Thanks, it’s interesting, despite I’m not very good at recognition of spoken english, I was unable to decipher robots part in particular.
Nevertheless I doubt that R&D division of single corporation can make all the work, which is nessesary for AGI launch, without open information from scientific community. Thus they can hide details of implementation, but they cannot hide ideas they based their work upon. Going back to Wright brothers, in 1910 there was already industry of internal combustion engines, and Henry Ford was already making money, and aerodynamics made some progress. All in all, I can’t see crucial difference.
The Ford Airplane Company
did get in on aeroplanes—but in the 1920s. In 1910 there was no aeroplane business.
For the inventors of machine intelligence, I figure you have to look back to people like Alan Turing. What we are seeing now is more like the ramping up of an existing industrial process. Creating very smart agents is better seen as being comparable to breaking the sound barrier.
Thanks, it’s interesting, despite I’m not very good at recognition of spoken english, I was unable to decipher robots part in particular.
Nevertheless I doubt that R&D division of single corporation can make all the work, which is nessesary for AGI launch, without open information from scientific community. Thus they can hide details of implementation, but they cannot hide ideas they based their work upon. Going back to Wright brothers, in 1910 there was already industry of internal combustion engines, and Henry Ford was already making money, and aerodynamics made some progress. All in all, I can’t see crucial difference.
The Ford Airplane Company did get in on aeroplanes—but in the 1920s. In 1910 there was no aeroplane business.
For the inventors of machine intelligence, I figure you have to look back to people like Alan Turing. What we are seeing now is more like the ramping up of an existing industrial process. Creating very smart agents is better seen as being comparable to breaking the sound barrier.