerful reactors. But with this new approach, there's a possibility for smaller fusion reactors. Reactors that are enough to fit in mobile vehicles!
Now for more hype... compact fusion... planes that fly forever!
I'm surprised at how fast progress has been. Just a few months ago I speculated that this was a possibility. I didn't know that someone was actually working on it!
The entire crazy thing is that you can use a fusion reactor to power your deep learning training and inference load! So it feeds back into itself! Well now, isn't that the perfect 'Proof of Work' system?
Let's all hope that deep learning was that missing ingredient that sustainable nuclear fusion has been seeking for decades. If it is, then unlimitless clean energy changes everything.
It's curious that @elonmusk commented about nuclear fission plants recently. However, the tell if this is indeed real is when you see Musk jump into fusion. So far he has not, perhaps that changes. cnbc.com/2021/07/22/elo…
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The alignment chart that has its origins in Dungeons and Dragons has a fascinating choice of just two dimensions that comprehensively shape a characters' behavior. theatlantic.com/technology/arc…
'A “good” moral alignment means a character will lean toward altruism and personal sacrifice. Evil means harming and oppressing. A neutral person is one who wouldn’t kill somebody for no reason, but wouldn’t protect anybody for no reason either.'
'lawfulness,“implies honor, trustworthiness, obedience to authority, and reliability. On the downside, lawfulness can include closed-mindedness, reactionary adherence to tradition, judgmentalness, and a lack of adaptability.'
It is a common belief that human civilization evolution is predominantly influenced by the religious and philosophical ideas of the past. I don't think this is true, civilization is influenced by technology. Let me explain.
Technology influences the direction of civilization because we are 'forced' to adopt it. We adopt technology because it is useful. We adopt it regardless of our religious or philosophical biases.
The Amish, as part of their religion. deliberately avoid modern technologies. With the exception, however, if it is used for work. So it is not uncommon to see them with smartphones and credit card readers to facilitate their commerce.
It's already been two years since John Vervaeke completed his 50 episodes 'Awakening from the Meaning Crisis'. I revisited one lecture and realized that it's much better than when I originally watched it!
My original motivation for watching his lectures was to see if I can gain more insight on human cognition in the hopes of understanding general intelligence. So I skipped most of his lectures until episode 26.
The previous episodes are a historical account of how humans evolved their thinking of how they would navigate this world. I tend to not care for historical accounts because they spend time on dead ends.
A horrible thing happened right after the printing press was invented. 4.5 to 8 million people died in Europe due to 30 years of warfare. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thirty_Ye…
A war spawned by the conflict between truth originating from traditional authority and truth originating from literal text. A new war is brewing between the theists and the atheists. Subjective truth versus objective truth.
To avoid this war, Science must recognize the subjective.
I'm also Asian, but I confess that the lack of exposure to faces of different races does affect your recognition abilities. One would think that it's only Asian faces, but it's any face of an unfamiliar kind. Recognizing faces is an intuition that requires practice.
Yesterday, my wife was spotted by a co-worker in a crowded shopping area. This was despite wearing a facemask and a heavy jacket. People can recognize other people with the smallest of cues.
'Rote Adaptiveness', the capability of automatically being adaptive seems like an oxymoron and is also not as well investigated. But this capability is critical to General Intelligence.
How can a skill that is performed without comprehension be one that is also adaptive? This sounds counterintuitive, yet we see this all the time in the field of software development.
Decades ago, it was well understood that software development should not be executed not like a factory floor. Instead, software development is more like a discovery process. Furthermore, we can invent processes to accelerate this discovery process.