Elixir
Made in America
Wait - the “memory” fails to respond when it’s unplugged. Like addressing a rock.Sometimes the line you get addressing the "memory" is only changed when you poke it,
Wait - the “memory” fails to respond when it’s unplugged. Like addressing a rock.Sometimes the line you get addressing the "memory" is only changed when you poke it,
And the neuron fails to respond when it has no chemical energy. What is your point here? That consciousness requires an imbalance of energy?Wait - the “memory” fails to respond when it’s unplugged. Like addressing a rock.Sometimes the line you get addressing the "memory" is only changed when you poke it,
Just highlighting one of the differences between organic and inorganic “intelligence”.And the neuron fails to respond when it has no chemical energy. What is your point here? That consciousness requires an imbalance of energy?Wait - the “memory” fails to respond when it’s unplugged. Like addressing a rock.Sometimes the line you get addressing the "memory" is only changed when you poke it,
But it's not really a difference is it? Switches of metal need energy gradients. Switches of meat and chemicals need energy gradients.Just highlighting one of the differences between organic and inorganic “intelligence”.And the neuron fails to respond when it has no chemical energy. What is your point here? That consciousness requires an imbalance of energy?Wait - the “memory” fails to respond when it’s unplugged. Like addressing a rock.Sometimes the line you get addressing the "memory" is only changed when you poke it,
Yes, it is. There is no “total shutdown mode” for organic intelligence short of brain death, which, if suffered for any extended period of time, is terminal.But it's not really a difference is it?
Literally the only difference between the two is that one has more tooling to allow bootstrapping and state off-loading to NVM.Yes, it is. There is no “total shutdown mode” for organic intelligence short of brain death, which, if suffered for any extended period of time, is terminal.But it's not really a difference is it?
Inorganic “intelligence” can endure unlimited disconnection, then reboot without incident.
You’re looking at intelligence as an a-temporal property rather than as a transient phenomenon.
SOME of the things brains do, and as you imply, there’s a mirror image flipside that advantages the inorganic format. The utility of either is utterly dependent on external preference sets.You're not presenting a useful distinction that would forbid the more well-organized system engineered for state analysis from doing the things that the brain does.
I can't imagine a self-driving bus doing anything for him beyond repeating "Last stop. Please exit the vehicle."
Yeah, wheelchairs. Someone in a wheelchair is probably incapable of securing the chair to acceptable standards. (I won't say always because there are probably a few with limited defects that do not preclude clambering around.)I can't imagine such a bus getting out of the bus to assist a mother with loading a pram; Guiding a blind passenger to board; or helping a wheelchair passenger. All of which are routine parts of the job.
Yeah, humans are far better at figuring out the sensible course of action when faced with incorrect information.Self-driving vehicles work up to the point where a dangerous situation occurs that requires actual intelligence to deal with. Unruly bus passengers are an excellent example wrt public transportation. Another example was a recent post I saw locally in which someone driving a Tesla found his vehicle kept pulling him into oncoming traffic. Apparently, the yellow stripe in the middle of the road had been covered with black during road resurfacing and was yet to be restored. The vehicle lost its ability to keep in its lane, and the driver had to fight with the car to avoid an accident. He had put it in self-drive mode and apparently let his mind wander before the car started wandering.
Never having lived in snowy conditions I've never heard that but it makes a lot of sense. At least if you can find a suitable parking lot, most of them have too many obstacles.There's a right way and a wrong way. You're right of course, that letting a child drive on a road with other vehicles is a recipe for disaster, but I WISH someone had taken me out in a field or a vacant parking lot and taught me to drive as a child.However, it is a bad idea to let children drive cars, hoping that they will learn from experience.
Around here adults routinely get in accidents because they don't have experience in ice or snow. It is widely recommended that they find a parking lot and practice spinouts, recoveries, drifts etc.. I see no reason to make a kid wait to do that if they can simultaneously see over the wheel and reach the pedals.
(There are kids around here who can operate an excavator or backhoe better than I can, and I am quite jealous.)
Somewhat agree. The Waymos appear better but they are being compared to drivers at large, not to drivers in similar situations (a data set we simply do not have.) Waymos never encounter wildlife. Waymos do not operate at freeway speeds. They're probably better--but we do not have the data to prove it. And we also do not have data on Waymo vs unimpaired drivers.We do not interact with other vehicles in the same sense that driverless cars do, either. We lack the same kinds of experiences as driverless cars, and the stats reflect it! AI:If you want to learn about the differences between artificial intelligence and natural ("actual") intelligence, you need to start with the concept of embodied cognition. Driverless cars do not even begin to interact with other vehicles and road conditions in the same sense that human beings do. They lack the same kinds of experiences as human drivers and the capability of modeling future outcomes of their interactions with other vehicles.
Driverless cars outperform humans in several categories of driver performance:
Overall safety: Waymo's autonomous driving system demonstrated a nine-fold reduction in property damage claims and a twelve-fold decrease in bodily injury claims compared to the overall human driving population.
I've lived in places with winter driving challenges (snow,ice, mountain roads etc) for over 50 years....it makes a lot of sense. At least if you can find a suitable parking lot, most of them have too many obstacles.
I can't think of anything around here that I would want to practice any sort of emergency in. As you say, they put in posts to keep the kids out--because any place big and empty enough for safe practice of emergencies is also big and empty enough for morons showing off--and said morons will eventually hit the edge of the envelope.I've lived in places with winter driving challenges (snow,ice, mountain roads etc) for over 50 years....it makes a lot of sense. At least if you can find a suitable parking lot, most of them have too many obstacles.
I've seen mall parking lots that were widely used for such activities, that were then fitted with steel posts at strategic intervals just to "keep the kids out". But there's always somewhere to practice, even if its a damn cornfield. When I lived in Fourmile Canyon my place had a big turnaround by my house where I used to routinely hang "bat turns", and used it to instruct a couple of kids there. It doesn't take long at all to train an appropriate response to losing traction. Just a lot of sliding.
I've been to Chicago three times in the past week.
I've been to Moscow three times in the past year.
But if I change "Moscow" to "Chicago" it keeps using "present perfect".I was in Moscow three times last week.
I was in Moscow three times last year.
I am pretty sure they are not.Both are correct English.
I am certain that they are. (And I don't accept YouTube as a source of information, it's purely a time wasting medium; If that one by some miracle happens to be the one that says something interesting or relevant, I will never know it, because like all YouTube videos other than music videos, I shall never click on it).I am pretty sure they are not.Both are correct English.
Present perfect is incompatible with "last week/year"