Sentences with phrase «what kind of intelligence»

The West is beginning to have an overdue debate about what kind of intelligence activity is legitimate for a 21st century democracy, and where red lines should be drawn.

Not exact matches

The postings didn't make it clear what kind of use Facebook wants to put the chips to other than the broad umbrella of artificial intelligence.
This kind of awareness and emotional intelligence is what gives people the courage to do crazy but brilliant things — like leave their well - paying job and start an online bookstore.
What the CEO of Austin, Texas - based global intelligence company Stratfor doesn't see on the near horizon are the kinds of breakthroughs that solve the world's most pressing needs and drive renewed economic growth.
«Investors have become increasingly concerned about what kind of growth, if any, they can count on for ESPN going forward,» Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Paul Sweeney told Bloomberg.
I refer to new ideas in physics, chemistry, physiology, philosophy, theology, all of which are pertinent to the religious significance of Darwinism.3 What many seem not to understand is that the crux of the religious issue is not between fundamentalism — which I recall no one whose intelligence I greatly admire defending — and evolution, but between two kinds of theism and two kinds of evolutionism.
Skills of every kind, particularly those of trained intelligence, are to be acquired as tools for the more efficient acquisition of what is desired.
On one hand, if all you want is some kind of recognition for how awesome you are at your particular skill or level of intelligence, then the only option is to be undeniably good at what you do.
and what kind of cause and intelligence can do such?
What kind of training is needed to prepare a core group for the task of reconnaissance and intelligence in the world?
Google declined to discuss what other kinds of tools it could build on the Patient Rescue platform — for instance by setting its artificial intelligences to work on huge volumes of data from millions of patients.
DataSift is new kind of search engine that uses crowdsourced human intelligence to answer vague, complex or visual questions, even when the users are not sure what they are searching for.
So you can imagine a kind of automated economy that isn't monetary, where people put in their needs, they make what they can, they get what they need, and that they organize it by computers or artificial intelligence
So in this issue Hanson follows that through to a conclusion coming up with tiny insect - like robots with greater than human level intelligence living by the billions in skyscrapers and sort of doing their virtual work at the equivalent of pennies per day and what this leads to, there are two different ideas about what this kind of economic runaway advancement would ultimately lead to.
And consciousness is kind of different from intelligence, but consciousness is what makes life meaningful for all of us.
More to the point, what Spielberg probably doesn't trust is the viewer's intelligence and humanity, meaning the real question is whether he thinks the kind of people who would go to a movie about Abraham Lincoln are morons.
That's kind of a scary thought, and maybe that is what drone Oscar Isaac's NATHAN to drink, that he couldn't balance empathy and shit - behaviour when crafting an intelligence... stray strands like this make Ex Machina an even better film than what comes out of a first brush with just «the story.»
It can never quite figure out what kind of film it wants to be, however, mixing deep thoughts about artificial intelligence (A.I.) with crazy drunken synchronized dancing (which, I will admit, was extremely fun to watch), and although it has fine cinematographic elements that are reminiscent of the best of Stanley Kubrick (slow tracking shots, some on steadicam), if one ponders the subject matter for more than a minute or two, it all seems very dumb.
In other words, contrary to Tough's assertion that «we have been focusing on the wrong skills and abilities in our children» (what he calls «the cognitive skills — the kind of intelligence that gets measured on IQ tests, including the abilities to recognize letters and words»), it would appear, especially for the poor in our inner cities, that we have not been focusing enough on those skills.
The power is having some augmented reality glasses, and these glasses have somehow that cognitive intelligence to tell the operator what screws they have to press, in what order they have to do a process... in the end, it comes to help, because the human being is fatigued or does not have their best day, and if you are doing some kind of delicate operation, having help, a counselor who is saying «First tighten the screw A, once it is closed, you go to B...»
What if we practiced full disclosure and acknowledged that there are many different kinds of intelligence, and that some can not be measured by conventional means?
Eventually, once technology and artificial intelligence (AI) catch up (which will be soon), personalized learning programs will also anticipate how learners desire to learn and what kind of content the need to learn from in the future, as they progress.
What we have learned to value in schooling is verbal and mathematical skills, and perhaps we have been excessive in the degree to which we value the kinds of intelligence that lead to high achievement in these competencies.
What Gardner also found is that there are physiological and specifically neurological bases for the different kinds of intelligence he identified — intelligences that collectively are essential for humanity and civilization, with some being emphasized by some cultures more than others.
because thats what your comments are - ugly piles of incoherent sh*t that lack any facts or intelligence of any kind.
In what police have described as the biggest operation of its kind, officers swooped on the offices of 20 binary options brokers in order to «review their compliance documents and gather intelligence on different types of investment fraud.»
It wonders about how far this kind of information and intelligence - building can go, before reminding us: «remember, you are what you like.
What's new, though, is a new kind of collective intelligence enabled by the Internet.
Because AGI [Artificial General Intelligence] safety is so under - researched, we're likely to find low - hanging fruit even in investigating basic questions like «What kind of prior probability distribution works best for formal agents in unknown environments?»
The intelligence agencies had all kinds of red flags about 9/11, but Bush never got any urgency from his top people, similarly they trumped up WMD with weak to no evidence because the higher ups knew that was what Cheney wanted to hear.
That kind of whirling action is what DARPA was after for a new drone that could be used for collecting military intelligence.
323 Lynn Vincentnathan: «what kind of alarm clock will it take to wake up people» It would take raising their intelligence and giving them degrees in physics.
I think I oftentimes when folks talk about Artificial Intelligence, they would like to think about it in terms of kind of like the machines versus the humans, and what do we remove.
Sharon D. Nelson: Well, interesting, you kind of answered my next question, so I think I'm going to reshape it a little bit because I do think a lot of lawyers are worried about Artificial Intelligence replacing their jobs, and from my own perspective, I think a certain amount of that fear is justified, but I do understand what you're saying and I've watched with considerable admiration as you've kind of turned your ship a little bit into a different harbor because originally it was called ROSS: The Super-Intelligent Attorney, and now, you have more shaped ROSS from the point of view of the lawyer as somebody that allows the lawyer to be more efficient, serve the client better, and to focus on something other than what you might call «the goat work» of the legal world, which we really don't want to do, and so how did you come to the realization that that was something that needed to be done?
Nutch and Lucene and some other projects now provide the background infrastructure that we need to generate a new kind of search engine, which relies on human intelligence to do what algorithms can not.
And so one of the things we're doing is we are kind of surfacing business intelligence for things like what's the estimated length from commencement to trial for this particular venue or what's the average length of a motion in this particular Los Angeles Superior Court, something like that.
This same kind of critical data snapshot is what a business intelligence dashboard is all about.
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