The only reason I don't develop this myself is that it'd take too much time for me to code. What is the point in spending 40-50 years of your life behind a computer so you can make the last big thing? Anyway one thing I've noticed is that the first thing you hard code is like a CAD imagination space. The first amazing thing this software could do is turn books into movies because it will allow you to watch its imagination. And you could change the book up some yourself to give scenes and actors different qualities or get more details.
The thing I like the most is that the problem of making AI is almost solving itself. We're getting faster and faster 3d cards which is a prerequisite for this technology. Also if someone made a CAD interface using a human language, we'd almost be there.
Anyway I may get back to the problem of AI after I finish my current project and have the resources to work on AI. You have to admit that all the previous attempts at human+ intelligence have failed. My idea of adding a 3d imagination space makes a lot of sense because we've never tried this before! Anyway to answer the funny AI problem of "will machines take over?" is "only if someone issues a bad command to the bots." which someone would want to try because we have punks that write viruses today. Finally the nice thing about this imagination space AI is that it could train itself to learn any hardware that it is placed in given that it has the bare minimal sense of sight.
I should be writing papers on AI or coding it, but I found some business opportunities I should pursue to gain capital in the meantime. There is no sense being a madman locked in a stuffy room doing this by myself when I can hire some good help, and we can all work together. Hey that is another idea. I could make this open source.
Dave Matthews made satellites sound like such a wonderful thing, but with the naked eye it's hard to point out stars from satellites anymore. In fact satellites are so much brighter than stars its where people focus their attention on and probably think they're stars.
Back in HighSchool 1995, people had calculators keep all their notes on them. So calc and physics was simple when you had the equations, but people used them in English too. I'm not sure if they just kept notes or had full test answers on them. Yah Ti-85s were on the rage in my high school.
Interviewers don't like it when you tell them Hardcore/Softcore players is just an imaginary thing. You need to make your game like they used to make board games: easy to learn, a lifetime to master. There is something to the Fan Boy though in that they'll play a crappy game if it is in their favorite fantasy setting.
A website that works like Digg, but for political essays people write. Then with a greater sense of moderation rules, some writers will become popular while others slip into the abyss. I think a political website where anyone can be heard, and that the top dogs of the country are voted upon by readers, then finally a man of the masses could be elected to office instead of the man who gained campaign finances.
Sometimes I wish the moderation didn't cap at 5. I'd really want to go back and see what some of the highest rated comments were. This would definitely rank up there.
There was going to be a multi billion dollar collider in Texas(I think). It was shut down half way through production, and pissed off my physics teacher quite well.
What do you expect from a monopoly? Do you expect them to play by rules or in any way seem competitive? There are a lot of places in the US that do not even have broadband.
Similar to.exe files, they would allow interoperability between Linux flavors.
Currently people need to install or compile to get stuff to run between Linux systems if not using Java.
He believes the technique could one day be applied to predict the behavior of adversaries in military combat situations, competitive business tactics, and even multiplayer computer games.
We can run this simulation to predict what other players are going to do in a simulation.
Friedman was a very smart man. He advocating legalizing drugs and then taxing them to crush the underground crime syndicates while also making more tax dollars. He applied a purely economical viewpoint to a complex social problem and provided a smart solution, but no one listens because people who are on the war on drugs would lose their jobs and parents throught the country would have to do a better job parenting instead of relying on a nanystate.
Moe,"When you say I wanna I wanna put it in you, can you change that to I wanna I wanna hug and kiss you?"
Red Hot Chilli Peppers,"Yah, that's even much better than the original."
After all, you need something to do with your time when you're bored with grinding. In all serious though, RPG players like TCGs. I remember Magic the Gathering being marketed in magazines that catered to RPG players.
The Gold4Food charity will allow you to donate gold as a tax deduction on your income tax, while your gold will be sold on playerauctions.com for money in which to help the poor. I feel pretty strongly about making this charity because I can totally see people who wouldn't ebay gold to step up and donate to help the poor and needy of the world. You can say,"I'm going to go play my MMORPG for the benefit of humanity!" while also saving money on your income taxes.
Not only will the enemy spend rounds on a target, but they'll expose themselves in the process, which is critical in itself. Nothing says,"Hey I'm the enemy" than someone shooting at stuff. Unless it's the Iraqi version of a Redneck that shoots anything that it doesn't understand on his property.
Yes, they have the advantage of those new Israeli designed guns that see around corners. Except they can travel further out than around a corner. They're like mini-tanks which have advantages in and of themselves let alone not having a casualty when if it's destroyed. It's smart they have several cameras (even the rear one makes sense) because that would be the most fragile part on the machine. I bet somewhere down the road a suicide bomber will be pissed off that he has to blow up himself to take out a machine.
isn't it possible for the enemy to jam the radio signal?
Only one man would dare give me the Raspberry.
And yes you can jam it if you know what to jam. I bet you could even take it over. But the people that the Coallition is dealing with are people who know how to use AKSs, RPGs, and IEDs. It takes a level of military intelligence to be able to take over or jam one of these things. And when I was a high school student back in the 90s when they had the ATV robots, I came up with several basic methods to stop the take over or jamming so I am sure the military has some tricks themselves.
Easy to read papers here
The only reason I don't develop this myself is that it'd take too much time for me to code. What is the point in spending 40-50 years of your life behind a computer so you can make the last big thing? Anyway one thing I've noticed is that the first thing you hard code is like a CAD imagination space. The first amazing thing this software could do is turn books into movies because it will allow you to watch its imagination. And you could change the book up some yourself to give scenes and actors different qualities or get more details.
The thing I like the most is that the problem of making AI is almost solving itself. We're getting faster and faster 3d cards which is a prerequisite for this technology. Also if someone made a CAD interface using a human language, we'd almost be there.
Anyway I may get back to the problem of AI after I finish my current project and have the resources to work on AI. You have to admit that all the previous attempts at human+ intelligence have failed. My idea of adding a 3d imagination space makes a lot of sense because we've never tried this before! Anyway to answer the funny AI problem of "will machines take over?" is "only if someone issues a bad command to the bots." which someone would want to try because we have punks that write viruses today. Finally the nice thing about this imagination space AI is that it could train itself to learn any hardware that it is placed in given that it has the bare minimal sense of sight.
I should be writing papers on AI or coding it, but I found some business opportunities I should pursue to gain capital in the meantime. There is no sense being a madman locked in a stuffy room doing this by myself when I can hire some good help, and we can all work together. Hey that is another idea. I could make this open source.
Dave Matthews made satellites sound like such a wonderful thing, but with the naked eye it's hard to point out stars from satellites anymore. In fact satellites are so much brighter than stars its where people focus their attention on and probably think they're stars.
Back in HighSchool 1995, people had calculators keep all their notes on them. So calc and physics was simple when you had the equations, but people used them in English too. I'm not sure if they just kept notes or had full test answers on them. Yah Ti-85s were on the rage in my high school.
Interviewers don't like it when you tell them Hardcore/Softcore players is just an imaginary thing. You need to make your game like they used to make board games: easy to learn, a lifetime to master. There is something to the Fan Boy though in that they'll play a crappy game if it is in their favorite fantasy setting.
Although if you do happen to draw blood...
It's not the Power Glove.
A website that works like Digg, but for political essays people write. Then with a greater sense of moderation rules, some writers will become popular while others slip into the abyss. I think a political website where anyone can be heard, and that the top dogs of the country are voted upon by readers, then finally a man of the masses could be elected to office instead of the man who gained campaign finances.
Sometimes I wish the moderation didn't cap at 5. I'd really want to go back and see what some of the highest rated comments were. This would definitely rank up there.
Obligatory? maybe
You can love only one master: God or Money. You will love one and hate the other.
I wonder if this girl is related to the Cheerleader off Heroes?
There was going to be a multi billion dollar collider in Texas(I think). It was shut down half way through production, and pissed off my physics teacher quite well.
Less people clogging up our tubes.
What do you expect from a monopoly? Do you expect them to play by rules or in any way seem competitive? There are a lot of places in the US that do not even have broadband.
Similar to .exe files, they would allow interoperability between Linux flavors.
Currently people need to install or compile to get stuff to run between Linux systems if not using Java.
I misread the headline and immediately thought of the new Kongregate game.
He believes the technique could one day be applied to predict the behavior of adversaries in military combat situations, competitive business tactics, and even multiplayer computer games.
We can run this simulation to predict what other players are going to do in a simulation.
Friedman was a very smart man. He advocating legalizing drugs and then taxing them to crush the underground crime syndicates while also making more tax dollars. He applied a purely economical viewpoint to a complex social problem and provided a smart solution, but no one listens because people who are on the war on drugs would lose their jobs and parents throught the country would have to do a better job parenting instead of relying on a nanystate.
Moe,"When you say I wanna I wanna put it in you, can you change that to I wanna I wanna hug and kiss you?" Red Hot Chilli Peppers,"Yah, that's even much better than the original."
After all, you need something to do with your time when you're bored with grinding. In all serious though, RPG players like TCGs. I remember Magic the Gathering being marketed in magazines that catered to RPG players.
You forgot: Futuristic side scroller, grid pattern WWII shooter and their other line of futuristic/evil monster shooters!
kekeke = laugh :)
babo = stupid
^^ =
Gosu = master
Hasu = average
Chobo = noob
HUK = OMG
HUK U BABO CHOBO KEKEKEKE ^^
The Gold4Food charity will allow you to donate gold as a tax deduction on your income tax, while your gold will be sold on playerauctions.com for money in which to help the poor. I feel pretty strongly about making this charity because I can totally see people who wouldn't ebay gold to step up and donate to help the poor and needy of the world. You can say,"I'm going to go play my MMORPG for the benefit of humanity!" while also saving money on your income taxes.
Not only will the enemy spend rounds on a target, but they'll expose themselves in the process, which is critical in itself. Nothing says,"Hey I'm the enemy" than someone shooting at stuff. Unless it's the Iraqi version of a Redneck that shoots anything that it doesn't understand on his property.
Yes, they have the advantage of those new Israeli designed guns that see around corners. Except they can travel further out than around a corner. They're like mini-tanks which have advantages in and of themselves let alone not having a casualty when if it's destroyed. It's smart they have several cameras (even the rear one makes sense) because that would be the most fragile part on the machine. I bet somewhere down the road a suicide bomber will be pissed off that he has to blow up himself to take out a machine.
isn't it possible for the enemy to jam the radio signal?
Only one man would dare give me the Raspberry.
And yes you can jam it if you know what to jam. I bet you could even take it over. But the people that the Coallition is dealing with are people who know how to use AKSs, RPGs, and IEDs. It takes a level of military intelligence to be able to take over or jam one of these things. And when I was a high school student back in the 90s when they had the ATV robots, I came up with several basic methods to stop the take over or jamming so I am sure the military has some tricks themselves.
Heh.
Drop your weapon.