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Household Emergent Behavior?

Sam Pullara asks: "I got an IM from my Mom today telling me that she couldn't find her Roomba. It somehow had escaped the kitchen and she couldn't find it anywhere, all the doors that it could reach were shut and she checked under everything. She eventually found that it had gotten into a room and closed the door behind it. Once all household items are networked I wonder if a rich environment like a house will make strange behavior like this commonplace? Will the interactions between all the individual devices create something more than the sum of their parts?"

2 of 359 comments (clear)

  1. What's that saying? by Ruprecht+the+Monkeyb · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Never ascribe to intelligence what can be explained by mere randomness.

  2. Not just machines by Cappy+Red · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "As humans, personify almost all machines we come in close contact with."

    Humans personify almost everything they come into contact with. It doesn't have to be close contact either.

    One of Humanity's biggest curiosities is about humanity. It is perhaps the biggest. The question of humanity is the basis of almost all art. We study animals, and end up teaching dolphins how to use computers, and gorillas how to use sign language. We are constantly looking for the being that can explain us to us: a god, aliens, both, neither, some dude who lost himself on a mountain, and in recent history robots. Maybe if we can consciously build a sentient being from the ground up, we can learn why we are from it. Or maybe if it becomes sentient on its own, it can tell us what it was like, passing in that moment from the mundane into the sublime.

    If and when emergent behavior happens, it will be sometime possibly long after we call it emergent behavior. We want it to happen... maybe just to get a perspective that isn't human.

    *honk*

    --
    This is my sig. It's prescription, I swear. I need it for reading things... on the other side of things