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Image Gallery: Singularity, the rapture of nerds?

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    John Smart, president of the Accelerating Change Foundation, provides a historical overview of accelerating change. He predicts that human-level machine intelligence will appear around 2060.

    Published: July 19, 2006 -- 11:35 GMT (04:35 PDT)

    Caption by: Bill Detwiler

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    Eliezer Yudkowsky of the Singularity Institute for Artificial Intelligence doesn't believe that human level AI can be predicted, even if know how to build real AI, how much work is involved and which organization and people are doing? it. "We have to be careful not to mistake our ignorance for knoweledge about it."

    Published: July 19, 2006 -- 11:35 GMT (04:35 PDT)

    Caption by: Bill Detwiler

  • 10639.jpg

    Douglas Hostader uses his own cartoons to illustrate his points about Kurzweil's Singularity book, which he said is marred by blurring with too much science fiction, calling it "wild beyond any speculation I am willing to accept."

    Published: July 19, 2006 -- 11:35 GMT (04:35 PDT)

    Caption by: Bill Detwiler

  • 10640.jpg

    Douglas Hofstader, professor of Cognitive Science and Computer Science Adjunct Professor of History and Philosophy of Science, Philosophy, Comparative Literature, and Psychology at the University of Indiana and the author of Godel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid, doesn't buy into the whole Singularity vision.

    Published: July 19, 2006 -- 11:35 GMT (04:35 PDT)

    Caption by: Bill Detwiler

  • 10641.jpg

    K. Eric Drexler, Max More, Christine Petersen, John Smart, Eliezer Yudkowsky, Peter Thiel and Steve Jurvetson.

    Published: July 19, 2006 -- 11:35 GMT (04:35 PDT)

    Caption by: Bill Detwiler

  • 10642.jpg

    Cory Doctorow poses the question, Singularity or Dark Age? -- and explains how the copyright laws are impeding technological and human progress.

    Published: July 19, 2006 -- 11:35 GMT (04:35 PDT)

    Caption by: Bill Detwiler

  • 10643.jpg

    Ray Kurzweil signs copies of his Singularity tome, The Singularity Is Near: When Humans Transcend Biology.

    Published: July 19, 2006 -- 11:35 GMT (04:35 PDT)

    Caption by: Bill Detwiler

  • 10644.jpg

    Tyler Emerson, executive director of the Singularity Institute for Artificial Intelligence, a research and public interest institute.

    Published: July 19, 2006 -- 11:35 GMT (04:35 PDT)

    Caption by: Bill Detwiler

  • 10645.jpg

    Douglas Hofstader, professor of Cognitive Science and Computer Science Adjunct Professor of History and Philosophy of Science, Philosophy, Comparative Literature, and Psychology at the University of Indiana and the author of G?del, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid, doesn't buy into the whole Singularity vision.

    Published: July 19, 2006 -- 11:35 GMT (04:35 PDT)

    Caption by: Bill Detwiler

  • 10646.jpg

    Stanford undergraduate students who help put on the Singularity Summit.

    Published: July 19, 2006 -- 11:35 GMT (04:35 PDT)

    Caption by: Bill Detwiler

  • 10647.jpg

    Douglas Hostader uses his own cartoons to illustrate his points about Kurzweil's Singularity book, which he said is marred by blurring with too much science fiction, calling it "wild beyond any speculation I am willing to accept."

    Published: July 19, 2006 -- 11:35 GMT (04:35 PDT)

    Caption by: Bill Detwiler

  • 10648.jpg

    Ray Kurzweil believes that his vision for Singularity is likely will have soft landing. See Singularity: Technology, spirituality and the close box.

    Published: July 19, 2006 -- 11:35 GMT (04:35 PDT)

    Caption by: Bill Detwiler

  • 10649.jpg

    Sebastian Thrun of the Stanford AI program predicts that autonomous cars will comprise 50 percent of cars on the highways by 2030.

    Published: July 19, 2006 -- 11:35 GMT (04:35 PDT)

    Caption by: Bill Detwiler

  • 10650.jpg

    The Singularity Summit panel: Ray Kurzweil, Douglas Hofstader, Nick Bostrom, Sebastian Thrun, Cory Doctorow, K. Eric Drexler, Max More, Christine Petersen, John Smart, Eliezer Yudkowsky, Peter Thiel and Steve Jurvetson.

    Published: July 19, 2006 -- 11:35 GMT (04:35 PDT)

    Caption by: Bill Detwiler

  • 10651.jpg

    Peter Thiel, president of Clarium Capital Management and former chairman and CEO of PayPal.

    Published: July 19, 2006 -- 11:35 GMT (04:35 PDT)

    Caption by: Bill Detwiler

  • 10652.jpg

    Douglas Hostader uses his own cartoons to illustrate his points about Kurzweil's Singularity book, which he said is marred by blurring with too much science fiction, calling it "wild beyond any speculation I am willing to accept."

    Published: July 19, 2006 -- 11:35 GMT (04:35 PDT)

    Caption by: Bill Detwiler

  • 10653.jpg

    Ray Kurzweil, Douglas Hofstader, Nick Bostrom, Sebastian Thrun.

    Published: July 19, 2006 -- 11:35 GMT (04:35 PDT)

    Caption by: Bill Detwiler

  • 10654.jpg

    Douglas Hostader uses his own cartoons to illustrate his points about Kurzweil's Singularity book, which he said is marred by blurring with too much science fiction, calling it "wild beyond any speculation I am willing to accept."

    Published: July 19, 2006 -- 11:35 GMT (04:35 PDT)

    Caption by: Bill Detwiler

  • 10655.jpg

    K. Eric Drexler pioneered the study of nanotechnology, and wrote Engines of Creation: The Coming Era of Nanotechnology.

    Published: July 19, 2006 -- 11:35 GMT (04:35 PDT)

    Caption by: Bill Detwiler

  • 10656.jpg

    Ray Kurzweil believes that his vision for Singularity is likely will have soft landing.

    Published: July 19, 2006 -- 11:35 GMT (04:35 PDT)

    Caption by: Bill Detwiler

  • 10657.jpg

    Sebastian Thrun of the Stanford AI program predicts that autonomous cars will comprise 50 percent of cars on the highways by 2030.

    Published: July 19, 2006 -- 11:35 GMT (04:35 PDT)

    Caption by: Bill Detwiler

  • 10658.jpg

    Douglas Hostader uses his own cartoons to illustrate his points about Kurzweil's Singularity book, which he said is marred by blurring with too much science fiction, calling it "wild beyond any speculation I am willing to accept."

    Published: July 19, 2006 -- 11:35 GMT (04:35 PDT)

    Caption by: Bill Detwiler

  • 10659.jpg

    Douglas Hostader uses his own cartoons to illustrate his points about Kurzweil's Singularity book, which he said is marred by blurring with too much science fiction, calling it "wild beyond any speculation I am willing to accept."

    Published: July 19, 2006 -- 11:35 GMT (04:35 PDT)

    Caption by: Bill Detwiler

11 of 23 NEXT PREV
Bill Detwiler

By Bill Detwiler | July 19, 2006 -- 11:35 GMT (04:35 PDT) | Topic: CXO

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John Smart, president of the Accelerating Change Foundation, provides a historical overview of accelerating change. He predicts that human-level machine intelligence will appear around 2060.

Read More Read Less

Douglas Hostader uses his own cartoons to illustrate his points about Kurzweil's Singularity book, which he said is marred by blurring with too much science fiction, calling it "wild beyond any speculation I am willing to accept."

Published: July 19, 2006 -- 11:35 GMT (04:35 PDT)

Caption by: Bill Detwiler

11 of 23 NEXT PREV

Related Topics:

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Bill Detwiler

By Bill Detwiler | July 19, 2006 -- 11:35 GMT (04:35 PDT) | Topic: CXO

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