Sublime
An inspiration engine for ideas
C’est ce qu’explique aussi Ray Kurtzweil, directeur de l’innovation de Google et gourou de la Silicon Valley. Selon lui, les ordinateurs, en particulier quantiques, vont continuer à permettre des progrès substantiels, si bien qu’en 2045 (la date de sa prédiction est précise !), les machines atteindraient une puissance de calcul supérieure à la nôtr
... See moreFrançois Taddei • Apprendre au XXIe siècle (French Edition)
Over the next century, scholars and fans, aided by computational algorithms, will knit together the books of the world into a single networked literature. A reader will be able to generate a social graph of an idea, or a timeline of a conce... See more
Maria Popova • Networked Knowledge and Combinatorial Creativity
Ray Kurzweil • The Law of Accelerating Returns « the Kurzweil Library + collections
- 3 layered intelligence
- Neuralink
- Compute ratio between limbic, cortex and silicon will be a key metric
ELON MUSK: "Birthrate might be the biggest threat to the future of human civilization“
La quantité d’intelligence humaine, observe-t-il, va décroissant, car les gens ne font plus assez d’enfants. En parallèle, la quantité d’intelligence informatique s’accroît exponentiellement, comme si elle suivait une loi de Moore sous amphétamines. Il arrivera un jour où les capacités intellectuelles biologiques seront dominées par les capacités i
... See moreWalter Isaacson • Elon Musk (Documents) (French Edition)
Fantastic Voyage: Live Long Enough to Live Forever and Transcend: Nine Steps to Living Well Forever.
Martin Ford • Rise of the Robots: Technology and the Threat of a Jobless Future
But Herbert Simon, a cautious student of these matters, has said that “Insofar as we understand what processes are involved in human creativity—and we are beginning to have a very good understanding of them -none of the processes involved in human creativity appear to lie beyond the reach of computers.”
Elting E. Morison • Men, Machines, and Modern Times, 50th Anniversary Edition
Ted Nelson, whose ambitious Xanadu Project (though never completed) was a vision of disparate information linked by “hypertext” connections.