Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror

Comment Re:It doesn't matter (Score 1) 70

I think your model is only one of several alternatives. I don't foresee a unitary intelligence as likely, but an executive function delegating different tasks to different experts depending on context. And it can't be limited to language, it needs to interact more directly with the physical world. But we're already taking steps in that direction.

Yes, it's difficult. Perhaps it will take awhile. But there's absolutely no reason to expect human intelligence to remain the top measure. (Even now there are lots of contexts where it isn't. Try to out-calculate a spreadsheet. What the spreadsheet can't do is design itself.)

Comment Re:working (Score 1) 23

lets then make sure that we take away the product of their work

No, they are not taxed 100% and taxes are marginal you only pay more as you make more.

Nobody makes money without the foundation of society the rest of us create, no billionaire or millionaire can exist in a world without the society we all create and all it entails making such things possible.

 

How is that a moral stance, how is it good economically?

Massive income inequality is bad economically and bad for society in general. It's societal and economic rot. Case in point: Post WWII America, most economic growth, most growth of middle class, lower inequality; high marginal rates.

enslave someone

Hey if anyone, and I mean anyone, you, me or the billionaires consider paying taxes as enslavement then please, by all means, relocate to all the successful developed nations with zero taxes.

Practically speaking, if someone sees this type of attitude, they choose a different jurisdiction to do their work, where there won't be such blatant abuse.

I have always been told this but it has yet to be demonstrated to me, today or historically. I have a billion dollars, i dont want to pay taxes, where do i go?

Seriously, its 2025 and I cannot take anarcho capitalism seriously, this is a joke ideology, sorry.

Comment Re:C'mon, Saudi (Score 1) 90

Good points, but not necessarily eternal truths. I suspect you could use magnetic fields to strengthen the cable. Of course, that would collapse if the power failed. But perhaps there are other alternatives that nobody has thought of.

Still, my favorite skyhook is the PinWheel, though it needs a hefty mass in a fairly low orbit (as well as long arms that reach into the stratosphere). But you need to lower as much mass as you raise (on the average) or the orbit decays.

Comment Re:working (Score 1) 23

We're talking the same thing, I don't disagree with your overall point of the human condition but you are holding Bezos actions as virtuous and that's my disagreement. Maybe barely versus him doing nothing but from the outcome of what this company does it could be negative utility particularly because this is just another me-too bandwagon AI venture.

  Basically we should t hold Bazos on any real esteem for this decision, he risks nothing, the success or failure of this venture will not affect him meaningfully nor is he really being altruistic at all either.

Comment Agreed (Score 1) 59

We used to use 3rd party booking sites. If everything went fine, there were no issues. If anything went wrong, it was a disaster. Hotel overbooked? The hotel won't help you. Wrong room type? The hotel won't help you. Can't find your reservation number? The hotel won't help you. You get to call Expedia and pray that a human picks up and can do something for you. This happened once to a friend, where a hotel was overbooked so Expedia got them a new hotel room on the other side of town. Didn't help our friend who was going to a conference at that hotel. If he had booked through the hotel, they would have put him in a sister hotel a block away.

We only book through the hotel sites now. You have a lot of leverage with the staff when you are sitting in front of them and they are responsible for filling your reservation. Also, if you are a rewards member, you can call the rewards number and they will usually fix anything the staff won't, or can't, fix.

Comment Re:There are no new jobs (Score 1) 54

The only way you could reasonably predict what jobs will be available would be to predict exactly how much more advanced AIs are going to get and how quicly. And any prediction is a "Wild Ass Guess".

FWIW, there's a company in China building humanoid robots for assembly line work. So far it's only sold less than a thousand, so it's probably still in the experimental stage, but if it's "nearly ready" then it will soon be ready.

Now most assembly line work is basically rote repetition, with only a limited number of special-case scenarios, to this is far from a general purpose robot...but it's enough to eliminate LOTS of jobs...if it's cheap enough. And if it is, one can expect incremental expansion into other roles.

Comment Re:Regulations? (Score 2) 54

People are not nearly as ideologically consistent when it involves their personal life and not the abstract national level. Khanna represents San Jose/SV so his constituents likely work in tech or gaming so they have personal issues and so they're gonna contact him to bring them forward, that's his job.

Lot of folks are capitalist in the streets and socialist in the sheets (and vice versa)

Slashdot Top Deals

Five is a sufficiently close approximation to infinity. -- Robert Firth "One, two, five." -- Monty Python and the Holy Grail

Working...