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US Air Force buying IBM 64 million neuron computer
It's getting scary how quickly AI development is progressing:
https://www.nextbigfuture.com/2017/0...-computer.html IBM may not be the biggest name in business and consumer products anymore, but its advances in AI are impressive. I wonder what will happen if they somehow meld this neuron system with IBM's WATSON?... <O> |
I'm really not believing this, unless it's only being purchased as a tiny tiny research platform for DARPA and USAF to work on. I don't see this as being that news worthy, given the specs, as neural networks have been under development for decades.
The article reads more like a brochure ad than a real news article. But it lists it at 7" high that fits on a standard server rack. That's really small. And it says it only has 64m neurons. The human brain has 100 billion. It's a simple little test project, nothing more. |
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However, there is a bigger picture: while the described module is only 64M neurons, remember that an awful lot of the technology we use today and take for granted started out on a scale much, much smaller than in use now and at speed, capability, and power consumption specs unimagined as practical when those technologies first appeared. The idea you can power a device of 64M neurons on just 19 watts is a very impressive accomplishment. Much as how WATSON was a game-changer for cognitive data processing, the capabilities of TrueNorth open the door to abstract cognitive processing. True, its only 64M neurons now, but I can easily remember when a RAM chip of 1MB was a really big deal; and, much like RAM, if you take roughly 1600 of the TrueNorth units as they stand now and find a way to network them, say through a WATSON-type system, numerically you have your 100B neurons... Here are a couple of links about TrueNorth: From IBM Research -- http://www.research.ibm.com/articles/brain-chip.shtml ..and if you really want to go deep into TrueNorth, here's a detailed article from the Proceedings of the National Academy Of Sciences of the United States of America -- http://www.pnas.org/content/113/41/11441.full (It has pictures and everything... :D...)... <O> |
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...and the state of current technologies shouldn't be a projection they, in turn, cannot be exceeded; history is full of "unexceedable" limits...
<O> |
AI + swarm intelligence = my biggest worry.
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IBM sold it's PC business a long time ago and what are you doing up so early in the morning?
http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2483557,00.asp Quote:
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http://www.azquotes.com/picture-quot...-65-1-0185.jpg IBM's adherence to a strict set of policies and hierarchies is what nearly sank the firm. They were almost too late when they started to loosen up and embrace 'out of the box' approaches. WATSON is truly one of their finest achievements and, if they can further develop TrueNorth, we may see more surprises in AI... The development of WATSON still amazes me. Here is an article from AI Magazine about WATSON and the work that went into the human vs. WATSON Jeopardy tournament, which WATSON won: https://www.aaai.org/Magazine/Watson/watson.php Watson was able to defeat the two highest ranking all-time Jeopardy champs, including the first 'super-champ', Ken Jennings, who added a little note to his 'Final Jeopardy' response... https://cdn.psychologytoday.com/site...?itok=KNX35TP1 What is more scary than the technology we are seeing now is the thought of what current but undisclosed levels and extents of tech are hiding away in labs like DARPA and the private sector... Oh, and I am awake because I'm damn old and ills and ails and the damned medications are conspiring to prevent me from a stable circadian state. I am given to the idea AI may approach and exceed our mental capabilities but they won't be fully human they suffer from age, as we do; I hope to one day see an AI using a walker... <O> |
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But my point stands - even if you shift from a two dimentional structure to a three dimentional one (and that is what they are effectively doing now) you still do not get over the actual physical quantum limits. |
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Quantum computers exist already.. and IBM has its hands in it of course. but will take five years at least for completing.
https://www.dwavesys.com/quantum-computing https://www.technologyreview.com/s/6...tum-computers/ |
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