Fans preserve and emulate Sega’s extremely rare ‘80s “AI computer”arstechnica.comexternal-linkcross-posted to: retrocomputing@lemmy.sdf.org alyaza [they/she] ( @alyaza@beehaw.org ) MA TechnologyEnglish • 1 year ago message-square16arrow-up183
arrow-up183external-linkFans preserve and emulate Sega’s extremely rare ‘80s “AI computer”arstechnica.com alyaza [they/she] ( @alyaza@beehaw.org ) MA TechnologyEnglish • 1 year ago message-square16cross-posted to: retrocomputing@lemmy.sdf.org
minus-square jarfil ( @jarfil@beehaw.org ) linkfedilink3•1 year agoSame old story: anything a computer can do, is an “algorithm”; anything it can not yet do, is “AI”… 🙄
minus-square Helix 🧬 ( @Helix@feddit.de ) linkfedilinkEnglish1•1 year agoif you listen to marketing of companies using Machine Learning, AI can do everything right now.
minus-square jarfil ( @jarfil@beehaw.org ) linkfedilink1•1 year agoThat is correct, AI has always been able to do everything “right now in the future”. ML, NNs, GPT, etc. are all terms to distinguish the actual algorithms, from the abstract future goal of “AI”.
Same old story: anything a computer can do, is an “algorithm”; anything it can not yet do, is “AI”… 🙄
if you listen to marketing of companies using Machine Learning, AI can do everything right now.
That is correct, AI has always been able to do everything “right now in the future”. ML, NNs, GPT, etc. are all terms to distinguish the actual algorithms, from the abstract future goal of “AI”.