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sbdaman

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Ontario university sues YouTube prankster for viral videos filmed on campus

nationalpost.com
3 points·by sbdaman·vor 2 Monaten·0 comments

The American Kitchen: How It Became What It Is Today (Gift Article)

nytimes.com
3 points·by sbdaman·vor 8 Monaten·0 comments

comments

sbdaman
·vor 2 Monaten·discuss
It's because he's not a philosopher and is wading into a long-standing philosophical debate and hand-waving away all the actual issues in contention.
sbdaman
·vor 2 Monaten·discuss
Physicist writing on the hard problem of consciousness. It's like a caricature of annoying physicists.
sbdaman
·vor 5 Monaten·discuss
It predicts what you are going to type as you type. It has a tendency to add words to the end of a message when you hit send.
sbdaman
·vor 5 Monaten·discuss
Keep autocorrect on and turn off predictive text. Makes the experience way better.
sbdaman
·vor 6 Monaten·discuss
Given it's set to generate random pages on the site, is there even any possible explanation for this that isn't sketchy?
sbdaman
·vor 8 Monaten·discuss
I've shared this on YN before but I'm a big fan of this piece by Kenneth Taylor (well, an essay pieced together from his lectures).

The Robots Are Coming

https://www.bostonreview.net/articles/kenneth-taylor-robots-...

"However exactly you divide up the AI landscape, it is important to distinguish what I call AI-as-engineering from what I call AI-as-cognitive-science. AI-as-engineering isn’t particularly concerned with mimicking the precise way in which the human mind-brain does distinctively human things. The strategy of engineering machines that do things that are in some sense intelligent, even if they do what they do in their own way, is a perfectly fine way to pursue artificial intelligence. AI-as-cognitive science, on the other hand, takes as its primary goal that of understanding and perhaps reverse engineering the human mind.

[...]

One reason for my own skepticism is the fact that in recent years the AI landscape has come to be progressively more dominated by AI of the newfangled 'deep learning' variety [...] But if it’s really AI-as-cognitive science that you are interested in, it’s important not to lose sight of the fact that it may take a bit more than our cool new deep learning hammer to build a humanlike mind.

[...]

If I am right that there are many mysteries about the human mind that currently dominant approaches to AI are ill-equipped to help us solve, then to the extent that such approaches continue to dominate AI into the future, we are very unlikely to be inundated anytime soon with a race of thinking robots—at least not if we mean by “thinking” that peculiar thing that we humans do, done in precisely the way that we humans do it."
sbdaman
·vor 12 Monaten·discuss
>but when you multiply it, it becomes significant.

Does it?