Houshalter comments on Singularity Summit 2010 on Aug. 14-15 in San Francisco - Less Wrong
You are viewing a comment permalink. View the original post to see all comments and the full post content.
You are viewing a comment permalink. View the original post to see all comments and the full post content.
Comments (22)
Thats a misconception. We're not trying to simulate human or human-like brains. IMO, NNs and the like are dead ends. The AI project I'm currently working on will be (theoretically) able to run on any machine. The thing is, that on a super fast machine, it can just spend extra time analyzing problems, while on the slow one it will probably have to spend most of its time figuring out how to do the problem without wasting so much power. So, yes, there is a definite advantage in speed, but it will always be as efficient as possible given the power it has. So measuring intelligence by how well it does compared to a human isn't practical. With that, a calculator could be argued to be thousands of times faster then a human.
That's a response that relies on specific models of AI. If one can construct any AI that does functionally resemble that of a human then speed of this sort will matter.