Archive for August, 2007

Productive Nanosystems: Launching the Technology Roadmap

Tuesday, August 14th, 2007
  • Productive Nanosystems: Launching the Technology Roadmap
  • DoubleTree Hotel Crystal City, Arlington, VA, USA
  • October 9-10, 2007
  • Description:

    For 20 years, researchers have explored the amazing promise of atomically-precise manufacturing. Now, for the first time, the Technology Roadmap for Productive Nanosystems will show the way forward, and the payoffs along the road, to this ultimate technological revolution.

    Over the last two years, under Battelle’s leadership, and hosted by four U.S. National Laboratories, researchers from academia, government, and industry have met to chart paths toward advanced, atomically-precise manufacturing. The resulting roadmap reveals crucial challenges and unexpected opportunities in the next steps forward. Join us for two intensive days with leading experts as we explore the power of advanced “bottom-up” nanotechnologies.


7th Alcor Conference

Tuesday, August 14th, 2007

[Frontier Channel Coverage: Alcor Conference - Table of Contents]


The Stem Cell Summit

Tuesday, August 14th, 2007
  • The Stem Cell Summit
  • Hynes Convention Center, Boston, MA
  • October 2-3, 2007
  • Description:

    Stem cell research represents the universal hope for healing and the political climate is changing for those seeking cures through revolutionary medicine. New rules are being written and public and private funding for research is becoming available. Genetics Policy Institute, Harvard Stem Cell Institute and Burrill Life Science Media Group have joined together to produce The Stem Cell Summit. This unique event will gather the global community of stakeholders to learn what’s new, share ideas, search for solutions and focus on advancing stem cell research from “the bench to the bedside.”

    Meet top innovators, researchers from around the world, clinicians, government officials, business leaders, political strategists, bioethicists, legal experts and advocates to celebrate scientific achievements, confront challenges and chart the future of regenerative medicine. Learn how cutting-edge biomedical research might impact your health and the health of your family and loved ones.


Technology Review’s Emerging Technologies Conference

Tuesday, August 14th, 2007
  • Technology Review’s Emerging Technologies Conference
  • MIT, Boston, MA, USA
  • September 25-27, 2007
  • Description:

    Technology Review’s Emerging Technologies (EmTech) Conference at MIT brings you remarkable technological breakthroughs that will transform the way we live and do business. This unique event brings together business leaders, venture capitalists, senior technologists, and an extraordinary group of the top 35 innovators under the age of 35—the TR35.

    Technology Review’s Emerging Technologies (EmTech) Conference at MIT is an event unlike any other. If you are in charge of the strategic direction of your organization or simply passionate about technology, it’s one you can’t afford to miss. The 7th annual event will be held on the beautiful MIT Campus in Cambridge, MA, on September 25-27, 2007, and will include:

    • Presentations from world-renowned business leaders
    • Showcase and demonstration of emerging technologies from leading companies
    • Breakout sessions focusing on the latest developments in specific areas of technology
    • Unveiling of the 2007 TR35 –the top 35 innovators under the age of 35
    • Unparalleled networking opportunities with the people you need to meet in the technology industry—venture capitalists, innovators and visionaries, corporate leaders, and entrepreneurs

Challenges & Opportunities: The Future of Nano & Bio Technologies

Tuesday, August 14th, 2007

Please see Frontier Channel’s coverage of this event.


Third “Strategies for Engineered Negligible Senescence” Conference (SENS3)

Tuesday, August 14th, 2007

Please see Frontier Channel’s coverage of this event.

  • Third “Strategies for Engineered Negligible Senescence” Conference (SENS3)
  • Queens’ College, Cambridge, England
  • September 6-10, 2007
  • Description:

    The purpose of the SENS conference series, like all the SENS initiatives (such as the journal Rejuvenation Research and the Methuselah Mouse Prize), is to expedite the development of truly effective therapies to postpone and treat human aging by tackling it as an engineering problem: not seeking elusive and probably illusory magic bullets, but instead enumerating the accumulating molecular and cellular changes that eventually kill us and identifying ways to repair — reverse — those changes, rather than merely to slow down their further accumulation.


State of Play V: Building The Global Metaverse

Tuesday, August 14th, 2007
  • State of Play V: Building The Global Metaverse
  • Singapore
  • August 19-22, 2007
  • Description:

    Organized by Harvard Law School, Yale Law School, New York Law School, Trinity University, and Nanyang Technological University in Singapore, this pioneering global conference on virtual worlds invites experts across disciplines to discuss the future of cyberspace and the impact of these new immersive, social online environments on education, law, politics and society. The hallmark of the conference is its multi-disciplinary perspective.

    Whether they take the form of games, social spaces, or educational environments, virtual worlds are now truly global in scope. The popularity of virtual worlds in Asia is phenomenal. From Thailand and Malaysia to Indonesia and the Philippines, the Asia Pacific region’s on-line gaming market generated approximately $1.4 billion in annual revenues last year – a figure that is expected to reach $3.6 billion by the end of the decade. Much of this growth will be propelled by 180 million Chinese Internet users, the majority of whom will play on-line games.


The Singularity Summit 2007

Monday, August 13th, 2007

Please see Frontier Channel’s coverage of this event.


The AI Question

Sunday, August 12th, 2007

When will AI surpass human-level intelligence?

This not an uncommon question in the futurist sphere, and especially among transhumanists and singularitarians. Bruce Klein, President of Novamente, a company pursuing Artificial General Intelligence by way of virtual agents, asked this question on the company’s blog and invited people to respond. The question appears straight forward enough. Whether or not you follow progress in artificial intelligence, it is easy enough to parse what is being asked. A layperson might reply with “never” or “hundreds of years” or, if they know something about the field, maybe a date some time this century.

What the layperson probably will not do is contentiously set up their answer by deconstructing the original question. Leave it to the experts to do that. A sampling of response introductions:

  • “Bruce, I generally think the question is misphrased.”
  • “I can’t answer the question because too many of the terms aren’t clear. There is a limited number of things that can be usefully said while standing on one foot.”
  • “Depends on how we define things.”
  • “I sometimes hate the relative opacity of this popular question, yet always love the motivations behind asking it!”
  • “In a way computers are already smarter than people.”
  • “Essentially, I don’t think that is a well-founded question. When it comes to playing chess or balancing accounts, AI has already exceeded human intelligence. Operations can be performed orders of magnitude faster and more accurately.”

In most of the responses, a series of dates are eventually provided, along with assumptions being made, rationalizations, personal beliefs, and sometimes sources. Not only the question but the asking of the question could be examined further. Who is asking the question and why? Who is answering and why? What is the context - historical, social - in which this question is being asked? How does this question-answer process work in cyberspace, via email and blog post, as opposed to other media? How might people who do not speak or write English pose the same question, and how might they respond? Why have only men responded so far?

This then is intellectual discourse, an activity that might lead some laypeople to scratch their heads and ask why the responders did not just provide a year and a brief explanation for their selection. Let us look back at the opening statement of the original post by Klein: “A question very simply crafted poll I’m asking a few friends to gain a better perspective on the time-frame for when we may see greater-than-human level AI.”

The edit says a lot about the responses that were received. Sometimes it is interesting, even useful, to just ask a simple question and expect a simple answer. We know what is being asked without becoming facetious about it.

My answer after my own verbose setup? Next decade (2010 - 2019).

Why (uh-oh)? Trends and technologies converge. Too often people examine individual trends and ignore convergence and surprises, all the while keeping in place their biases, including human-centric biases. The substrate from which human-level artificial intelligence will arise is a matrix of computing hardware, software, communications technology, progress in our understanding of the human brain, experiments in social networking and the metaverse, robotics, economic (the cost of human labor versus automation, robotics, and AI; military, government and private investments), etc. This substrate is all but in place.

To a historian, new technology might appear to have arrived suddenly, as if one day Technology X did not exist and the next day it did. In the days that follow, Technology X loses its luster and becomes just another part of the background noise of our technological existence, another piece of the substrate, a historical footnote. Convergence occurs and technologies appear to vanish into one another.

We - proponents and critics alike - place human-level artificial intelligence on a pedestal. That this was a hard problem, or is not a hard problem at all, will be all but forgotten with the advent of AGI. Human-level intelligence itself is only as miraculous or mundane as we individually and subjectively choose to view it.

Whether or not we as laypeople or we as experts define our terms, we make assumptions about intelligence from our interactions with other humans. When those assumptions about intelligence match with our interactions with other sentient beings, AI will have surpassed human-level intelligence. Yes, surpassed, not just equaled. That will happen within the next decade, when the substrate is appropriate for it.


Cybernudism and Frontier Channel Merged

Saturday, August 11th, 2007

My blog that use to be “Leis on Life” and then “Cybernudism” has been imported into Frontier Channel. The old blog has been deleted and the cybernudism domain name parked.

I kept these properties separate in a half-hearted attempt to keep news reporting and commentary separate. However, there was a lot of overlap and they belong together. Future commentary posts will be flagged as such.