AI and Quantum Computing: Glimpsing the Near Future

2024 ж. 4 Сәу.
224 835 Рет қаралды

Catch a glimpse of the near future as AI and Quantum Computing transform how we live. Eric Schmidt, decade-long CEO of Google, joins Brian Greene to explore the horizons of innovation, where digital and quantum frontiers collide to spark a new era of discovery.
This program is part of the Big Ideas series, supported by the John Templeton Foundation.
Participants:
Eric Schmidt
Moderator:
Brian Greene
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#worldsciencefestival #artificialintelligence #quantumcomputers #ericschmidt #ai

Пікірлер
  • This aspect of learning is like the old reading. Marvellous. I got 'stuck' in certain subjects & didn't progress within those subjects. Once I left School & continued my education whilst working, I eventually reached my goal.

    @egaaronp@egaaronpАй бұрын
    • So glad to hear that you reached your goal. 💪 ❤️ 🌎 Awesome. I pray that you reach your next big goal too. 🙏 Thanks 😊

      @quantumpotential7639@quantumpotential763916 күн бұрын
  • The last thing we want is a virtual Kissinger! We had to wait for decades until that PoS kicked the bucket

    @daspec@daspecАй бұрын
  • This is about 7x more interesting than I expected

    @Aestiv@AestivАй бұрын
    • Agreed

      @sakthimadhankumar3254@sakthimadhankumar3254Ай бұрын
    • Im here at an average of 9 atm.

      @AIroboticOverlord@AIroboticOverlordАй бұрын
    • @@AIroboticOverlord fucking facts

      @aleclippe6213@aleclippe6213Ай бұрын
    • A reference to 6.66 perhaps?

      @PeteBogg@PeteBoggАй бұрын
    • It grabbed me and I watched to the end I was like , ok … I’m watching this

      @RetireandGo@RetireandGo28 күн бұрын
  • I got here by accident, i stayed on purpose...

    @specialmindset@specialmindset29 күн бұрын
    • I like Brian but he needs to learn an interview format. Let your guest answer your question especially when they ask for the opportunity.

      @user-pp6bz9tv2f@user-pp6bz9tv2f28 күн бұрын
    • I could not agree more.

      @simonlooker6000@simonlooker600022 күн бұрын
    • I'm delighted that you found your purpose. This warms my heart ❤️ and delights my soul. May you continue to delve into this new purpose of yours and find what your purpose means for all of us. Now let us pray 🙏 . Thanks 😊

      @quantumpotential7639@quantumpotential763916 күн бұрын
    • I was exactly the opposite

      @CONNELL19511216@CONNELL1951121615 күн бұрын
    • Says the AI

      @PTJ2008@PTJ20086 күн бұрын
  • One of the most interesting episodes of World Science Festival, ever.

    @Raptorel@RaptorelАй бұрын
  • This is one of your best interviews Brian! You did a remarkable job eliciting incredible insights from your guest. Thank you 🙏

    @markring40@markring40Ай бұрын
  • Eric Schmid is one the sharpest minds, we need more of you Eric!

    @HEBEcoin@HEBEcoin22 сағат бұрын
  • This guy was at Princeton 50 years ago? That is some very effective anti-aging treatment.

    @stephenreed9631@stephenreed9631Ай бұрын
    • No he just was to nerdy and boring for having liquer booze drugs and having a good time once and a while.

      @AIroboticOverlord@AIroboticOverlordАй бұрын
    • @@AIroboticOverlordAnd, is that bad? …

      @michen25@michen25Ай бұрын
    • look at his girlfriends and u see the treatment !

      @hharuniz@hharuniz28 күн бұрын
    • he drinks baby tears

      @juliocortez5209@juliocortez520928 күн бұрын
    • ​@@michen25yes

      @juliocortez5209@juliocortez520928 күн бұрын
  • Eric is oddly very, very proud of having been friends with Henry Kissinger. A very sharp and clever mind with a glaring blind spot!

    @musicman9023@musicman9023Ай бұрын
    • Precisely! See my above post.

      @marktwain5232@marktwain523228 күн бұрын
    • Not to mention such bonehead views on immigration

      @qcard76@qcard7623 күн бұрын
    • I am getting chills as I listen to Mr ES

      @friarnewborg9213@friarnewborg921323 күн бұрын
    • Maybe Eric knows shit that made him appreciate Henry…both of them are (were) the GOAT 🐐 s

      @DavidBorda-oz9mu@DavidBorda-oz9mu21 күн бұрын
  • First time hear Eric speaks scientifically. Now I understand why Google was so successful. His understanding the progress in AI is the deepest and the logical I ever heard. Impressed!

    @KUBITED@KUBITEDАй бұрын
    • Thank God we know this wasn't written by AI.

      @MrPizzaboy19@MrPizzaboy19Ай бұрын
    • Yes but he’s an idiot when it comes to politics. He’s part of that globalist group that want one world government. Listen to him. He gives it away

      @DailyTuna@DailyTuna29 күн бұрын
    • AGI Powered Universal Basic Income of £888/week powered by Vitruvian Key

      @Thiveandshine@Thiveandshine29 күн бұрын
    • the is the artificial sentence i ever heard.

      @672joan@672joan25 күн бұрын
    • so the logical!

      @brandonsmith6965@brandonsmith696512 күн бұрын
  • Eric Schmidt is a Great Communicator! You know Eric is wicked smart when he has Brian saying "scary" multiple times.

    @mannysinvestments2328@mannysinvestments232827 күн бұрын
  • I have a bone to pick with Mr. Schmidt about his KZhead algorithm: How come it took this long to recommend this channel to me when this is the only type of thing I watch?? Answer me that Mr. Smarty Pants! In all seriousness, this was awesome. I was hanging on every word.

    @kmunson007@kmunson0078 күн бұрын
  • Eric went from fighting the man to being best friends with Henry Kissinger. What a transformation.

    @kylewollman2239@kylewollman223929 күн бұрын
    • is that old walking tumor still alive ?

      @ashleyobrien4937@ashleyobrien493728 күн бұрын
    • My exact same observation. He starts out discerning the insane totally immoral mass National Suicide of the Vietnam War, and ends up being best friends with one of it's main spiritually illiterate morally defective Architects? Regarding "AI", this is an absolutely brilliant conversation right up to the minute on what humanity is facing with AI, but I find Eric Schmidt profoundly suspect. Me, U.S. Army, 1969-1971. I had my eyes wide open through the whole experience and took notes. There is no way this morally defective Nation is going to survive. Those who's economy lives by the sword, will die by the sword. We are all on the road to the FINAL SCENE in "THE GAME" as so clearly stated in the profound 1978 PROPHETIC Allegorical Film "The Deer Hunter" which will most definitely be coming in the looming 2040's. Now Retired, I worked 41 years as a Application Development Software Engineer. I loved every single minute of it. But the Dr. Strangelove factor of Eric Schmidt is just too much for me.

      @marktwain5232@marktwain523228 күн бұрын
    • Jeez I thought the same thing when he said that. Like…um…ok, so you are an enabler of one of the worst elitist evil-minded humans in the 20th century. No wonder you can be a billionaire with no moral compunctions… 😕

      @peterjohnstoltzman@peterjohnstoltzman25 күн бұрын
    • @@ashleyobrien4937 no, worst thing about that, he never had to face a day in court for his warcrimes ... just like Bush W. ... Then again, not like americans still give a shit about a million dead iraqis from an unjust war the populace was tricked into(most rightleaning folk still think there were WMDs ^^ and that Jan 6th was done by antifa hrhr). I guess the next news cycle, the attention span of amebas while somehow thinking they have the devine right to do whatever the fuck they want aka american exceptionalism plays a role in that.

      @kinngrimm@kinngrimm25 күн бұрын
  • One of the most phenomenal discussions on AI to date.

    @JoshuaCEDO@JoshuaCEDO25 күн бұрын
  • One of the most interesting discussions I have heard about this technology and it's potential impacts. Eric Schmidt is an extraordinary and perceptive man. Thanks Brian.

    @ianshepherd2861@ianshepherd2861Ай бұрын
  • Great conversation! 🔭🚀🛰️🪐

    @LucAnderssen@LucAnderssenАй бұрын
  • Amazing conversation, thanks for sharing.

    @dnavas7719@dnavas7719Ай бұрын
  • Thanks for this conversation. It illustrates how AI is accelerating the acceleration of science and technological acceleration. I think the technological singularity is coming a whole lot faster than even the most optimistic experts predict. Thanks for posting.

    @thephilosophicalagnostic2177@thephilosophicalagnostic2177Ай бұрын
  • Really incredible conversation... so much knowledge, so much to think about. Thanks for putting it together Brian!

    @MatteoGariglio@MatteoGariglioАй бұрын
  • There is an underlying very simplistic view of good and bad in many parts of this discussion.

    @mikaelfiil3733@mikaelfiil3733Ай бұрын
    • Also he starts out by saying Chinas way to deal with the internet is bad. Then proceeds to complain that the US and the west isnt implementing the exact same system of mass surveillance

      @guffeluffe5987@guffeluffe5987Ай бұрын
    • Big government is technologically illiterate, so we need big corporations to save us from ourselves, Putler, Xi Jinping and their evil minions.

      @attilaszekeres7435@attilaszekeres743529 күн бұрын
  • @1:10:37 - Brian Greene makes such an excellent point about teaching methodology re maximum next step for each student. Any school who leverages technology and implements this practice will see their school STEM scores elevate to highest levels across the board !

    @pradeeptyagi3226@pradeeptyagi322628 күн бұрын
  • Thank you so much for sharing this. This is the most articulate explanation of how AI will change our world I have found. I am so grateful for Dr. Greene and his work and I am optimistic about the future of AI especially in the realm of education and medicine.

    @joyceschofield4946@joyceschofield4946Ай бұрын
  • 0:12 I’ve been pondering the intersection of AI and Quantum since 2019! I’m excited to see how you all discuss this! Love your channel, Brian!

    @streetcodenate@streetcodenateАй бұрын
  • This guy scares me. Alarm bells when I hear a close friend of Henry Kissinger, productivity, economic growth etc. .Prof Brian's question about becoming the big man is such an excellent one that I don't think he managed to get an honest answer to

    @tobaidi@tobaidiАй бұрын
    • Very scary indeed.

      @guffeluffe5987@guffeluffe5987Ай бұрын
    • whats the timestamp for this part? I just finished and must have missed it.

      @tannerjam@tannerjam21 күн бұрын
    • Yeah, it very cringey to hear, like he's dikriding kissinger who is known kill many people in multiple wars and genocides

      @mrnarason@mrnarason20 күн бұрын
    • Democracy is a temporary patch to a bigger problem: humans need control because we're savages. I welcome the moment humans will not need any form of control or control will be deemed to something better than us. It's 2023 and we are still at war with each other, we are clearly broken.

      @Vedoibambinipovri@Vedoibambinipovri4 күн бұрын
  • Thank you so much for this video. Great insights about AGI from Eric and excellent questions thrown by Brian.

    @dacuriousdaisy@dacuriousdaisy28 күн бұрын
  • Thank you Brian for another great Video!!!!

    @rickcoyne7845@rickcoyne7845Ай бұрын
  • Brian this is the Nexus I have been waiting for, I have told Bard (past Ai ) and Copilot what I wish for concerning knowledge, they seem active enough supplying me with awesome material such as this conversation with you and Eric. This Nexus also has taught me enough that I can milk the AIs' for much more than ever possible. My grand kids will be taught from this conversation . Now we the people would benefit from more extended conversations between you two as you both are extremely perceptive, concise and entertaining. What a match in brilliance, my family will grow much more rapidly in understanding and hopefully in wisdom, also I liked your idea about spatial conception, conceiving knowledge and adgility via AR/VR, AWESOME IDEA.

    @VMac-eg7fb@VMac-eg7fb27 күн бұрын
  • Amazing conversation between two very bright minds. A pleasure listening to Eric Schmitt

    @Jeffben24@Jeffben2420 күн бұрын
  • much like reading a book, it is a thought provoking conversation, thank you both!

    @canonest@canonestАй бұрын
  • Extraordinary interview with Eric Schmidt.

    @DrRick-dq4bb@DrRick-dq4bb29 күн бұрын
  • organic chemistry is an extremely visual (picture-based) subject matter. I found using imagery, students were able to comprehend very complicated multi-step reactions.

    @toddrothman2765@toddrothman2765Ай бұрын
  • I teach in adult education in outreach so this means to those who didn’t get their qualifications at school in the standard way and are returning to learning. But returning to learning for many different reasons and for different outcomes. Learning is more than knowledge acquisition it holds instead it many self identify signifiers which are not necessarily known to the learner. They are learning about how they learn why they learn as much as about the content too. How deep a dive they want to go into their individual learning pathways is up to them but as educationalists in the work I do we do have to know the differences in an individual’s approach to learning because it has been disaffected somewhere along the line through economic disadvantage or not having their learning style met in the standard classroom. For this reason we réfère to education as a journey and a pathway because the destination is navigated and it works best when the process is collaborative as in the learner is aware of how they learn best and what their challenges are to ensure they see challenge as objective as a tool not a signifier of self identify that can create low emotional self value. Having said all that the emergence I am seeing because I teach English to refugees is the way translations can be a fast way to communicate without holding all the knowledge. So my feeling is AI will offer voice strips in the future and when you speak out loud the voice strips will translate your voice into any language. This exists on phones but I think there will be more bio AI apps like a voice strip like a patch and navigation systems that talk to you more like a real person would that can see all the objects and elements in real time. So yes I think AI might help with how someone learns but I think there will be more apps that will say we can replace you not knowing with apps that make it look like you know to facilitate communication in the moment. Like language learning. People will still need to know for themselves but the tools to learn will be at some point many stages of efficiency that some of the tools will actually do the job themselves.

    @ionagibbons9906@ionagibbons990619 күн бұрын
  • Brian Greene and Eric Schmidt 👋👋👋 that was Great thank you ty ty.

    @playpaltalk@playpaltalk24 күн бұрын
  • What a great mind Eric has. First time I've got to know him. Good job Brian 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

    @cashkaval@cashkavalАй бұрын
  • So glad to have found you! Fantastic information! Thank you both for a mind bending conversation. Wow.

    @lorirodgers9474@lorirodgers947419 күн бұрын
  • Eric is a fabulous interview and brings so much experience to the table! Great conversation!!

    @kskoolstuff@kskoolstuff21 күн бұрын
  • The examples Eric poses are powerful learning tools for us in the audience. Thank you.

    @TerryAllison@TerryAllison22 күн бұрын
  • Wonderful as usual Brian , simply wonderful . Never stop ☯️

    @joecheshul9325@joecheshul9325Ай бұрын
  • Fascinating discussion! Both exciting and very disconcerting !🇿🇦

    @antoinettejoubert@antoinettejoubertАй бұрын
  • This has me thinking. Significant changes to our society will happen at a faster pace. I look forward to it, but keeping up with it may be challenging.

    @ricksmith1382@ricksmith138228 күн бұрын
  • Wow this is such an amazing discussion. Mind blowing 🤩

    @tglv5159@tglv5159Ай бұрын
  • Great conversation. The discussion about education is truly insightful and inspiring (1:05)

    @user-yj8kg7gi4s@user-yj8kg7gi4s28 күн бұрын
  • Eric never stops😂🥰excellent way to wrap it up. It's up to all of us. Liberty.. free will.. is why the the universe works so well. We come here, make bad choices, less and less, and forgive and be nice more often.. becoming more and more of the "it's not about me" MO is so important

    @goldnutter412@goldnutter41223 күн бұрын
  • Excellent. Thank you. Appreciated.

    @ahsanmohammed1@ahsanmohammed126 күн бұрын
  • this is an awesome talk. gets my understanding of AI to the next level

    @sendscho2260@sendscho2260Ай бұрын
  • Thank you guys!

    @DobrinWorld@DobrinWorldАй бұрын
  • The most sober and factual discussion of what is likely the most melodramatic phase in the history of human progress. Spoiler alert: The drama doesn’t subside.

    @ernstgumrich5614@ernstgumrich5614Ай бұрын
    • Oh for sure What happens when we simultaneously introduce an alpha intelligence/species and shatter the majority of non labor jobs?

      @RetireandGo@RetireandGo28 күн бұрын
  • Excellent interview, questions, answers and look forward of what is happening.

    @ErkanNIsa@ErkanNIsa22 күн бұрын
  • Incredible knowledge, thank you for sharing.

    @romanone@romanone24 күн бұрын
  • Thank you Eric and Brian. Awesome discussion

    @ErinWallace7@ErinWallace720 күн бұрын
  • I am 36 mins in and loving this, thinking I understand what they are saying in general and wishing I was 10% as smart as Schmidt and Greene.....

    @cloudysunset2102@cloudysunset210229 күн бұрын
    • The beautiful thing about our moment in time is anything you didn't understood fully, you can ask chatGPT or your favorite LLM and ask it to explain it to you in a way you can fully understand. 🙂

      @sparkofcuriousity@sparkofcuriousity29 күн бұрын
    • Don’t sell yourself short.

      @amycowan3132@amycowan313222 күн бұрын
  • Thank you.

    @gsilcoful@gsilcofulАй бұрын
  • I like Brian Greene, I enjoy listening to him explaining things in his inimitably coherent and easy to follow way. He does a great job of brining cutting edge science to laymen like me.

    @MKTElM@MKTElMАй бұрын
  • Wow! thank you for your conversation. It was enlightening.

    @CeeYew@CeeYew17 күн бұрын
  • This was the best interview (Inspite of the wok via swat that slipped through occasionally)

    @ilovehanoivietnam2521@ilovehanoivietnam252126 күн бұрын
  • The education part at 1:07 to 1:13 is quite interesting here. Feedback loops that incrementally adjust to a students learning capabilities, primarily using our dominant visual cortex.

    @energyideas@energyideasАй бұрын
    • as an "to be" teacher (still at the end of my bachelor), i was recently wondering if its still worth finishing my studies with how fast jobs are replaced and i had the same idea about it with it being individualized etc. even maybe an AI-classroom in VR format etc. but i think ploitics and people (parents) will be very slow to adapt (10+ years) even once the tech is there (And ripe). im not opposed to it at all though, will be great. just like wikipedia but SO MUCH MORE.

      @kliersheed@kliersheedАй бұрын
    • @@kliersheed yes, finish

      @energyideas@energyideasАй бұрын
  • This will be interesting!

    @captain_context9991@captain_context9991Ай бұрын
  • You missed computing with light

    @eglintonflats@eglintonflats26 күн бұрын
  • The 1:04:18 discussion around education is very fascinating and relevant even though I enjoyed this whole talk.

    @NickDeCastro@NickDeCastro25 күн бұрын
  • it's reassuring to hear so much positivity around AI, most of what is being said on youtube is always tinted with a bit of doom and gloom, but mr schmidt here reminds us of why we wanted AI in the first place, to augment what humans are already doing.

    @HarryNicNicholas@HarryNicNicholasАй бұрын
    • I’m not opposed to AI but also please remember that he (literally) has a vested interest in the success of AI.

      @velvetjones8634@velvetjones863427 күн бұрын
  • amazing conversation. more of that please

    @gregoryw1@gregoryw1Ай бұрын
  • Definitely have a Part II.

    @mfu9943@mfu9943Ай бұрын
  • Exciting prospects... Thank you!

    @sunbird7349@sunbird734921 күн бұрын
  • He mentions the Vietnam war and how it led to questioning the morality of our government, which led to the structural philosophy of the Internet, being by the people instead of through government. And then, five minutes later you find out that Kissinger is his best friend?! I’m usually not a big fan of throwing the baby out with the bathwater, but in this case, I think it’s warranted.

    @jeffnaumann1017@jeffnaumann1017Ай бұрын
    • Several commentators are thrown by Eric’s friendship with Kissinger. Men of their times both brilliant and both have remarkable strengths and glaring weaknesses. I’m also guilty of having remarkable friends and hope I’m not condemned for their missteps as I have made enough of my own.

      @martywells9961@martywells996127 күн бұрын
    • @@martywells9961 Point acknowledged but do YOU have a body count in the millions to show for your oopsies?

      @jeffnaumann1017@jeffnaumann101723 күн бұрын
    • You can be friends with people of different opinions and beliefs. Didn't come across that way tbh. Kissinger like Hitler was not all bad. No human is, but he seemingly aligned himself with Kissinger. I do remember Kissinger thinking Mao had the moral high ground when they met and Mao probably thought so too. People are poor judges of themselves. Do No Evil was actually a red flag to delusional infantile minds with no personal insight. Now they are cynical political minds with a facade of moralin their heads to make their elongated lives tolerable ​@@martywells9961

      @virupakshawalla5734@virupakshawalla57347 күн бұрын
  • GREAT & DEEP DISCUSSION.THANK YOU - YOU ALL!.

    @peacea5192@peacea5192Ай бұрын
  • It would have been an even more interesting discussion if they would have drilled down on physics-informed neural networks which Eric eluded to. I've been working with them lately. They're really cool.

    @roberthaley3672@roberthaley3672Ай бұрын
  • This was both enlightening and frightening all at once. A Really fascinating conversation. But talking about good guys with AI is like talking about good guys with nuclear weapons.

    @longlostkryptonian5797@longlostkryptonian5797Ай бұрын
  • Would like to see Stephen Wolfram as a part of this conversation.

    @robertkarr9792@robertkarr979224 күн бұрын
  • What I'd love to see in my lifetime, where we can upload information directly to our brains.

    @RAM_845@RAM_84518 күн бұрын
  • Thank you

    @Hastingsnow@HastingsnowАй бұрын
  • These AI talks are great. Hope to see more such guests.

    @TheHonestBroker@TheHonestBrokerАй бұрын
  • Cool, cheers guys

    @devilsolution9781@devilsolution9781Ай бұрын
  • Eric is very clever for sure!!

    @hamdiel-sissi7760@hamdiel-sissi7760Ай бұрын
  • Excellent topic, excellent conversation. Is there a version of this video with subtitles in Spanish? If so, please someone let me know it.

    @ramirogal8955@ramirogal895523 күн бұрын
  • Well uncovered future threats and perspectives to live in the world where all people are relatively satisfied and do not break the world with extremal behaviour. It's crucial to respect real qualities and distinct them among an ocean of upcoming illusions.

    @yuriimarshalofficial@yuriimarshalofficialАй бұрын
  • Thanks for this

    @CrispSkimmer@CrispSkimmerАй бұрын
  • Science isn't based primarily on "proof" like mathematics, but on evidence, prediction, and observations that test the prediction, and so add to the evidence. Nature, not mathematics or people, has the final word about the best current world model.

    @BobCahalan46@BobCahalan46Ай бұрын
    • In a sense I feel like you could say that experimentational results or "evidence" as you're referring to it there is effectively proof by demonstration. I guess the funny part is: you don't even really need to understand or know what you are proving. The math does itself, you just gotta look at the results and then try to figure out what the math was before it did what it did. Of course nature has the final word on being the best model for... Itself. But I don't really understand your approach here to downplaying mathematics in terms of it's ability to describe nature. It is eerily effective at describing it. To the point where you get genuinely amazed by it over and over again the deeper you go into studying these things. Hell, Dirac (iirc) discovered anti-matter by correctly interpreting that a square root solution must be positive AND negative. The correct mathematical notation of a square root is the symbol with a + - symbol infront of it. Since two negatives times each other equal a positive. So he discovered anti-matter, before the experimentational discovery of anti-matter (as in, where they understood what it was), without even really knowing what it was except for expecting an opposite charge. In a sense, the mathematics he was doing was more accurate than he intended. It was *better* at describing reality than anyone expected in that specific case. It showed the existence of anti-matter before we discovered the existence of anti-matter. And all because of a rather abstract and generally not very important mathematical fact about square root operations. LOL. So I'm sorry but I genuinely think you are underestimating mathematics. Particularly, although this is personal opinion, I think you're extremely mistaken about mathematics in the sense that we're the ones making it up. We're making up the symbols, we're making up some axioms and trying others just in case, and so on. Our math isn't perfect either, not even close. There are some problems we simply don't have the tools for. (3n+1), Riemann, ... But see that's the thing though. Nature's mathematics, so a theory of everything, IS PERFECT. It cannot be anything but perfectly mathematical. If there are any faults in mathematics, then it lies within OUR interpretation of it. Because the right answers are there to find. The problem is we need the correct tools. And it's very easy to use a wrong tool.

      @glenndewulf4843@glenndewulf4843Ай бұрын
    • (Terrific explanation, thanks btw) ..So would you say -- and this is only "coincidentally" related to your example -- that for example the discovery of the possibility of the square root of negative (-) numbers and how it has given us a framework for real-world application in electricity, engineering, fractals, etc, could be an interpretation of math/nature that is eerie to us humans because it's true nature may be potentially beyond the scope of human interpretation even though we can still leverage it in practical ways? Just thinking out loud, not trying to get off topic, but that reminds me of hologram universe theories. :)

      @jamesstortz936@jamesstortz936Ай бұрын
    • As someone who does mathematics as a hobby (although kinda passionately so), my personal opinion is that there is absolutely something "eerie" or "freaky" about mathematics. Or at least certain concepts within it that reveal something. Like for example 1/3 = 0.333... 2/3 = 0.666... 3/3 = 0.999... = 1. Like this is the most simple example I can think of and I often bring it up... If you are thinking about this deeply and you don't find it freaky, I don't think you understand it. Maybe I don't either, but I must've gone deep enough to feel the freaky. Hahah. I love this one because it's kinda like a limit in math without being an actual limit. An infinitesimally small number so close to zero that it equals zero. Or an infinitesimally-close-to-1-number, which is so close to 1 that it equals it. You can surely claim more advanced knowledge, I'll concede it. You can go into depth and explain this all you want. But man, isn't this freaky? Something freaky going on there. And this isn't even remotely chaos theory or all that stuff. This is just division and multiplication of fractions, and already we can run into things we don't *really* understand (I think). Well, as far as I know, mathematics is full of that.

      @glenndewulf4843@glenndewulf484326 күн бұрын
  • Invaluable

    @karolawatches@karolawatchesАй бұрын
  • this is an extremely important interview!

    @peterhovmand74@peterhovmand7428 күн бұрын
  • i work as developer in a very complex software architecture and i can confirm that gpt-4 accelerates me immensely. not for the casual programming stuff but for everytime i struggle with a framework, i have a weird bug etc. basically the things that consume the most time. just yesterday i was checking whats wrong with an url and it found that the query uses 2 question marks instead of one, i simply didn't see that. in the future i would like it to have more context of what i'm working on and be quite a bit smarter, the leverage is just beginning

    @JazevoAudiosurf@JazevoAudiosurf27 күн бұрын
  • trustability ... the challenge !! Not because of ai but because of humans using it .. Great conversation, many thanks.

    @johnrussel4483@johnrussel4483Ай бұрын
  • I hope luminaries such as these guys and Elon Musk, Sam Altman, Demmis, etc continue to do well and have a positive impact on the alignment of these systems.

    @onebadfishtoo@onebadfishtoo25 күн бұрын
  • I doubt Einstein would have said, a person like Kissinger, should be resurrected in any form. How many lives, stolen? Intelligence, consciousness, conscience. Good or evil?

    @andrewreeve5537@andrewreeve5537Ай бұрын
  • A highly interesting talk, thank you for that!

    @iriscater8888@iriscater888823 күн бұрын
  • I LOVE this idea of a math tutor Ai that uses visuals and generated images that break any math problem down into the fewest steps needed to come up with the correct answer, and still be easy to remember, including adaption to the personality and/or learning speed/ability of the student. Brilliant idea, including the idea of free to everyone (revenue comes from advertising, digital mining, or some other clever and practical, eco-friendly and/or freedom-friendly operation, grants, NDA's etc.); as well it seems a genius idea to use the "for-profit model" of a non-governmental corporation, to attract the best minds and rogue geniuses out there to develop such AI systems (even if ur primary customer might b some 3 letter agency out there- it's about selling an image and branding the idea that the "best minds go here to get a job, because they pay better and treat u better than most other boot camps, even the US Navy...". I'd love to get in an early investment (if i get the funds someday), or even help write the by-laws for such a "S-corporation, tech-start-up"- to look into such win-win, applied AI products and services. If nothing else, i'd be willing to pay hundreds of my own, hard-earned buck$ for such a "math tutor robot" that lets me learn on my own schedule and be move at whatever speed i feel comfortable with, either slower or faster, ... so i wouldn't get bored with the pace of things. Excellent product idea, so i'll just pray the Google Goddess somehow makes it so, and thanks for this genius video featuring two, real geniuses... u guys r aririte n my book! Sunsaver out.

    @sunsaverfromnhh9184@sunsaverfromnhh918427 күн бұрын
    • P.S. - i'd think that the existing language model Ai could prolly come up with suitably or even surprisingly humorous or clever, pneumonic stories or poems to help capture the attention of moody or easily distracted students, kids with ADHD or ADD, teach spelling/reading to students with dyslexia, etc. Good luck on the cyber warfare: it looks like one of freedom's enemies has already gotten the jump on the USA and several other democratic societies/nations on this planet, so i'm praying that "our" supercomputer, super-duper Ai beats "their" supercomputer Ai, even if means our boys and girl permit the Ai to launch a first-strike under those two parameters: 1.) it's bad for nation_x__ ; and it's good for USA.

      @sunsaverfromnhh9184@sunsaverfromnhh918426 күн бұрын
  • I'm going to have to listen to this again.

    @MichaelFlynn0@MichaelFlynn029 күн бұрын
  • Wow, that went in many fascinating directions ✴✴✴✴✴

    @Ava31415@Ava31415Ай бұрын
  • Really interesting, I have just average intelligence but was surprised to be able to understand a good deal of the conversation, I remember at school that my teacher was surprised that I was good at logarithm's but was hopeless at algebra, he tried hard to make me understand but didn't have the time to help me, I always wonder if I could have learned better ? the idea of something being able to understand your abilities and teach you in small stages sounds great to me. +

    @MrMick560@MrMick560Ай бұрын
  • Brian is just the best.

    @YouLoveMrFriendly@YouLoveMrFriendly28 күн бұрын
  • Such a great discussion!... Thax.

    @rw9207@rw920725 күн бұрын
  • Frank Herbert kinda addressed the ramifications of machine dependency.

    @lancechapman3070@lancechapman3070Ай бұрын
    • Well said. The guy is a powerful deeply problematic sociopath

      @JohnnyComelately-eb5zv@JohnnyComelately-eb5zvАй бұрын
    • I meant Schmidt not Herbert

      @JohnnyComelately-eb5zv@JohnnyComelately-eb5zvАй бұрын
  • This is excellent poignant, insightful, even provocative presentation!

    @donmilland7606@donmilland7606Ай бұрын
  • Excellent ideas discussed

    @pewrumalnarayanan3477@pewrumalnarayanan3477Ай бұрын
  • what about nested questions such as: How do I transport 2 kayaks from point (a) home to take a river trip from point (b) start of river kayak trip to point (c) end of river kayak trip. There are two kayaks, two vehicles SUV (can transport kayaks) another MX-5 (can only transport up to two people), two people. How to shuttle kayaks vehicles and people such that kayaks are never left unattended by at least one of the two people, and such that both people go down the river from point (b) to (c), and eventually get everyone and everything back home point (a).

    @AchimDaffin@AchimDaffinАй бұрын
    • This is what it came up with Here are the steps you can follow to transport two kayaks from point (a) home to take a river trip from point (b) to point (c) using two vehicles, an SUV and an MX-5, and ensuring that kayaks are never left unattended by at least one of the two people: Load both kayaks onto the SUV and drive to point (b) with both vehicles. Unload the kayaks at point (b) and leave one person to watch over them while the other drives the MX-5 back to point (a). Once at point (a), the person with the MX-5 should pick up the remaining person and drive to point (b). At point (b), the two people can start kayaking down the river. They should make sure to keep at least one person with the kayaks at all times. After reaching the end of their kayaking trip at point (c), they should load the kayaks back onto the SUV. One person should then drive the SUV back to point (b) with the kayaks while the other person rides in the MX-5. Once everyone has returned to point (b), they can load the kayaks onto the SUV and both people can ride back to point (a) in the SUV. By following these steps, you can successfully transport two kayaks from point (a) home to take a river trip from point (b) to point (c) using two vehicles while ensuring the safety of the kayaks and keeping them attended at all times. As you can see the nested difficulties )levels of temporal as well as geographic tokens, even sequence is not grasped. So in the following I'll show how human does have the capability to solve, it really is amazing what the mind does and we take for granted.

      @AchimDaffin@AchimDaffin28 күн бұрын
    • after giving it the right answer it still persisted on unneeded complications How about doing it this way?... Suv with boats and one driver, along with one driver in Miata drive to end point of boat trip. Leave the Miata there locked. The driver of Miata gets in SUV with boats and other driver and take it back to start to begin their boat trip to end point. At end point, now leave one person with boats, other person drives Miata to start, and switches to SUV, returns to finish to pick up boats and other driver, they return to start, one driver gets out and then gets in Miata to drive it home, while other driver drives SUV and boats home. ChatGPT Yes, that is another way to shuttle the boats with the two vehicles. Here are the steps for this scenario: The two people with the two vehicles will drive to the ending point of the boat trip with both vehicles. They will leave the Miata locked at the ending point and both people will get into the SUV with the boats and drive back to the starting point of the trip. Once they arrive at the starting point, they can unload the boats and gear and leave the SUV with the boats there. One person will stay with the boats while the other person drives the Miata back to the ending point of the trip. At the ending point, the person with the Miata will leave the car there, switch to the SUV with the boats and the other person, and they will begin the boat trip to the starting point. When they reach the starting point, they can unload the boats and gear and leave one person with the boats while the other person drives the Miata back to the ending point. At the ending point, the person with the Miata will get in and drive it back to the starting point to pick up the other vehicle. The SUV can then drive back to the ending point with the boats and the other person, pick up the person who stayed with the boats, and return to the starting point to drop off the other person and the Miata. Finally, one person can get into the Miata and drive it home, while the other person drives the SUV with the boats home. By using this shuttle method, the boats are never left unprotected by at least one person, ensuring their safety and security. However, it does require an additional step of switching between vehicles during the shuttle process.

      @AchimDaffin@AchimDaffin28 күн бұрын
  • Wow what a 💎 of a discussion

    @UnDaoDu@UnDaoDu4 күн бұрын
  • Truly excellent chat. My mind is full now. Time to digest...

    @zacharydaniels3186@zacharydaniels318621 күн бұрын
  • Eric Schmidt was awesome

    @beecee793@beecee79322 күн бұрын
  • Earnest Excellent Enterprising Extraordinary Emerging Evolving Endeavor 💐

    @iiigraghu@iiigraghu5 күн бұрын
  • What would be the best way (any way) for an old programmer to get into both AI and quantum computing? I've been just doing MS SQL Server for the past 30 years but I did write OS parts and a barebones OS at CSUS 35 years ago.

    @vjimmers1@vjimmers117 күн бұрын
  • I realy like your filosofi on education. You are so right. bravo.

    @ejvindgeckler4951@ejvindgeckler495122 күн бұрын
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