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Checking the rise of the machine : Comments
By Mal Fletcher, published 28/2/2014In today's world it is not human beings with headphones that process our conversations. It is automated bots and web-based algorithms.
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Posted by Ponder, Friday, 28 February 2014 10:38:03 AM
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<<Noted futurist and inventor Ray Kurzweil predicts that by 2029 computers will be able to understand what we say, hold conversations and learn from their experience.>>
Yes, I also read his depressing book. Hopefully he is wrong, or hopefully, since the purpose of computer technology is to compensate for the ever-increasing human population, humankind will somehow or another be decimated by then so there will be no need for it. I for one, don't want to be around in this world if/when this nightmare materialises. Posted by Yuyutsu, Friday, 28 February 2014 2:24:47 PM
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Video on Google's self-driving car.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cdgQpa1pUUE And then there's Mercedes' autonomous vehicle. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LHqB47F12vI Notice how it takes care to avoid cyclists! And here's the dark side: Who killed Michael Hastings? http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/06/24/michael-hastings-car-hacked_n_3492339.html Posted by stevenlmeyer, Friday, 28 February 2014 5:51:32 PM
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I suppose just about everyone has seen the pics re Albert Einstein's predictions by now. How spot-on was that lad. He could fore-see the rise of leftism.
When you sum up between the fun police, the bludging bureaucrats, the cops who mindlessly follow orders unlike Police officers, the pop music followers, the sport-washed like the brainwashed etc etc. you come to realise that the machines aren't to blame at all. The sexually perverted morons in authority are the cause. Fancy a democracy being manipulated by those weirdoes and, to add insult to injury they have no shortage of supporters. Posted by individual, Friday, 28 February 2014 6:34:52 PM
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>>I fear the day when technology overlaps our humanity. It will be then that the world will have permanent ensuing generations of idiots.>>
Einstein never uttered most most of the quotes attributed to him. This one is dubious to say the least. See: http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Talk:Albert_Einstein Two things to remember when someone attempts to clinch an argument by quoting some wise old man. (1) The person quoting usually isn't wise (2) The wise old man probably never said it in the first place Posted by stevenlmeyer, Friday, 28 February 2014 7:17:19 PM
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stevenlmeyer,
Don't be too hasty in dismissing the authenticity of that phrase. I recall reading a book by Professor Gabor called inventing the future, printed 1962 in which makes reference to an age at around the year 2000 when people with low IQ will be operating machines. The computers come to mind. Why, I am predicting that all the do-gooders will be cowering out of sight when the gravy train slows & being left is out of fashion along with homosexuality & when common sense will once again rule rather than ideaology. Posted by individual, Friday, 28 February 2014 8:41:46 PM
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It's unlikely that the singularity will ever occur (thankfully). The limits to growth will see to that.
Advanced technologies will become increasingly uneconomic over time as energy and other resources become increasingly scarce and expensive whilst 'consumers' purchasing power falls as the dysfunctional world of finance has to deal with the reality of a finite planet. Sure it will take a few decades but it will become increasingly economic for humans to replace machines. The real issue to think through is how we deal with this without resorting to slave labour and other such niceties of times past. Posted by leckos, Saturday, 1 March 2014 8:36:29 AM
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The insidious gradual undermining of natural aptitude by way of electronic technology is taking over the minds of so many. This will be one of the most critical factors within the lifetime of the so-called babyboomers. Due to the decline of manufacture & the subsequent loss of revenue, the increasing demand for social services will not be met. The rest is up to anyone's imagination of which hardly any is needed to guess what's in store for us.
Posted by individual, Saturday, 1 March 2014 11:52:08 AM
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Hi! Good evening! I have read your article and in my opinion, humans may maintain it's position and is not replaced by these hi-tech robots because, they are not be made if humans are not present. These machines are made only to help humans in their daily lives and to help progress in lifestyle not to destroy its community.
Posted by lhen, Sunday, 2 March 2014 9:19:30 PM
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Hi! Good evening! I have read your article and in my opinion, humans may maintain it's position and is not replaced by these hi-tech robots because, they are not be made if humans are not present. These machines are made only to help humans in their daily lives and to help progress in lifestyle not to destroy its community.
Lorizhel Lyndsey L. Ligeralde Contributor, www.ourhappyschool.com Posted by lhen, Sunday, 2 March 2014 9:21:34 PM
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I realise that your article covers the entire range of modern technology which offers vast benfits to users, and which could be monitored be users for whom the data was not intended, but one aspect of this massive creation of data is the very needlessness of much of it.
I really couldn't care less about using social media to keep track of how many times a person has taken a drink of water, or what they're about to buy in the supermarket.
The sheer volume of minutiae shows that many people are infatuated with the wizardry of a new device, and rush to find ways to make use of it, instead of thinking about what, and why, they wish to communicate to someone else.
I guess it comes down to the premise that if you have something worthwhile to say, say it. If not, don't!