Page 5 - Artificial Intelligence: Building Smarter Machines
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announced in December 2012. “Fast forward a decade—Google has
                     demonstrated self-driving cars, and people are indeed asking questions
                     of their Android phones.”
                         Kurzweil’s most daring predictions have to do with an even bigger
                     issue—artificial general intelligence. Not only is he optimistic, but he
                     is also quite specific in his pronouncements. Kurzweil believes that
                     computers will have enough awareness to pass the Turing test by 2029.
                     Their breadth of knowledge, he says, will allow machines to converse as
                     coherently and naturally as humans do.
                         But Kurzweil sees this achievement as a mere stepping-stone on
                     the road to superintelligence. In his view, machines will continue to
                     improve, reprogramming themselves and downloading massive amounts
                     of information from the Internet until they exceed human intelligence.
                     Kurzweil predicts that this new reality, known as the Singularity, will
                     occur in 2045. First coined by science fiction writer Vernor Vinge
                     in 1993, Singularity describes a time when machines have surpassed
                     humans in intelligence and become trillions of times more powerful
                     than the computers of the early twenty-first century. Kurzweil envisions
                     the Singularity as a transformed world in which machines will make us
                     better and smarter and will prolong our lives indefinitely.

                     THE LAW OF ACCELERATING RETURNS

                     Kurzweil bases his predictions on what he calls the Law of Accelerating
                     Returns, a variant of Moore’s Law. Moore’s Law is named for Gordon
                     Moore, who cofounded the computer chip company Intel. In the
                     1960s, he observed that the transistors that controlled electric currents
                     in computers were shrinking in size so fast that each year, twice as many
                     could fit on a computer chip as the year before. Kurzweil’s law applies
                     this same doubling to the speed, memory, and power of computers.










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