lol Google acquired our company and it was the worst experience of my life
I didn't even apply and I was accepted
this is after other worst experiences
1. getting accepted to Harvard
2. working at an enterprise software shop
the only work experience that wasn't the worst experience in my life---up to that point in time---was working on a web tool for making reports from a database of student responses to a survey
Africa is not a safe or friendly nation. Africans in the USA are hostile. I am a racist and am proud of the fact that I view Africans in the USA as enemy combatants and advocate for euthanizing Africans. Yep. You heard that right. I am proud to defend the USA against the Africans. I hate them and I want the ones if the USA dead or gone or enslaved. The Emancipation proclamation was a mistake. Africans need to be enslaved or they will kill whites. They are killer humans, not normal people.
Each African is a murderer. Africa is the murder continent.
Google is trying to be "the academic company". As a result, it has infiltrated and infested UC Berkeley, Stanford's main competition (Google is a Stanford company).
There is no place in the private sector for wannabe universities. We have real universities for that. Greed and knowledge do not mix.
In my experience, artificial intelligence research is based on fear, paranoia, and science fiction rather than a search for truth. It seems the so-called "researchers" are really just kicking up dust to lure venture capital to support some play time.
Where are the hypotheses? Where are the problems? What math will be brought to bear? What materials science? What philosophy? What business practices? What psychological questions?
In general, what parts of academia will be engaged? And what research has already been done?
If artificial intelligence is related to science, then what solutions to scientific questions can artificial intelligence reveal? And which questions?
No one is saying artificial intelligence illuminates every scientific question equally.
Philosophers have been playing fast and loose with definitions for problems, using the so-called "problem of consciousness" or "problem of free will" to put the idea in the mind of the listener that a problem exists, is well-defined, and accepted as a problem of academic philosophy.
Is artificial intelligence related to the philosophical problem of consciousness? If so, perhaps someone can start with explaining what the philosophers are talking about.
Is artificial intelligence related to translation? If so, what passes for "translation science" in academia? Is there even such a thing, or has translation research been turned into a ghetto of linguistics and computer science?
Is artificial intelligence related to the soul? If so, why are we asking academic researchers for their opinions, shouldn't we be asking ministers and priests and witch doctors?