My guess is that Yves Chauvin will get the 50%. He discovered the process in the 1960's and the two American's refined it to an exact quick, painless process.
So my question is, when does Google start becoming smart? Right now its got very basic AI, but imagine five years down the road from now...it could predict trends, markets, where you are going when you leave your house, how to attack nations...you know.. Skynet. I know thats a little farfetched, but the amount of computing power at Google's headquarters, and just having such a large device constantly searching the information web is kinda scary.
We basically have the same system running at the retail store im working for. basically its a three tier, basic, medium, and high-end. and as it was said in a previous post, most people who actually come into a retail store to buy a computer are either completly computer illiterate or they basically know the specs they are looking for. it'd help the beginners to start with, but would confuse the hell out of them in the long run once new levels are out and they start switching them up. i suppose its a good idea, but it has fatal flaws.
what is this world coming to? ID is not science. bleh...
My guess is that Yves Chauvin will get the 50%. He discovered the process in the 1960's and the two American's refined it to an exact quick, painless process.
So my question is, when does Google start becoming smart? Right now its got very basic AI, but imagine five years down the road from now...it could predict trends, markets, where you are going when you leave your house, how to attack nations...you know.. Skynet. I know thats a little farfetched, but the amount of computing power at Google's headquarters, and just having such a large device constantly searching the information web is kinda scary.
We basically have the same system running at the retail store im working for. basically its a three tier, basic, medium, and high-end. and as it was said in a previous post, most people who actually come into a retail store to buy a computer are either completly computer illiterate or they basically know the specs they are looking for. it'd help the beginners to start with, but would confuse the hell out of them in the long run once new levels are out and they start switching them up. i suppose its a good idea, but it has fatal flaws.