Sentences with phrase «of turing»

EOS, Dfinity and Aeternity are all projects competing for the main niche of turing completeness of centralized blockchains.
TV makes use of a Turing - complete language for its smart contracts.
Genaro Network is the first of its kind blockchain project comprised of a Turing - complete public chain integrated with a decentralized storage network.
The Turing Phone hit a mediocre 38,862 while my Nexus 6 made it to 76,508, literally almost doubling the performance of the Turing Phone.
The other important aspect of the Turing phone is the Imitation key which is an extra hardware component that encrypts your data and makes it almost impossible for any malicious software or app to enter your device.
RSK is set to enable support of Turing - complete smart contracts, hence bringing the flexibility of Ethereum to Bitcoin.
The use of non-Turing complete smart contracts After the DAO incident in 2016, critics of Turing - complete smart contracts on permissionless public blockchains became vocal.
The lack of turing - complete smart - contracts capabilities may become an obstacle to Bitcoin's growth to it's full potential.
But the ordinary use of this kind of hardware — the programming of it — is a literary art, just because all of the Turing machine, the operations, and the program are abstractions.
Months later in December, news reports reveal that Martin Shkreli, the 32 - year - old founder of Turing Pharmaceuticals, who has been accused of serious price gauging, bought the album for about $ 2 million.
Philpott had this to say about the design of The Turing Test: Solving the puzzles of The Turing Test is all about trusting your instincts as a player, especially as the puzzles are designed in a way that only a human could solve them.
This narrative adventure game has been heavily inspired by Hideo Kojima's 90's cult - classic Snatcher and puts players in the role of a downtrodden reporter who joins forces with a sentient robot named Turing in order to investigate the mysterious disappearance of Turing's creator.
The two set out to investigate the mysterious disappearance of Turing's creator; what follows is a cyber-noir detective thriller through the futuristic world of Neo-San Francisco.
T.O.M. presents a theory to explain why the base has been changed, postulating that these are a series of Turing Tests designed so that only a human can pass through them.
All in all, the game part of The Turing Test was very enjoyable.
The beauty of The Turing Test lies in the lack of hand - holding.
Episode Info: Editor - in - Chief of Good E-Reader Interview starts at 3:45 and ends at 33:51 News «Amazon Go cashier - free store could be headed to SF's Union Square» by Matier & Ross at The San Francisco Chronicle - May 13, 2018 «The Information hires NY Times's Wingfield» by Chris Roush at Talking Biz News - May 15, 2018 The Information «Trump personally pushed postmaster general to double rates on Amazon, other firms» by Damian Paletta and Josh Dawsey at The Washington Post - May 18, 2018 «You'll soon hear 8 new voices in Amazon Alexa skills» by Michelle Fitzsimmons at Techradar - May 16, 2018 Tech Tip «How to Tag Your Highlights While You Read» by Daniel Doyon at Readwise - May 16, 2018 Readwise.io Interview with Michael Kozlowski Good e-Reader Good e-Reader app store and YouTube channel Good e-Reader store «Storytel e-Reader will launch this summer» by Michael Kozlowski at Good E-Reader - May 16, 2018 Storytel Kobo «How CLEARink technology is going to change e-readers for the better» by Markus Reily at Good E-Reader - August 1, 2017 CLEARink Interview with Dr. Jeanne Tifts, English teacher at Belmont Hill School (Interview begins at 33:52 and ends at 43:50) Loom Next Week's Guest Andrew Updegrove, author of The Turing Test: A Tale of Artificial Intelligence and Malevolence (Frank Adversego Thrillers Book 4) Outro music by the Belmont Hill School B - flats Please Join the Kindle Chronicles group at Goodreads!
Editor - in - Chief of Good E-Reader Interview starts at 3:45 and ends at 33:51 News «Amazon Go cashier - free store could be headed to SF's Union Square» by Matier & Ross at The San Francisco Chronicle - May 13, 2018 «The Information hires NY Times's Wingfield» by Chris Roush at Talking Biz News - May 15, 2018 The Information «Trump personally pushed postmaster general to double rates on Amazon, other firms» by Damian Paletta and Josh Dawsey at The Washington Post - May 18, 2018 «You'll soon hear 8 new voices in Amazon Alexa skills» by Michelle Fitzsimmons at Techradar - May 16, 2018 Tech Tip «How to Tag Your Highlights While You Read» by Daniel Doyon at Readwise - May 16, 2018 Readwise.io Interview with Michael Kozlowski Good e-Reader Good e-Reader app store and YouTube channel Good e-Reader store «Storytel e-Reader will launch this summer» by Michael Kozlowski at Good E-Reader - May 16, 2018 Storytel Kobo «How CLEARink technology is going to change e-readers for the better» by Markus Reily at Good E-Reader - August 1, 2017 CLEARink Interview with Dr. Jeanne Tifts, English teacher at Belmont Hill School (Interview begins at 33:52 and ends at 43:50) Loom Next Week's Guest Andrew Updegrove, author of The Turing Test: A Tale of Artificial Intelligence and Malevolence (Frank Adversego Thrillers Book 4) Outro music by the Belmont Hill School B - flats Please Join the Kindle Chronicles group at Goodreads!
In 2014, on the 60th anniversary of Turing's death, Eugene Goostman, a program simulating a 13 - year - old Ukrainian boy, passed the Turing test during a display at the Royal Society of London by convincing 33 % of judges that «he» was human.
Knightley gets a chance to play smart and emotionally intelligent as Joan Clarke, mathematician, friend and fiancée of Turing.
This beautifully designed and photographed period drama, adapted from Andrew Hodges» book The Enigma by debut screenwriter Graham Moore, centres on three important points of Turing's life: boarding school, a miserable existence before his death in the 1950s, and his critical work defeating the Nazis» Enigma encryption device.
Benedict Cumberbatch leads the film as Turing with a fine performance, and stars opposite Keira Knightley playing a female companion of Turing, alongside talents like Matthew Goode and Mark Strong.
Certainly, one's initial impression of Turing (Benedict Cumberbatch) is of a man blithely unconcerned with others» opinions.
The arrest is used as primarily a framing device to allow for narration and, ultimately, the tragic ending of Turing's life.
Three decades ago, when playwright Hugh Whitemore decided to fashion a drama from the life of British mathematician Alan Turing, the most notable aspect of Turing's personal life was his homosexuality.
Though it's unclear from the trailer, the film will also delve into the more tragic, non-Nazi-fighting aspects of Turing's life.
The third part of Turing's life explored here is his time at boarding school (awkwardly transitioned to with an on - the - nose line of dialogue).
Some of the best scenes are of Turing's confrontations with a Royal Navy Commander (perfectly played by Charles Dance), and of course, the critical moments with the other members of his code - breaking team (including Matthew Goode and Keira Knightley).
We see flashbacks of Turing's early years when at boarding school where he fell for a boy named Christopher, who introduced him to the art of cryptography, as well as glimpses of his final years, pre-conviction, as he sits in an interrogation room with a detective who suspects high treason rather than homosexuality.
The narrative framework, however, is grounded in scenes of Turing's persecution as a gay man.
The glossing - up of the story is excusable if one allows that a dourly realist approach would likely alienate multiplex audiences hitherto unaware of Turing's achievement — not least as the father of the digital computer — and his unforgivable destruction.
We're to simply trust the gasps and awestruck looks of those surrounding him of the genius of Turing, watching the gears turn away on his big mechanism while needless movie obstacles are brought up in order to create narrative tension, only to be (inevitably) resolved by some wry comment and a stiff upper lip.
After tracing how the discoveries of Turing's World War II decoding machine led to the modern computer, Cumberbatch clarified that the Morten Tyldum - directed film «is not a period drama» but is «utterly relevant» now because of its discussion of Joan Clarke's (Keira Knightley) plight in a male - dominated workplace, as well as Turing's secret homosexual status, for which he was punished by the British government and eventually triggered his suicide.
While the «modified» facts may raise an eyebrow and / or finger, The Imitation Game makes the «legend» of Turing abundantly clear: he was a flawed, courageous, ingenious individual who served a society that did not serve him or «his kind»....
Moore's non-linear script plays out like a puzzle in itself as it tries to solve the mysteries of Turing's life as each section of the story unfolds.
Through three separate timelines, it is first and foremost a biopic of Turing - his unhappy childhood at boarding school in the 1920s, his efforts to break the Nazi enigma code at Bletchley Park in the 1940s, and the investigation in to his homosexual behaviour in the 1950s - when such things were still a crime.
The final language that accompanies the credits leaves you with that searing image engrained in you that despite all of Turing's accomplishments his life ended in a horrible and unjust way.
As the subject of a Turing test between her creator, Nathan Bateman (Isaac) and his employee Caleb Smith (Gleeson), Ava is not only alluringly beautiful, but sympathetic, misunderstood, and for all intents and purposes, human.
Hell, there's a reference to the story of Talos hidden within one of The Turing Test's optional chambers.
Lauded by Winston Churchill as being the man who made the greatest single contribution to the war effort, the film is both a celebration of Turing's life and an infuriating look at the circumstances that turned him from a hero into a pariah.
With Queen Elizabeth II's pardon of Turing only two years prior in 2013, perhaps it was too much to expect from The Imitation Game to do much more than simply admit that yes, Alan Turing was an important man that was gay.
Yet the horrific circumstances of his chemical castration and the very real realities of his life as a gay man are sidestepped by the faux thriller set - up of the film, a device that conveniently allows a heterosexual writer like Moore (who's Oscar acceptance speech granted us insight into how his version of Turing lacks any on - screen interiority as a gay man) to touch upon the subject as a clichéd trope.
The elegiac use of the film's title, then, can inadvertently be the game administered as a test as concerns this portrayal of Turing — by the final frames, we have a mere gasp of understanding what his life was like, a rough, nobly hewn composite from a perspective either too ignorant or too uneasy to deal with the realities of those historically treated as sexual criminals.
In effect, much of Turing's gay life is completely washed over.
I was not one of A Beautiful Mind's historical accuracy Nazis, who used the film's marginalization of the real John Nash as a way to bash the film (for my money, it was the horrid screenplay and direction that made it such a painful film to watch, not its artistic rewriting of history), though the erasing of Turing in Enigma is rather distressing.
Turing provided an influential formalisation of the concept of the algorithm and computation with the Turing machine, formulating the now widely accepted «Turing» version of the Church - Turing thesis, namely that any practical computing model has either the equivalent or a subset of the capabilities of a Turing machine.
-- calls up the essential problem of Turing's thought experiment.
It centres on Tom Jericho, a brilliant student of Turing, who breaks one of the toughest ciphers, only to break himself after the end of a brief affair with a woman at BP.
This is a tall story to say the least; and the rapid telling of this crucial episode makes too light of the content of Turing's thesis.
Jacob Aron says that if one of the Turing machines simulated by Adam Yedidia and Scott Aaronson halts, it would prove the set of axioms of mathematics called ZFC to be inconsistent, but mathematicians wouldn't be too panicked because «they could simply shift to a slightly stronger set of axioms» (14 May, p 9).
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