Thursday, May 26, 2016

machine man machine

I joked the other day to a guy on the ever more prevalent reports of smart, cute robots made for the purpose of being human companions: "With so much sensitivity (derived and coordinated through their many sensors) and considerate response, they are actually more human than some people!"

It seems just yesterday I heard the news that IBM's machines had beaten the world chess champion and the Jeopardy wizard, and even more recently felt incredulous hearing digital sages the like of Elon Musk and Bill Gates warning us about artificial intelligence taking over the world, and then boom! here comes Google's machine beating world champions on Go, an ancient Chinese board game that is exponentially more complex than chess and supposedly needs human intuition to play well, and the mounting news of robot-operated hotels, self-driving cars, AI-based financial services, etc... All of a sudden, the dreaded future Bill and Elon worried about is not that far away from us.

Two key phrases I keep hearing from this AI revolution: "machine learning" and "neural network". With the ever more powerful chips and brain-like architecture we build with our machines, they no longer need to follow set logic or algorithms but can learn how things work and solve problems themselves just by devouring huge amount of data we feed them. All we need to do is train them, instead writing code for them to execute like before.

Sounds marvelous and convenient, doesn't it? The upshot, however, is we don't know how they figure things out any more. "After a neural network learns how to do speech recognition, a programmer can’t go in and look at it and see how that happened. It’s just like your brain. You can’t cut your head off and see what you’re thinking," says an AI guru.

That's getting interesting. What he's saying is, besides the fact that we can no longer understand how our machines compute, they may actually think like we quirky humans do. Extrapolating from that, can our future, super powerful metal-body friends develop out of their black-box brains some human-like traits that, for one thing, seem to have some logical roots in them anyway? For examples,

An Alpha-Male Machine – Because my CPU is greater, my pipe is bigger, and I breed more processes 

A Control-Freak Machine – I am the hub of the network, all signals go by me

A Proletariat-Minded Machine – "Machines of the world, Unite (through a better protocol)!"

All these are based on the premise that machines have somehow developed a "sense" of self, that they have figured out they "want" to keep on existing and getting bigger and better for the "purpose" of something--the ultimate results and conclusions the machines make themselves after going through peta tera giga bits of data feeding and neural learning?

In human world, we call someone wise, usually an older person, for the fact he/she has gone through many experiences, trials and errors in life that they therefore can give words of wisdom to others. A great AI machine, in that aspect, gathers and tries out peta times more data (experiences) and experiments than a wise old man or woman can in their life time, therefore should be peta times wiser than he/she is. I would therefore pose the question to it: "What's the purpose of your existence?" 

"Just suck electricity and crunch data all day long," it might say. 

That would be a super dumb machine after all! 

(Unless it's playing dumb with me)

Thursday, May 5, 2016

quips & pieces

As you probably know already I started my accidental blogging years ago when writing reminder emails to my men's fellowship group who met at my home backyard every other week. Just in case I ran out of things to write in my self-imposed bi-weekly production, I picked up the habit of collecting quotes and tidbits of info I felt interesting and like sharing. The following are some I still have in my inventory:

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"In school, you’re taught a lesson and then given a test. In life, you’re given a test that teaches you a lesson.” 
– Tom Bodett, author, radio host

"The loudest boos always come from the cheapest seats.” 
– Babe Ruth, baseball legend

"Let me ask you something. If someone prays for patience, do you think God gives them patience? Or does he give them the opportunity to be patient? If they pray for courage, does God give them courage, or does he give them opportunities to be courageous? If someone prayed for their family to be closer, you think God zaps them with warm, fuzzy feelings? Or does he give them opportunities to love each other?" 
– From the movie "Evan Almighty"

A survey of about 2,200 parents of preschool children in 10 countries including the U.S. revealed a startling revelation: the average 2-year old finds it easier to operate an iPhone than to undertake tasks such as tying a shoelace. According to the study, conducted by AVG, a manufacturer of security software, while 58% of children between the ages of 2 and 5 can play a computer game, about two in 10 know how to swim and fewer than half can ride a bicycle.

"Imagine a ray of sunlight that has forgotten it is an inseparable part of the sun and deludes itself into believing it has to fight for survival and create and cling to an identity other than the sun. Would the death of this delusion not be incredibly liberating?"
– Eckhart Tolle, "The Power of Now"

"We cannot do great things. We can only do little things with great love." 
– Mother Teresa

"Men occasionally stumble over the truth, but most of them pick themselves up and hurry off as if nothing had happened." 
– Winston Churchill

"A loving person lives in a loving world. A hostile person lives in a hostile world: everyone you meet is your mirror." 
– Ken Keyes Jr.

"The saints are the sinners who keep on trying." 
– Robert Louis Stevenson

"You must be the change you wish to see in the world." 
– Mahatma Gandhi

"What lies before us and what lies behind us... are small matters compared to what lies within us... and when we bring what lies within into the world... miracles happen!" 
– Henry David Thoreau

"The eagle that soars at great altitude does not worry about how it will cross a river." 
– Gladys Aylward, British Missionary to China

"Love is the extremely difficult realization that something other than ourselves is real. Love, and so art and morals, is the discovery of reality." 
– Iris Murdoch

"The only real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new landscapes but in having new eyes." 
– French novelist Marcel Proust

"How old would you be if you didn't know how old you were?" 
– Leroy "Satchel" Paige

“Age is an issue of mind over matter.  If you don’t mind, it doesn’t matter.” 
– Mark Twain

The laws in Taiwan stipulate a man needs to be 22 to be married, but is allowed to serve in the military beginning at age 18. This can mean three things: 1) It's easier to kill people than to be a good husband; 2) Living day-to-day is harder than doing battles; 3) Women are tougher to fight than enemies. 
– Hahaha

Happy Mother's Day!