Computer History Museum
This is an episode of REVOLUTIONARIES, a co-production of the Computer History Museum and KQED television, with major sponsorship by Intel. Recorded: November 5, 2011, originally broadcast on May 7th, 2012.
Join leading researchers Dr. Eric Horvitz of Microsoft Research and Dr. Peter Norvig of Google for an intriguing discussion about the past, present, and future of artificial intelligence, moderated by KQED’s Tim Olson. We were extremely fortunate to have Eric and Peter on our stage — they’ve known each other for several years, and discussed everything from machine learning to data-driven science, the world of perception, speech recognition, robotics, self-driving cars, and even a computer called Watson.
Watch the full lecture at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VxF841qbLfs
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real ai just a transhumanist fantasy
Peter seems to be really pissed of by the doushhbaggery that the microsoft guys spews..
Orvi are in both their surname.
i think its less douchbaggery and more passion
Norvig is definitely a committed narrow "AI" practitioner. I put AI in quotes when constrained to narrow AI, because such tool creation has little to do with intelligence by any definition remotely related to animal capacities. I appreciate both of their desire to use AI as an augmentation to human endeavors, but feel that Norvig's desire to separate AI from any understanding of animal intelligence will limit his success towards augmentation. Hovitz is right to think that understanding animal intelligence may not only contribute to AI, but also facilitate the integration of the two.
I came here for 37:11