Comment Re:I'm not convinced (Score 1) 45
Sounds like motivated reasoning to me.
That you can reason yourself into feeling certain ways does not make cognition a requirement for emotion.
Sounds like motivated reasoning to me.
That you can reason yourself into feeling certain ways does not make cognition a requirement for emotion.
I said that the word "drone", as in a mindless unthinking being, is derived from drones, as in male bees.
What you actually said:
We think of bees as mindless drones (literally, we took the very word!)
Suggesting that the word "drone" means "mindless bee."
The word "drone" can refer to male hive insects. Or it can refer to remote-controlled airplanes. Completely different things, but neither really describes a mindless unthinking being. If I had to guess, I would say you got that from bad fan fiction.
You are confusing "forgetting" with "disruption".
I am not. Nothing I said suggests disruption. As you said yourself:
bees sometimes make navigation errors
However, what you are choosing to ignore is that, once a bee has been accepted into a different hive, it becomes part of that hive. It does not return to its original hive. It has forgotten.
The very example you gave is actually an example of bee memory being too rigid.
You yourself gave a better explanation than I could of how that is not true.
Drones are specifically the male bees. Most bees are not drones.
And of course they all act individually, how else would individual bees act.
The behaviour of the hive is different from the behaviour of the individuals: Individual bees are communicative, hives are not.
And an individual bee has limited memory. They even forget which hive they are from after a while if they don't return to it.
Deja-vu!
Didn't OpenAI say the exact same thing five years ago?
any definition that anyone would have recognized 10 years ago.
10 years ago, Eliza was not AI yet.
It's what AlphaFold is doing, but AlphaFold is not an LLM, it's something completely different.
There are experiments that have shown insects to not modify their behaviour in certain situations when any mammal would lose patience and try a better way. That is probably the reason why "people" "assume" that insects are "reflex-based machines."
Of course it is also known that bees can learn. They learn of the locations of sources of nectar, for example, and communicate that to their hive through dance. But it has also been shown that individual bees retain that information only for half an hour. The hive can retain it for much longer.
That's not trial-and-error learning.
I don't think anybody questions that insects have emotions. Emotions are hormones. Insects have those. Plants do, too.
And insects have pain receptors, so they are able to feel pain, but the effect is not the same as in mammals. (Or in plants, for that matter.)
Brains are central organs. Insects have nerve nodules that serve the same purpose, but they are not as centralised. In that sense, insects do not have brains, but they have something similar that might as well be called a brain. (And there are fungi that are specialised in manipulating those, physically, to elicit specific behaviour in ants, which works only because their "brain" structure is not as flexible as actual brains.)
That bees can move obstacles and climb on things does not in itself prove that they plan those solutions through abstract thinking.
So this seems like another paper that has been published for the readers to have a good laugh.
Even if it were evidence of abstract thinking, that has no implications for emotions or pain.
With the separation of L1 cache into data cache and instruction cache, every modern CPU is effectively Harvard architecture.
The Minix in the Intel CPU was put there by Intel, not by any government. (I suspect that Intel use it to spy on the NSA.)
Merging an app with the OS, that's what Microsoft tried with the Internet Explorer. It did not end well for them.
Effectively, half of Microsoft Office is baked into Windows, especially the parts that date from the MS-DOS days. (The "if Lotus will run, DOS is not done" days.)
All modern CPUs have had vector extensions that facilitate matrix multiplication since the last millennium. Nothing new there.
For a minimal real-time OS, there is plenty of choice. RTOS is a common one.
Plan 9 would have the advantage of supporting the fork-join process model from 1957 that Windows still struggles with.
That's also why apps are not a good idea: They are based on the batch process model, not taking advantage of the parallelism primitives offered by modern operating systems. Not only is that model slower, and uses more RAM, it also makes it more difficult for programmes to interact.
AI apps typically run on GPUs or similar specialised hardware, which Linux will never be ported to because, while the hardware is highly parallel, it has no native support for context switches between processes. The parallel hardware might make context switches superfluous anyway, but that would require a new OS written from the ground up. Instead, Microsoft are using Android here, which uses a Linux kernel (and ships with a specialised daemon for inter-process communication between apps).
Emulating an OS is a stupid idea: Any Turing-complete machine can emulate any other Turing-complete machine, but an OS abstracts the hardware. There is no point in abstracting the abstraction. What you want instead is a compatibility layer that implements alien OS primitives. (There's a reason why WINE Is Not an Emulator is faster than native Windows.)
Of course you lose all the advantages of a hardware-specific OS either way.
Memristors are another hardware architecture that is looking for applications. There was hope that they might be more suitable for AI, but that has never materialised. Currently, no OS exists that can run on memristors. There is also not C standard library port for them, and it might not make sense to create one. There is also no back-end for the GCC for any memristor architecture. (GPU and quantum computer code is usually generated by LLVM back-ends, not GCC; I expect that it will be no different for any other exotic hardware except maybe FPGAs which have their own proprietary compilers.)
What could go wrong?
Game of Thrones cribs most of its violent politics from British history.
You are missing the point. It's not about the violence.
In chess, you win the game by capturing the king.
All the other pieces are dispensable, it doesn't matter how many you lose. Pawns can be made rooks and knights and bishops and queens, but when the king is captured, it's game over. Everything hinges on protecting the king.
It's a single point of failure. The goal is to exploit it.
It doesn't matter what color the Go stone is, they're all "Chinese".
Eventually.
Because while the Mongols were busy capturing Nanjing, the Chinese were capturing Ulan Bator.
And the Manchu dynasty didn't have an "unbroken lineage" either, let alone to ancient times.
There were a lot of revolts, revolutions, palace revolutions, palace coups, changes of dynasty, historical revisions, wars, and civil wars.
That's not the point.
The point is: There is no king to capture in Go. No single point of failure to exploit.
While you are busy capturing an area, you opponent is putting your eyes out.
While you are busy putting eyes out, your opponent is busy encircling you.
That's why any would-be conqueror ends up speaking Mandarin.
Not because of the Heavenly Mandate. If you pay attention, China doesn't even have an emperor anymore.
While Britain and Russia were playing chess, China was playing Go.
Poker resembles how war *actually* works.
It really doesn't.
Chess is the game of kings, mostly because it's all about the king, but also because it is a model of warfare, which used to be what kings concerned themselves with. But chess doesn't model logistics, it models battles.
Go is a much simpler strategy game. It has no pawns, rooks, knights, bishops, queens, or kings, all with their own move set. It only has two rules, everything else follows from that. Which makes it much harder to master.
Everything affects everything else. A wrong move early in the game can lose you the whole game down the line.
Poker isn't a strategy game at all. By rules alone, it is purely a game of chance.
There are other differences as well. It's not a board game, it's a card game. It's not one-on-one, any number can play. It's not a perfect information game, it involves bluffing and guessing.
You don't misdirect an opponent by hiding an attack by feigning another attack. You don't attack at all.
More to the point: There is no strategy. There is no planning.
The cards that you are dealt do not depend on what you did before.
It is more advantageous to lose often and early, and to win rarely but big. (And to let your opponents win often and small.)
So, while the USA were busy bluffing, everyone else was counting the cards.
It does explain some things in history.
There's an old saying in diplomacy:
Russia and Britain play chess. (Open board, an early mistake can lose the late game, and it's all about the king.)
China plays Go. (Open board, and there is no king, only area.)
America plays poker. (All about bluffing, cards kept close, every round is a new game, and it doesn't matter how often you lose, but how big you win.)
"PC gaming has long been associated with a single dominant platform, but that's changing"
So the Atari game crash of 1983 has caught up with them?
That can't be right. The 2600 was not a PC.
Oh, wait, they are talking about browser games.
They are preparing to take the plunge and switch away from Macromedia Flash?
What are they betting on? Java applets, ActiveX, Silverlight?
SMIL?
Italy's Piracy Shield exists only because of the USA.
It is Hollywood that demanded that all the world respects the DMCA, and it was the WTO and the USA trade representative who blackmailed anyone they could into implementing the required measures on penalty of trade tariffs.
That is why the EU has decided to allow internet censorship. (Yes, they did say "think of the children!")
And Cloudflare have broken Italian law. That is what they are being fined for.
The EU does not fine companies to make money. That's not how governance works. (The fine is in Euros, not dollars.)
And the EU did not ask for American companies to open subsidiaries in Europe. (Actually, Ireland did, with their flat tax and being extremely lax about enforcing European privacy law. Because of the NSA's PRISM requiring USAmerican companies to share user data with them, the legality of any American company operating in the EU is dubious at best. Especially after the one-man office for compliance with the "save haven" agreement was closed last year.)
After Microsoft locked out a civil servant for being involved in an international law case, the EU has sped up moving away from American Big Tech companies.
And EU privacy law makes it illegal to share any European government data with USAmerican citizens or with any device or person in the USA.
the DOJ will step in
The USA have tried to DNS poison European companies before. Last I heard was about streaming football matches in Spain, and it was the DoHS who did it, or maybe ICE. Ever since then, European ISPs have been careful about pulling DNS changes from the root servers, all of which have come under control of the USA during the previous decade. (Note that the USA do not have jurisdiction in Spain, or anywhere in Europe.)
The USA have weaponised their monopolised web services, which means that their blocking European services will not harm the EU, it can only harm American citizens. Same as their trade tariffs. There is no longer a reason for anyone in the world to comply with the DMCA or the WTO.
Cloudflare challening the legality of this Piracy Shield is reasonable.
Nobody in the EU will be sad to see it dismantled. (Except the purveyors of censorship/surveillance devices, of course, but the majority of their business is with the friendly dictatorships that the USA have set up around the world anyway.)
Well, free will is [...] the capacity to decide and act without any external impetus.
No, that's automation.
I'm really interested in is dissecting this screwbot.
Sure. Everybody needs a hobby.
Since it was clearly a factual and well-recorded historical event, I think we deserve answers.
Haha
You can take my AmigaOS from my cold, dead hands!
% APL is a natural extension of assembler language programming; ...and is best for educational purposes. -- A. Perlis