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Tag Archive for futurist

Tiny Minds

 

In one of Isaac Asimov’s earlier robot books, he takes a moment to explain why you might have a bipedal robot, shaped like a human, looking (roughly) like a human.  One of the reasons suggested was that they could be generalists, much like humans are.  They could be reprogrammed to drive a tractor, or climb a ladder, or ride a bike, thus putting all the cost in to the programming (software) rather than into developing custom hardware for every application.

AI’s are likely to follow a similar path.  In game development we already have limited “AI’s”, pieces of software that serve as bad guys, that make alterations to the game based on interactions with the player.  In fact, most games have to cripple these, so as not to make the overall game too challenging for players.  They “think” insofar as they receive input, check it against a set of parameters (and sometimes experiences) then change their behavior to suit. Kind of like the cat getting sprayed with water when it claws the couch.

When most people think about AI they think about something along the lines of Azimov’s positronic brains, a human analog, constructed in mimicry of human thought processes and morality.  The real truth is that AI’s will likely be specialized through an evolutionary process much like the one described in this article.  They will be really really good at doing one (or a small suite) of relative tasks.  They will be widely varied (one AI who robocalls you to find out your politics, one AI who cuts your grass, one AI who drives your car).

The REALLY clever companies out there (I’m eyeballing GOOGLE for this) are initially going to follow a similar pattern to what you see now with their suites of Apps.  You will find yourself allying with one brand or another when it comes to your AI’s because they will all be able to share data smoothly, your lawn care AI can talk to your shopping AI for more fertilizer and your shopping AI can talk to your nutritionist AI to see if you need a fresh shipment of Soylent ordered in).

 

 

Throttle Forward

 

So WHY haven’t all these bits and bobs gelled yet?  Will they ever?  The thing about fictional futures is, they are often driven by a single mind, and single individual.  That means they are fueled by the experiences and information gleaned by one mind.  Someone (usually the author) has done their research, talked (or not talked) to experts in the field that they have access to (who may or may not be the same experts that everyone else is talking to).

Like a bathtub full of gin, all of those experiences and information points get mellowed together, they sit and steep and come together over time until you have a final, consumable product (much like bathtub gin, the quality may vary).

So a vision of the future is a *curated* experience.  You are looking at it through a single lens, through the eyes of the writer/artist who put it all together.

Which is why the “real” future won’t match.  Ever.  The people who *create* the future do their own curation.  Sometimes they are informed by futurists, by authors and artists, and the pieces they create reflect that.  As often as not, they are chasing a rabbit and have to see where it goes, so where they end up may not at all be where they planned to go.

So, while we may have all the *pieces* of a dystopic future at our fingertips, they are not going to gel.  It takes an individual to do that, to create a suite or a collection or an experience by bringing all of those bits and bobs together.