Computers are sure changing the world

Welcome to the Leverguns.Com Forum. This is a high-class place so act respectable. We discuss most anything here ... politely.

Moderators: AmBraCol, Hobie

Forum rules
Welcome to the Leverguns.Com General Discussions Forum. This is a high-class place so act respectable. We discuss most anything here other than politics... politely.

Please post political post in the new Politics forum.
Post Reply
User avatar
AJMD429
Posting leader...
Posts: 33629
Joined: Sun Sep 09, 2007 10:03 am
Location: Hoosierland

Computers are sure changing the world

Post by AJMD429 »

.
This is just a dramatic illustration of the fantastic abilities of computers not only to do things fast, but to use algorithms to learn to do them even faster than initially shown how to do them.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/technolo ... i-BB1q5ne0

I remember writing a program for my HP-41 calculator to play the poker game '21' and my wife and I and friends would each have a name we entered when we played. The program I wrote enabled the calculator to learn the player's risk-taking thresholds as measured by 4 or 5 metrics, then learn to beat THAT player better and better with each game.

Of course that was a primitive program based only on 'numbers' and written in what amounted to assembler-language. I used a TurboPascal compiler to create the same program a couple years later on an 8088-based machine. Those 8-bit processors probably stepped through a few hundred commands per second max, and now we have 64-bit processors at gigahertz speeds, plus programmers way more talented than me.

The idea that a machine can learn to solve a Rubik Cube faster than it can be physically manipulated is incredible.

But the political and social implications of this era are far beyond merely solving a puzzle... :shock:
It's 2025 - "Cutesy Time is OVER....!" [Dan Bongino]
User avatar
GunnyMack
Advanced Levergunner
Posts: 11295
Joined: Mon Sep 19, 2016 7:57 am
Location: Not where I want to be!

Re: Computers are sure changing the world

Post by GunnyMack »

I saw a robot that is now "3d printing " foundation walls. Another that lays bricks. All well and good but it still takes skill to engineer, build and maintain these things.

It is amazing how much computers have advanced since the refrigerator sized tape machines from the Apolo missions.

What I was truly in awe of was the mathematics and the women that developed the range finding stuff for our 16" naval guns!
BROWN LABS MATTER !!
Post Reply