What is AI going to look like?
As a cognitive scientist, whose focus has been to create interfaces and shared domains of natural-language processing between humans and AI, I am glad I’ve found the following page on Substack:
https://ianweinberg.substack.com/p/artificial-intelligence-and-the-brain
This article was recommended by one of my fellow authors, KW NORTON:
In my experience, there is a whole network of graphene-based quantum nano-computers (those were already 12k faster in 2012 than the fastest “supercomputers”), linked to at least one mainframe that has been running a live global simulation and fed live data from worldwide resources for at least 10-15 years. By now, the problems of computing speed/power/capacity, networking bandwidth, and storage have been resolved, so such simulation is fully possible.
Of course, it wouldn’t be happening, if it were useless.
As far as I can see, the current process of transforming the world to the NWO has been relying on such multi-threaded processing, because everything in the last two and a half years has been working flawlessly (although a bit lawlessly), and even at this very moment, a large number of variables are being considered to be sequenced and timed by this AI:
I have described a task-specific AI before, when I was contemplating the roles of the USPS, which can contribute to the examples in the above article:
Brain surgeons know very well (but you don’t have to be one to know it) that every brain is slightly (or even drastically) different and tasks can be flexibly and dynamically relocated within the intraneural network and even the whole network re-arranges itself from time to time, which usually results in brand new cognitive structures*.
The ways the multi-dimensional open system called “brain” (as the central module of the human neural network) manages to use only parts of it that are activated as a result of stimuli (problem-solving, reminiscence, social interaction, or blunt impacts etc.). Still, the details will probably remain a mystery for a long time, if not forever. However, a “super AI” can already emulate much of it (without its controllers having the slightest idea of what it’s doing).
When will a “super AI” be able to perfectly emulate humans? Only after humanoid robots that cannot be distinguished from humans are released among the population and perfect the final phase of the self-improving algorithm. It’s from the original Philip K. Dick novel:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/0345404475
Of course, use a different merchant, if you can!
The movie version is good, too:
https://www.ebay.com/b/Blade-Runner-DVDs/617/bn_78111980
*After a stroke, recovery is possible only because other parts of the brain can take over the role(s) of the damaged part.
Two excellent movies on this topic are as follows.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bggUmgeMCdc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ne6p6MfLBxc
Sometimes you scare the heck out of me, Ray.
Thanks. I, we, all of us, need it!
I understand this nano-quantum zeta threaded AI can beat any chess master after one move, your first!