Theme: AI

  • No, because china needed to steal technology to modernize, and the chinese gover

    No, because china needed to steal technology to modernize, and the chinese government did everything possible to make it possible.


    Source date (UTC): 2020-03-16 23:28:20 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1239695021420564480

    Reply addressees: @SPQRIUS

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1239694290550501377

  • Thoughts on American Military Tech

    Thinking…. Something is wrong with the military’s robotic warfare initiative, that has to do with how it’s using vulnerable monolithic modules on top of heavy armor, and cramming too much into each platform. But my intuition is that they’re applying missile and airframe tech to land vehicles, and putting it on a platforms rather than building AI capacity into the platform – because Missiles and airframes face very different problems from vehicles. Going to have to look into the requirements if I can spare a couple of hours, because current AI tech shouldn’t need this vulnerability. Given that people in that industry aren’t stupid I clearly don’t understand something. Other issue is that we have to fly armor to the battlefield and if that’s true we shouldn’t rely on armor. Most obvious example is success of the Abrams, but failure of our personnel carriers, particularly Bradley and Humvee, but inability to copy the Russians’ use of tank platform and armor as personnel carriers because of weight. Third is our failure to equip light infantry with an intermediate weapon – a more advanced version of the Russian RPG, and transport. And I am not sure why we should be looking at overseas deployment strategies if we’re getting out of the policing business – and if we can’t possibly compete with china and Russia in arming the not-first-world, and we need Europe to rearm on their own. I am not sure we should be engaging in urban warfare rather than adopting the Russian strategy of just using artillery to reduce it to rubble, or the Chinese strategy of just building a fortress and overwhelming the opposition. There is no chance for the USA to fight a land war in Asia or Africa without a colony or base structure, and we no longer have an economic interest or the economic ability to do finance a world of bases. The policing strategy has to end. The only way of fighting a war not on our territory – where we want to preserve capital – is to use the Russian strategy of saturation with artillery or in our case, bombs and missiles. The only reason to have people on the ground is political. Reducing a country to rubble, their infrastructure to rubble, and their military to scrap doesn’t take standing there. It takes AI’s and drones to discover targets, long range bombers, and missiles – and lots and lots of them. the only reason to put people on the ground is to police and hold the territory – which we shouldn’t be doing other than where we can fight land wars: in our homelands. We also have to come to terms with the reality that nuclear weapons that White People have refused to deploy against each other are going to be used in the future, and probably not infrequently.

  • Thoughts on American Military Tech

    Thinking…. Something is wrong with the military’s robotic warfare initiative, that has to do with how it’s using vulnerable monolithic modules on top of heavy armor, and cramming too much into each platform. But my intuition is that they’re applying missile and airframe tech to land vehicles, and putting it on a platforms rather than building AI capacity into the platform – because Missiles and airframes face very different problems from vehicles. Going to have to look into the requirements if I can spare a couple of hours, because current AI tech shouldn’t need this vulnerability. Given that people in that industry aren’t stupid I clearly don’t understand something. Other issue is that we have to fly armor to the battlefield and if that’s true we shouldn’t rely on armor. Most obvious example is success of the Abrams, but failure of our personnel carriers, particularly Bradley and Humvee, but inability to copy the Russians’ use of tank platform and armor as personnel carriers because of weight. Third is our failure to equip light infantry with an intermediate weapon – a more advanced version of the Russian RPG, and transport. And I am not sure why we should be looking at overseas deployment strategies if we’re getting out of the policing business – and if we can’t possibly compete with china and Russia in arming the not-first-world, and we need Europe to rearm on their own. I am not sure we should be engaging in urban warfare rather than adopting the Russian strategy of just using artillery to reduce it to rubble, or the Chinese strategy of just building a fortress and overwhelming the opposition. There is no chance for the USA to fight a land war in Asia or Africa without a colony or base structure, and we no longer have an economic interest or the economic ability to do finance a world of bases. The policing strategy has to end. The only way of fighting a war not on our territory – where we want to preserve capital – is to use the Russian strategy of saturation with artillery or in our case, bombs and missiles. The only reason to have people on the ground is political. Reducing a country to rubble, their infrastructure to rubble, and their military to scrap doesn’t take standing there. It takes AI’s and drones to discover targets, long range bombers, and missiles – and lots and lots of them. the only reason to put people on the ground is to police and hold the territory – which we shouldn’t be doing other than where we can fight land wars: in our homelands. We also have to come to terms with the reality that nuclear weapons that White People have refused to deploy against each other are going to be used in the future, and probably not infrequently.

  • THOUGHTS ON AMERICAN MILITARY TECH Thinking…. Something is wrong with the mili

    THOUGHTS ON AMERICAN MILITARY TECH

    Thinking…. Something is wrong with the military’s robotic warfare initiative, that has to do with how it’s using vulnerable monolithic modules on top of heavy armor, and cramming too much into each platform.

    But my intuition is that they’re applying missile and airframe tech to land vehicles, and putting it on a platforms rather than building AI capacity into the platform – because Missiles and airframes face very different problems from vehicles.

    Going to have to look into the requirements if I can spare a couple of hours, because current AI tech shouldn’t need this vulnerability. Given that people in that industry aren’t stupid I clearly don’t understand something.

    Other issue is that we have to fly armor to the battlefield and if that’s true we shouldn’t rely on armor. Most obvious example is success of the Abrams, but failure of our personnel carriers, particularly Bradley and Humvee, but inability to copy the Russians’ use of tank platform and armor as personnel carriers because of weight.

    Third is our failure to equip light infantry with an intermediate weapon – a more advanced version of the Russian RPG, and transport.

    And I am not sure why we should be looking at overseas deployment strategies if we’re getting out of the policing business – and if we can’t possibly compete with china and Russia in arming the not-first-world, and we need Europe to rearm on their own.

    I am not sure we should be engaging in urban warfare rather than adopting the Russian strategy of just using artillery to reduce it to rubble, or the Chinese strategy of just building a fortress and overwhelming the opposition.

    There is no chance for the USA to fight a land war in Asia or Africa without a colony or base structure, and we no longer have an economic interest or the economic ability to do finance a world of bases.

    The policing strategy has to end. The only way of fighting a war not on our territory – where we want to preserve capital – is to use the Russian strategy of saturation with artillery or in our case, bombs and missiles. The only reason to have people on the ground is political. Reducing a country to rubble, their infrastructure to rubble, and their military to scrap doesn’t take standing there. It takes AI’s and drones to discover targets, long range bombers, and missiles – and lots and lots of them. the only reason to put people on the ground is to police and hold the territory – which we shouldn’t be doing other than where we can fight land wars: in our homelands.

    We also have to come to terms with the reality that nuclear weapons that White People have refused to deploy against each other are going to be used in the future, and probably not infrequently.


    Source date (UTC): 2020-02-20 23:06:00 UTC

  • The difference between the engine of a 3d video game and the human brain turns o

    The difference between the engine of a 3d video game and the human brain turns out to be terrifyingly small. We just do everything in massive parallel and at a much lower voltage and current because of it, and we do the prediction as well as the construction.


    Source date (UTC): 2020-02-12 19:45:39 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1227680184901537793

    Reply addressees: @robinhanson

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1227679648219324416


    IN REPLY TO:

    Unknown author

    @robinhanson If the question is ‘who is the observer’ (which I suspect is the origin of most problems in philosophy and cognitive science) it’s memory of the last few memories recursively processed as a stream of changes in model in the hippocampal region. Consciousness is a verb not a noun.

    Original post: https://x.com/i/web/status/1227679648219324416

  • I wish translation software was good enough to create Propertarian fb feeds in A

    I wish translation software was good enough to create Propertarian fb feeds in Arabic, Russian, French, German, Spanish and Italian. God knows we don’t need to convert the eastern europeans – they’re already sensible.


    Source date (UTC): 2020-02-02 09:22:00 UTC

  • “Hey Alexa: Flatter me” …..Drives my family nuts. Only think I like it for is

    “Hey Alexa: Flatter me”
    …..Drives my family nuts.

    Only think I like it for is (a) what’s the weather outside (b) remind me to do something, especially (c) when the laundry or the baking… https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=557082988221929&id=100017606988153


    Source date (UTC): 2020-01-17 23:08:54 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1218309247043362816

  • “Hey Alexa: Flatter me” …..Drives my family nuts. Only thing I like it for is

    “Hey Alexa: Flatter me”

    …..Drives my family nuts.

    Only thing I like it for is (a) what’s the weather outside (b) remind me to do something, especially (c) when the laundry or the baking is done. Otherwise, I just use it to be a smartass.

    If I figure out how to make it make jokes about The View, NBC, or Hallmark Channel there will surely be violence in the household…. lol

    I’d make a Stupid Paul Krugman Tricks channel but no one for 30 miles in any direction would get the jokes.


    Source date (UTC): 2020-01-17 18:08:00 UTC

  • 2) If your intellectual journey was through the computer science (AI), law, and

    2) If your intellectual journey was through the computer science (AI), law, and economics and physics channels, you see us as mere gene machines using language to rationalize seizure of opportunities,and that few of us possess any agency whatsoever,and we only do by randomness.


    Source date (UTC): 2020-01-13 17:22:53 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1216772618965200897

    Reply addressees: @DuchesneRicardo

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1216771972522283013


    IN REPLY TO:

    Unknown author

    @DuchesneRicardo 1) Thinking about this a bit. … If your intellectual journey was through the literary channel you see the world as the world of agency. If your intellectual journey was through psychology and soft science channels, you see the world of limited agency. But …

    Original post: https://x.com/i/web/status/1216771972522283013


    IN REPLY TO:

    @curtdoolittle

    @DuchesneRicardo 1) Thinking about this a bit. … If your intellectual journey was through the literary channel you see the world as the world of agency. If your intellectual journey was through psychology and soft science channels, you see the world of limited agency. But …

    Original post: https://x.com/i/web/status/1216771972522283013

  • I meant strategic tech investment, but tweets are character limited. 😉

    I meant strategic tech investment, but tweets are character limited. 😉


    Source date (UTC): 2020-01-09 16:38:34 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1215311914508726272

    Reply addressees: @EricLiford

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1215311481929072642


    IN REPLY TO:

    Original post on X

    Original tweet unavailable — we could not load the text of the post this reply is addressing on X. That usually means the tweet was deleted, the account is protected, or X does not expose it to the account used for archiving. The Original post link below may still open if you view it in X while signed in.

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1215311481929072642