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Wired April 2001 Paul Boutin |
Kurzweil's Law Change is accelerating. And so is the acceleration. Say good-bye to the future as we know it... |
PC Magazine June 15, 2006 Sebastian Rupley |
Beyond The Brain Entrepreneur Ray Kurzweil believes the hardware and software necessary for computers to operate at a human level is in the near future. |
Bio-IT World May 2006 John Russell |
Kurzweil: Life Is the Fast Lane Inventor and futurist Ray Kurzweil's opening keynote at the Bio-IT World Life Sciences Conference + Expo painted an optimistic vision of a world governed by growing information technologies that will transform what it means to be human. |
Wired March 24, 2008 Gary Wolf |
Futurist Ray Kurzweil Pulls Out All the Stops (and Pills) to Live to Witness the Singularity The famous inventors lifetime goal is to travel across a frontier in time, to pass through the border between our era and a future without human life. |
IEEE Spectrum June 2012 Andrew Hodges |
Turing and the Test of Time Celebrating Alan Turing's fundamental contributions to the computer age |
Popular Mechanics October 5, 2009 Glenn Derene |
What Does a Beer Taste Like After the Singularity? Even if we accepted that it was possible to digitize the broad, ever-evolving spectrum that is human intelligence, add your own consciousness to it and then accelerate the heck out of it, what would the point be, exactly? |
BusinessWeek November 8, 2004 Catherine Arnst |
Redefining Smart Jeff Hawkins tackles his greatest passion, the study of the brain, in his new book "On Intelligence: How a New Understanding of the Brain Will Lead to the Creation of Truly Intelligent Machines." |
BusinessWeek August 1, 2005 Otis Port |
Raymond C. Kurzweil: Prophet Of Longevity Inventor-entrepreneur-author Raymond C. Kurzweil believes that by 2030, biomedical technology will allow us to halt the body's aging process and rejuvenate tired cells. He laid out several predictions that have proven successful in his book, Fantastic Voyage; another book is due in September. |
IEEE Spectrum December 2010 John Rennie |
Ray Kurzweil's Slippery Futurism His stunning prophecies have earned him a reputation as a tech visionary, but many of them don't look so good on close inspection |
Salon.com August 10, 2000 Thomas Scoville |
Hello, are you human? At a Silicon Valley cocktail party, it's hard to find anybody who passes the Turing Test. |
InternetNews October 8, 2004 Susan Kuchinskas |
Jeff Hawkins, Innovator Though he may not strive for the robotic capacity of I, Robot, the founder of Palm and Handspring offers a glimpse into the function of intelligence and how he wants to extend that to machines. |
Inc. September 1, 2002 Thea Singer |
The Innovation Factor: Your Brain on Innovation Want to know what makes a creative genius tick? Neuroscience gives us some clues. |
PC Magazine November 2, 2005 |
Bits & Bites v24n21 Yahoo! has teamed up to provide free digitized books online... Sun Microsystems and Google plan to collaborate around Java... Ray Kurzweil's new book The Singularity Is Near suggests technology will soon surpass human intelligence... |
IEEE Spectrum July 2006 |
Robots Can Ape Us, But Will They Ever Get Real? One of the most profound questions of engineering, arguably, is whether we will ever create human-level consciousness in a machine. In the meantime, robots continue to take tiny little bot steps in the direction of faux humanity. |
Fast Company Jul/Aug 2014 Om Malik |
Man and his Machines The world of information has surpassed human cognitive powers, And that means machines have to help us make decisions. |
Salon.com January 2, 2002 Suzy Hansen |
The emotional machine Steve Grand, designer of the artificial life program Creatures, talks about the stupidity of computers, the role of desire in intelligence and the coming revolution in what it means to be "alive." |
AskMen.com September 15, 2014 James Fell |
Here's Why You Should Head To The Weight Machines Immediately Next Time You're At The Gym Do both. Machines versus free weights is a silly argument. It's like arguing whether you should eat vegetables versus fruits. |
Wired March 24, 2008 Mark Anderson |
Never Mind the Singularity, Here's the Science Many computer scientists take it on faith that one day machines will become conscious. |
CRM September 13, 2013 Harden & Sears |
How Could Your Business Benefit from the Vending Machine Model? Recurring revenue technology advances make it possible. |
Chemistry World July 31, 2014 Andy Extance |
Turing patterns show their hand in finger formation James Sharpe's team at the Center for Genomic Regulation in Barcelona has identified proteins that create a 'Turing network' that tells embryo limb cells what to become. |
IEEE Spectrum November 2012 Stephen Cass |
Film Review: The Singularity Will humans and machines merge? Doug Wolens's latest documentary, released 1 November, captures the argument between the two sides. |
Popular Mechanics December 2009 |
The Singularity Is Coming--Now What? For some time now, futurists have been talking about a concept called the Singularity, a technological jump so big that society will be transformed. |
BusinessWeek May 10, 2004 Andy Reinhardt |
Alan Turing: Thinking Up Computers The Cambridge University mathematician laid the foundation for the invention of software. |
Chemistry World June 1, 2012 Andrea Sella |
Turing's machine Alan Turing, perhaps not often remembered as a chemist, stands out for providing the starting point for computational chemistry and for presenting a chemical hypothesis for the spontaneous appearance of structure. |
Scientific American February 2006 Andrew Hodges |
A Tour of Turing The life and death of Alan Turing continues to offer up mysteries. |
Wired June 22, 2009 Chris Hardwick |
Congratulations Human, You've Been Accepted to Singularity University Nine weeks of deep thought with eminent theorists and business leaders. |
AskMen.com August 17, 2015 Anthony Yeung |
Benefits Of Fitness Machines Although I thought otherwise, it turns out machines have a lot of benefits and have their place in a balanced, intelligent training program. |
Chemistry World September 1, 2013 Laura Howes |
Water acts as a lubricant for molecular machines Small shuttles and wheels on axles made from single molecules can be sped up with a small amount of water. |
AskMen.com Iain Ilich |
How To: Determine Someone's Intelligence Don't judge a book by its cover: learn to detect multiple forms of intelligence. |
PC Magazine October 28, 2003 Cade Metz |
CAPTCHA-ing the Spammer A technology that tries to distinguish between humans and machines may be a capable weapon against spam, but it isn't perfect. |
Science News January 19, 2002 Ivars Peterson |
Computers by the Trillions A team of computer scientists and biochemists have demonstrated how a test tube of DNA molecules can compute on its own. |
AskMen.com July 16, 2015 Anthony Yeung |
Why Free Weights Are Better Than Machines You need to do free-weight exercises. You'll build strength and size in the way you're designed to move. |
Fast Company April 2005 Lucas Conley |
60 Seconds with Ray Kurzweil Futurist and inventor Ray Kurzweil has been alive 56 years. In that time, he has invented a reading machine for the blind, built orchestra-quality music synthesizers, and pioneered speech-recognition technology. |
PC Magazine December 9, 2003 |
Bits & Bytes Futurist Ray Kurzweil predicts we will have reading machines within a few years that are not just sitting on a desk, but are tiny devices you put in your pocket, enabling blind people to read anywhere... Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer has announced a string of new security initiatives... etc. |
CRM October 12, 2015 Jeff Erhardt |
6 Ways Machine Learning Can Generate More CRM Value Making sense of data, becoming more efficient, and, most important, pleasing customers can now be done on a large scale. |