Lee Cronin
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
and then get people to kind of subscribe to that. And if they actually nuke each other, even for fun in the metaverse, there are dire consequences.
and then get people to kind of subscribe to that. And if they actually nuke each other, even for fun in the metaverse, there are dire consequences.
No, they're happy. They have a job for another 20 years, right?
No, they're happy. They have a job for another 20 years, right?
No, they're happy. They have a job for another 20 years, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah. I'm a believer in equal employment.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. I'm a believer in equal employment.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. I'm a believer in equal employment.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I want to understand the mechanism of intelligence that's gone through evolution, right? Because the way that intelligence was produced by evolution appears to be the following. Origin of life, multicellularity, locomotion, senses. Once you can start to see things coming towards you,
I want to understand the mechanism of intelligence that's gone through evolution, right? Because the way that intelligence was produced by evolution appears to be the following. Origin of life, multicellularity, locomotion, senses. Once you can start to see things coming towards you,
I want to understand the mechanism of intelligence that's gone through evolution, right? Because the way that intelligence was produced by evolution appears to be the following. Origin of life, multicellularity, locomotion, senses. Once you can start to see things coming towards you,
and you can remember the past and interrogate the present and imagine the future, you can do something amazing, right? And I think only in recent years did humans become Turing-complete, right? Yeah. And so that Turing-completeness kind of gave us another kick up. But our ability to process that information It's produced in a wet brain.
and you can remember the past and interrogate the present and imagine the future, you can do something amazing, right? And I think only in recent years did humans become Turing-complete, right? Yeah. And so that Turing-completeness kind of gave us another kick up. But our ability to process that information It's produced in a wet brain.
and you can remember the past and interrogate the present and imagine the future, you can do something amazing, right? And I think only in recent years did humans become Turing-complete, right? Yeah. And so that Turing-completeness kind of gave us another kick up. But our ability to process that information It's produced in a wet brain.
I think that we do not have the correct hardware architectures to have the domain flexibility and the ability to integrate information. I think intelligence also comes at a massive compromise of data. Right now, we're obsessing about getting more and more data, more and more processing, more and more tricks to get dopamine hits. So when we look back on this, going, oh, yeah, that was really cool.
I think that we do not have the correct hardware architectures to have the domain flexibility and the ability to integrate information. I think intelligence also comes at a massive compromise of data. Right now, we're obsessing about getting more and more data, more and more processing, more and more tricks to get dopamine hits. So when we look back on this, going, oh, yeah, that was really cool.
I think that we do not have the correct hardware architectures to have the domain flexibility and the ability to integrate information. I think intelligence also comes at a massive compromise of data. Right now, we're obsessing about getting more and more data, more and more processing, more and more tricks to get dopamine hits. So when we look back on this, going, oh, yeah, that was really cool.