Artificial intelligence is getting smarter by leaps and bounds — within this century, research suggests, a computer AI could be as “smart” as a
Tag: Artificial Intelligence
The Dawn of Artificial Intelligence: Sam Harris
Jason McCabe Calacanis who is an American Internet entrepreneur, blogger and Samuel Benjamin “Sam” Harris who is an American author, philosopher, neuroscientist are having a conversation
Understanding Artificial Intelligence and Its Future: Neil Nie
Neil Nie demonstrates how artificial intelligence–and particularly, object recognition–works… and how it will affect the future. Neil Nie is a computer science student at
The Future of Artificial Intelligence and its Impact on Society – Ray Kurzweil
In a wide-ranging discussion, Ray Kurzweil, inventor, author, and futurist, covers issues ranging from how AI will enhance us — expanding our intelligence while
Towards Artificial General Intelligence: Oriol Vinyals
What is artificial general intelligence and what are researchers doing to achieve this goal today? Oriol Vinyals, from Google DeepMind, walks you through the
The Long-term of Artificial Intelligence & Temporal-Difference Learning
Prof. Richard Sutton’s nice talk about reinforcement learning in artificial intelligence recorded in July 2017. Slides here: http://videolectures.net/site/normal_dl/tag=1137922/deeplearning2017_sutton_td_learning_01.pdf The Artificial Intelligence Channel Richard S. Sutton
I’m definitely not worried about the AI Apocalypse: John Giannandrea
“I’m definitely not worried about the AI apocalypse, I just object to the hype and soundbites that some people are making,” John Giannandrea said
How the future will look like
I just went to the Singularity University summit and here are the key learnings. In 1998, Kodak had 170,000 employees and sold 85% of
Exponential Artificial Intelligence Can Immortalize Human by Digitizing Conscious: Ray Kurzweil
Ray Kurzweil, one of the world’s leading inventors, thinkers, and futurists, with a thirty-year track record of accurate predictions and called “the restless genius”
CS221: Artificial Intelligence: Principles and Techniques | Stanford University
What do web search, speech recognition, face recognition, machine translation, autonomous driving, and automatic scheduling have in common? These are all complex real-world problems,