yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Ray Kurzweil: Your Robot Assistant of the Future | Big Think


3m read
·Nov 4, 2024

If you really want to understand what's on a written page, right now we need a human to read it. That's very slow. We will get, I believe, technology very soon that can actually do a pretty good job of reading natural language documents. Watson shows that that's feasible. If you consider, Watson was actually able to read Wikipedia and understand it well enough to play a game of this Jeopardy, which is a complex, subtle, ambiguous game of language, and got a higher score than the best human players put together.

And its knowledge was not programmed fact by fact in Lisp or some computer language. It just read Wikipedia and other encyclopedias, 200 million pages of natural language documents. It didn't do a perfect job of understanding it and didn't do a perfect job of answering the questions, but was better than the best human players put together from having read natural language documents. That's very impressive. That's coming to a search engine near you.

There's major search engines like Google that are not just going to be using keywords with synonyms; they're going to actually read for understanding the concepts, 'cause if you think about searching, there's a lot of information now that's ignored, which is the meaning of all these documents, which is why they were created. So if you can have a computer even do a job that's very mediocre compared to human but then can apply the scale of computation... I mean, Watson—if it read one page, it's not as good as you are, but it didn't read one page—it read 200 million pages. You and I can't begin to do that.

Watson's out reading all medical literature, every medical journal article, every medical book, major medical blogs, and will be an expert diagnostician and medical consultant that has read everything. No human can do that. So that's where we're headed. Our search engines will actually also know us very well. We will let them listen in on conversations; verbal, written.

They'll watch everything we're reading, writing, saying, and hearing, and then they'll be like an assistant. It'll say, "Oh, you know, you were talking about how you can get the supplement phosphatidylcholine into the cells yesterday in that conversation with Joe. You know, there's research that came out 13 minutes ago that speaks to that." It'll be an assistant that helps you through the day, will answer your questions before you ask them, or even before you realize you have a question, and you'll just get used to this information popping up that you wanted.

You'll be frustrated if you're thinking about something and it doesn't immediately pop up without you even having to ask for it. I'm not actually predicting that until 2029 we will match human intelligence, but we can nonetheless do things that humans can't do. I mean, Watson, if it read one page, as I said, wouldn't be as strong as you or I, but it was able to read hundreds of millions of pages, and its ability to read each page is going to increase.

So that's where we're headed. But then a comment on that is it's not an alien invasion of these intelligent machines to displace us. We will use them to make ourselves smarter, which is what we do today.

More Articles

View All
Scenes From Nigeria’s Baby Boom | Podcast | Overheard at National Geographic
Foreign when I first got this assignment, I think my first thought was, “Oh no, how am I going to do this?” Yagazi Amazi is a Nigerian photographer and a National Geographic Explorer. Last year, Nat Geo asked her to photograph Nigeria’s population, which…
Hide Out On the Border | Badlands, Texas
This is the end of the road right here, a church. Oh, there’s in Mexico! Go see Fred. I try to come check on him, you know, at least once a month. Down here I get tainted; he needs something, I’ll bring it. This is Fred’s little hideout here. There’s Fre…
Mr. Freeman, part 07 [посвящается Стивену Хокингу, RIP]
Supported by MFCoin. Supported by Rocketbank. Supported by Exness. Music by “B-2”. I do know what you do not. This knowledge bothers me a lot. Dead tired from the everyday hustle and bustle, I fell asleep and saw a crazy dream. So nuts that all the soph…
What Causes The Northern Lights?
[Applause] Welcome to Alaska! I’m just outside of Fairbanks, and I’m trying to find the Northern Lights, the Aurora Borealis. But the conditions haven’t been ideal because tonight it’s a bit cloudy, a bit hazy, and we’ve got a moon out which is nearly ful…
Jeremy Grantham: What's Coming is WORSE Than a Recession
Do you think we’re in a major bubble now at right now in the United States? And do you think that the tech bubble has burst sufficiently so that the tech bubble burst is over? Throughout his over 50-year career, billionaire investor Jeremy Grantham has d…
Solving square-root equations: two solutions | Mathematics III | High School Math | Khan Academy
Let’s say that we have the equation ( 6 + 3w = \sqrt{2w + 12} + 2w ). See if you can pause the video and solve for ( w ), and it might have more than one solution, so keep that in mind. All right, now let’s work through this together. The first thing I’…