by on 8 February, 2009 - 17:22
by: Idris Mootee
Remember what you've read about Singularity? The technological singularity is a theoretical future point of unprecedented technological progress, caused in part by the ability of machines to improve themselves using artificial intelligence. Remember Ray Kurzweil? Inventor. Entrepreneur. Artificial Intelligence. Futurist. Author: "The Age of Spiritual Machines: When Computers Exceed Human Intelligence" and "The Singularity is Near."
In 2045 the human race "breaks the shackles of its genetic legacy and achieves inconceivable heights of intelligence, material progress and longevity." Kurzweil's Law of "accelerating returns." Material progress faster than Moore's Law. The "Singularity" is that postulated point in time when technological progress, led by machine intelligences designing their own replacements at an ever-increasing rate, becomes so rapid that we mere humans can no longer comprehend or control it. It is no sci-fi,many think it is real.
Microsoft started early playing with the idea and the singularity project in now its 5th year. One focus of the project has been to throw away the past- the OS we have today (Linux, Windows) evolved from designs in the 60s and 70s when computers were limited in resources and not very networked. What could you get if you design for today’s CPU power?
Some believe that this point will eventually be reached in the real world. I think that those people are drastically underestimating the other limits to progress, such as bandwidth limits for data gathering, the difficulty of comprehension, and the inverse relationship of speed to reliability in data analysis. They're also confusing exponential growth curves (which lead to arbitrarily high growth rates) with S curves, which apply to real-world situations in which growth rates increase for a while as key limits are overcome, then slows again.
But while we're waiting for God to emerge from machines, some of the people promoting the concept of the Singularity are looking for practical ways to turn technological progress into social progress. The questions are when will artificial intelligence out-compete humans? Or when computers can have personalities? Or when I can transfer my knowledge as well as personality traits to a computer? Or will artificial intelligence eventually manifest themselves as brands and run all marketing activities (who needs an ad agency?) These are interesting questions. What other technologies and applications, which may take us to Singularity:
All these ideas are disruptive and scary in some cases. But we are moving towards that direction. Many are pushing that idea and they include Ray Kurzweil, Peter Diamandis (X Prize Foundation), and Google co-founder Larry Page. They formed a Singularity University aimed at both students and executives in various technology disciplines (including Space & Physical Sciences, Biotechnology and Bioinformatics, Nanotechnology, Neuroscience & Human Enhancement, AI, Robotics, & Cognitive Computing, Energy & Ecological Systems and Future Studies), the objective is to close the gap in understanding and applying fast-developing technologies to solve what they called humanity's grandest challenges...such as poverty, hunger, and pandemics. In another word, applying Singularity to safe the world.
I don’t think the answers to many of these problems will come from technologies alone. My biggest concern whether the top-down, capital intensive management systems will dominate the thinking and cloud the visions of people who might make other choices if they only saw the potential for them. And technology is always a double-edged sword. Same as Singularity. The future is always dangerous…and exciting.
Have a great weekend.
This blog reflects the personal opinions of individual contributors and does not represent the views of Futurelab, Futurelab's clients, or the contributors' respective employers or clients.
Taylan says:
08 Feb 2009, 22:39
I wouldn't call that underestimating the limitations. Technology has a way of not only putting pieces in place, but also of changing the very nature of the puzzle itself. It shifts along with itself the social structure, changes business strategies, revises methods of education, diminishes reliance on resource intensive processes, and so on.
Just like the OS example: if you look at the past, you see a whole range of limitations that the new technology should overcome. Going back to the drawing board and reformulating the problem, however, might reveal that the new tech does not need to follow the old path. And with the old path are gone the limitations we once assumed absolute.
jerry says:
10 Feb 2009, 04:19
I think that this is the beginning where SciFi and reality combine for our generation. In the past it was the invention of airplanes and submarines, code that anticipates the users next click, why not AI the interfaces with human though processes?
Erwin van Lun says:
15 Feb 2009, 03:18
Good stuff Idris.
I personally agree that singularity will be extremely important for the future.
But I also believe human beings will as a result be extremely intelligent and that the world of 2050 is remarkable peacefull. I named this world Pamper Planet. A long story, it a the summary of my new book. Curious what you think.
Erwin
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