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Comment Re:advice to children (Score 1, Redundant) 92

At the same time, "but I don't like this law" isn't going to protect you from punishment if you break it.

Fight unethical laws with every fiber but you're going to be far more effective if you Chesterton's Fence than if you just stomp your feet and whine.

Comment Re:It's inevitable (Score 2) 92

Age gates cannot be placed in any meaningful way in Linux. Not possible. Hence they may be placed somewhere, but they will be meaningless. Example: My Linux systems have no systemd. Second example: You can boot Linux from read-only medium and that possibility will not go away.

Comment Re:Mac OS has already started to pester me (Score 1) 60

Well, my current estimate id +5 effective qbits every 50 years. That linear scaling may be massive overestimating things, chances are the real scaling is inverse exponential, but lets assume it is linear for the moment. RSA130 needs around 450 effective qbits in a long calculation. We are currently able to factor 21, i.e. 5 bits. Hence we may see RSA130 fall to a QC in something like 4500 years.

I have absolutely no problem with QCs as physics experiments and for advancing some areas of Math. But pushing them as future computing mechanisms is dishonest and should count as scientific misconduct.

Comment Re:Gimmick to attract quantum investors? (Score 1) 60

Indeed. Also note that "basically no progress" can be a lot faster than "basically no progress". At the glacial pace that QCs are making, and with the laughably low performance they currently have (factoring 21 after 50 years of research, seriously???) relative speeds are strongly subject to meaningless artefacts.

Comment Re:Why do we trust the big ones? (Score 1) 60

We are not going to get AGI this century. The people that claim that are lying (Altman) or are delusional. AGI is not a question of throwing more computing power at the problem. Something fundamental is missing and we have no idea what. Also note that most humans may not actually have any meaningful amount of general intelligence. Only about 10-15% are independent thinkers and can fact-check. And that is basically what AGI would need to be able to do to qualify. Unless we find out a lot more, we cannot even make predictions on whether machines can have AGI.

Now, given that state of affairs and tech history, this indicates we are at the very least 100 years away. And that is if we get a credible and practical theory how AGI works tomorrow. The one mechanisms we have that is AGI (automated theorem proving) does not scale at all in practice due to exponential effort and that is a hard limit. We do not have any other mechanisms. And some quasi-mysticism like "put in all human knowledge and AGI will result" is just bullshit and has no scientific value.

Comment Re:Yeah, butt... (Score 1) 60

Yes. Not quite there, may take another 20 years or so, but I had an opportunity to see where they where 35 years ago. And they already were deep in the details at that time back when. But the thing is, self-driving is a classical problem and classical problems can be divided, parallelized, special cases and maps put into databases, etc. Self-driving is conceptually _easy_. The practical aspects are not. None of that is true for Quantum Computations. Quantum Computations are all-or-nothing and you cannot break them down into smaller parts.

That said, AGI is still completely out of reach and may not even be in reach of machines in this universe. There is far too much unknown to even credibly speculate. Going to Mars might be possible at this time, but you go there to die. Colonization is at least 100 years away and makes no sense. "Colonizing" the desserts and oceans on earth would be far, far easier and I do not see anybody doing that...

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