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hmmm .. chicken and andouille gumbo (no chocolate)
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A few squares of dark chocolate are on my menu every day, but thanks for an excuse.
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Our next door neighbour has taken to posting chocolate bars through our letter box; about a couple of dozen so far (mainly Mars bars plus a few Crunchies, Wispas and a twix).
This is on top of bowls and pans of dhal plus other food stuffs.
They are an odd couple but she has a heart of gold. They've only been there a few months and won't be there long as the place they are renting is on the market. They don't do this for anyone else in the street.
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The only thing I get from my neighbours is poison on the plants
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About three years ago, Dr.Oetker tried marketing chokolate pizza. The reactions against in was even stronger than agains pineapple on pizza.
The first week, lots of people's reaction to the news was "That sounds som crazy that I must try what it tastes like", and sales were way above expectations. But to almost all buyers, that was the only chokolate pizza they bought - it simply was too crazy. Even when eaten with vanilla ice cream and fruits, as recommended... So after the first peak, sales dropped to almost noting, and it was withdrawn from the market after three months.
Surprisingly, when looking for information about this pizza variant, I also came across several web sites offering recepies for your own home made chocolate pizza. One was with strawberries an marshmallows in addition to the chocolate. The second one was with marshmallows, mango, raspberries and strawberries. The third one one called for four different kinds of chocolate, fresh chili (not too surprising), potato chips and a dressing with sour cream, fresh basil, powder sugar and fresh lemon juice. Not exactly what comes to mind when I hear "pizza"...
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If you boil a funny bone does it become a laughing stock?
I posted this because I thought it was humerus!
If you can't laugh at yourself - ask me and I will do it for you.
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Get your coat. Your hat and mask have already been deposited in the street.
Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows.
-- 6079 Smith W.
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and when should I start laughing ... ?
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I've got to hand it to you, thinking you can palm that off just because it's dark outside. However, if you think elbow over this post you got a femur guesses to go through, yet.
Ravings en masse^ |
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"The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits." - Albert Einstein | "If you are searching for perfection in others, then you seek disappointment. If you seek perfection in yourself, then you will find failure." - Balboos HaGadol Mar 2010 |
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Best joke so far today...
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Been reading various books on AI. Most recent one is really a very interesting thought experiment.
Our Final Invention: James Barrat [^]
Some of it may be a bit over the top, but the author does a great job of explaining why a future Artificial SuperIntelligence may off us with no malice.
from the book You and I are hundreds of times smarter than field mice, and share about 90 percent of our DNA with them. But do we consult them before plowing under their dens for agriculture? Do we ask lab monkeys for their opinions before we crush their heads to learn about sports injuries? We don’t hate mice or monkeys, yet we treat them cruelly. Superintelligent AI won’t have to hate us to destroy us.
Also, we tend to anthropomorphize things (animals, robots, etc) and then believe "they'll think similarly to us." However, a SuperIntelligence probably will not think with the same logic as us:
from the book: A prerequisite for having a meaningful discussion of superintelligence is the realization that superintelligence is not just another technology, another tool that will add incrementally to human capabilities. Superintelligence is radically different. This point bears emphasizing, for anthropomorphizing superintelligence is a most fecund source of misconceptions.
Therefore, anthropomorphizing about machines leads to misconceptions, and misconceptions about how to safely make dangerous machines leads to catastrophes.
The author continues, prompted by Asimov's three laws and how those laws really don't actually cover the details they need if we were to meet Artificial Intelligence.
from the book And so it goes with every Asimov robot tale—unanticipated consequences result from contradictions inherent in the three laws. Only by working around the laws are disasters averted.
from the book Are Asimov’s laws all we’ve got? I’m afraid it’s worse than that. Semiautonomous robotic drones already kill dozens of people each year. Fifty-six countries have or are developing battlefield robots. The race is on to make them autonomous and intelligent.
If you're interested in these types of thought experiments about where the future might lead, you will want to read this one.
NOTE: My original post fell out of redis and was lost to history so I'm reposting.
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raddevus wrote: If you're interested in these types of thought experiments about where the future might lead, I would be interested... if that future were not that fvcked up.
M.D.V.
If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about?
Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you
Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.
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Yeah, we all want it to be done right. The book does a great job of pointing out the problems that have to be solved.
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At this point all we have to fear is one using this so-called AI (nothing super-intelligent about it), and after brain-washing the common people, exploit it...
"The only place where Success comes before Work is in the dictionary." Vidal Sassoon, 1928 - 2012
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As the current AI iterations are just very good statistical machines I can't see us getting to superAI any time soon.
Having said that if they ever get AI to be creative then Ghu knows what will be the next step. I doubt I will be around to see it happen.
Never underestimate the power of human stupidity -
RAH
I'm old. I know stuff - JSOP
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Interestingly, the algorithm that beat the world champion at Go, actually did commit an act of "creativity". I didn't know about this either, until I read about it in the book, The Creativity Code: Art and Innovation in the Age of AI[^] by Marcus du Sautoy who is a professor of math.
What happened was that during a particular match the Go AI committed a move that everyone said was childish and wrong but then ended up causing the AI to beat the champion. The really interesting thing was that even though there is like 3000 years of Go to study no Master Go player would ever say to use that move. However, now, all Go players know this strategy now and use it. But it was created by the Go AI.
There are some other things you'll learn in this book to and that is that Math proofs are so complex (some are 10,000 pages long - seriously) now that only AI can determine if they are correct or not. But how do we know the AI is correct? It's really interesting.
modified 7-Jul-20 9:14am.
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There are a few problems with AI, the first being that we don't even know what intelligence is.
I like to point at The Big Bang Theory where main character Sheldon is supposed to be super smart, yet he can't function in society.
In a way, Penny is much smarter than Sheldon despite having about a third of his IQ.
I know it's just a show meant for laughs, but that part isn't far-fetched.
You've probably heard the tribes-in-the-jungle argument before, they can't do basic math, but they're able to survive out in the jungle, something most of us couldn't.
An IQ test tests that which we, in the modern west, think a reasonably intelligent person should know, but it's shaped around our current time and place.
A tribe member wouldn't score a 1 on an IQ test, but they're still intelligent by their own standards.
So what is intelligence and how do we test it?
The dictionary says "the ability to acquire and apply knowledge and skills."
That's a very broad definition and I'd like to argue it's not very accurate either.
Any "AI" that's around today is nothing more than a machine learning algorithm that just finds patterns.
Not to downplay the technology, but it's hardly "intelligent".
Take that computer that "learned" how to play Super Mario simply by failing thousands of times and then doing something else.
By the dictionary definition it "acquired" a skill (playing Super Mario) and then "applied" it (by finishing the level/game).
Yet, I don't think trial and error would generally be considered as intelligent.
So at what point do we consider it intelligent?
So then comes the next question, if we don't know what intelligence is then how are we going to recreate it?
I find it funny that people are worrying about artificial super intelligence while we don't even have artificial regular intelligence yet.
That's not to say computers can't completely elephant us over right now.
There's a few super computers out there that run very complex computations and simulations and I wouldn't be surprised if one of them concludes it'd be best if the entire world got nuked and reset
Still, that will be a completely logical decision, not intelligence
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Precisely.
Social Media - A platform that makes it easier for the crazies to find each other.
Everyone is born right handed. Only the strongest overcome it.
Fight for left-handed rights and hand equality.
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Very good post and interesting points.
I thought that AI was just a bunch of math toppled upon math until I read the book, The
Creativity Code: Art and Innovation in the Age of AI[^] by math professor Marcus du Sautoy.
In it he explains the AI that defeated the world champion of Go.
The interesting thing is that it committed a move that no human Go player would ever commit.
That move led the AI to win a particular match. But as the world watched the commentors said it was a childish and faulty move. They said the algo had obviously failed.
Then because of that move the algo went on to win.
There is like 3000 years of Go and people began to study that move and wonder why the AI chose it. They cannot explain why, but now every Go player uses that move at a particular point in matches. It actually did something that others had not done before.
Somewhat of a point of creativity. Very interesting.
modified 7-Jul-20 9:13am.
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raddevus wrote: The interesting thing is that it committed a move that no human Go player would ever commit.
That move led the AI to win a particular match. But as the world watched the commentors said it was a childish and faulty move. They said the algo had obviously failed.
Then because of that move the algo went on to win. Statistics, probability, many other things... but creativity?
M.D.V.
If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about?
Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you
Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.
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Nelek wrote: Statistics, probability, many other things... but creativity?
I know. I agree with you. But there is a lot more to the story than it would seem. And this is the part that is so interesting and confusing.
Algorithms are "learning" making changes based upon choices they made and then making changes again, in a huge loop.
But, already, the people who've developed these AIs do not know why the AI made a particular decision.
In the past, you could say, "well, look here in the source code there is an if statement and this flag variable. However, the way things are done now, the algorithm tries things and the humans are not even sure why.
You'd have to read that entire book to really see how complex it is becoming but it isn't just pure stats now, it is something a level beyond that. That's why when the AI that beat the Go world champion made this choice it was as if it exercised some form of random creativity. It's quite interesting. Read that book and it'll really make you think.
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raddevus wrote: You'd have to read that entire book to really see how complex it is becoming but it isn't just pure stats now, I know I should read it to be able to speak with based arguments, but this is not going to happen. I am just saying my opinion on the topic, with a "general user" knowledge about the topic.
raddevus wrote: Algorithms are "learning" making changes based upon choices they made and then making changes again, in a huge loop. Humans do it too, specially babies learn a lot using the "trial and error" method. Nothing against it.
raddevus wrote: But, already, the people who've developed these AIs do not know why the AI made a particular decision. People can be unforeseeable too, so it is something one could "live with"
raddevus wrote: In the past, you could say, "well, look here in the source code there is an if statement and this flag variable. However, the way things are done now, the algorithm tries things and the humans are not even sure why. And that's exactly the dangerous part of it. We are trying things were you can't know "a priori" what's going to happen. And not only with AI or in the IT branches.
I am not against the advances, I would only wish a bit more of caution doing things. As someone already said:
Quote: Humanity wins knowledge way, way faster than wins wisdom. Kids usually learn the hard way that to start running without having learned to walk properly can be painful.
The biggest difference is... in these kind of topics the running without walking properly of few can bring us ALL to a very unpleasant situation.
M.D.V.
If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about?
Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you
Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.
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Fantastic points. I agree. Great post.
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Thanks
M.D.V.
If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about?
Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you
Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.
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