(really a bell shape if you include the first half)
Isn't that sentence a tad redundant? You have to program robots to learn, they don't just evolve on their own.
Quote from: Meta Cognition on October 28, 2014, 07:16:11 PMQuote from: DustinTimeForBed on October 28, 2014, 07:11:11 PMIsn't that sentence a tad redundant? You have to program robots to learn, they don't just evolve on their own. Well, if you had a robot intelligent enough to re-write its source-code, it could. That wasn't my point, however. My point is that the human labour involved in programming a robot to learn is miniscule in comparison to programming a robot to be a doctor - if you see my point. You're creating a bit of kit with the capacity to develop, not one rolling off the assembly line already developed. And, of course, it should go without saying that the labour involved in creating such robots could itself be automated.Intelligence doesn't correlate with creativity.
Quote from: DustinTimeForBed on October 28, 2014, 07:11:11 PMIsn't that sentence a tad redundant? You have to program robots to learn, they don't just evolve on their own. Well, if you had a robot intelligent enough to re-write its source-code, it could. That wasn't my point, however. My point is that the human labour involved in programming a robot to learn is miniscule in comparison to programming a robot to be a doctor - if you see my point. You're creating a bit of kit with the capacity to develop, not one rolling off the assembly line already developed. And, of course, it should go without saying that the labour involved in creating such robots could itself be automated.
but it's partly about how software engineers are expected to do incredibly difficult tasks and projects because the public generally don't understand the complexity behind it. And at the same time, software advances much faster than hardware.
Quote from: Meta Cognition on October 28, 2014, 07:58:54 PMMy original, and only, assertion is that we will see the abolition of a substantial portion of the labour force in the next half-century.I don't disagree with that. But I'm still leaving it at a few hundred to a thousand years before we fully automate, at least in my amateur opinion.
My original, and only, assertion is that we will see the abolition of a substantial portion of the labour force in the next half-century.
Quote from: challengerX on October 28, 2014, 08:01:53 PMQuote from: DustinTimeForBed on October 28, 2014, 07:59:24 PMQuote from: challengerX on October 28, 2014, 07:55:02 PMIf you think it's impossible for humanity to progress at a rate fast enough to automate the majority of jobs way before a thousand years timea thousand yearsNope.Compare 100 years ago to today and we're going at a pace that's almost unprecedented.And again, it will slow down. How hard is that to understand? Even Moore's Law is expected to die in a few decades.
Quote from: DustinTimeForBed on October 28, 2014, 07:59:24 PMQuote from: challengerX on October 28, 2014, 07:55:02 PMIf you think it's impossible for humanity to progress at a rate fast enough to automate the majority of jobs way before a thousand years timea thousand yearsNope.Compare 100 years ago to today and we're going at a pace that's almost unprecedented.
Quote from: challengerX on October 28, 2014, 07:55:02 PMIf you think it's impossible for humanity to progress at a rate fast enough to automate the majority of jobs way before a thousand years timea thousand years
If you think it's impossible for humanity to progress at a rate fast enough to automate the majority of jobs way before a thousand years time