Let's say there are N issues of importance (Iraq, drug war, taxation, right to self-defense, etc.) and each has a minimum of two possible distinct stances. That puts the number of positions you can take on these issues at *at least* 2^N
Only if all issues are independent of one another.
If few people "catch on" to your math theories, consider that it might be because they're inaccurate rather than of a level of genius beyond everyone else.
So, could this be the first step towards 3D screens? Like lenticular printing, your left eye sees an image from one angle and the right eye sees another.
When presented with a new game, the first thing you do is learn how to play. The second thing is to learn the best strategy to win. This is just concerned with the first part and that's the novelty - looking at human actions and learning what they're doing, not necessarily how to beat them.
It can learn games other than RPS. The point is that you give no information about what you're playing at all - just give it the video and the other inputs coming from the players and it tries to work out what's going on from scratch.
Let's say there are N issues of importance (Iraq, drug war, taxation, right to self-defense, etc.) and each has a minimum of two possible distinct stances. That puts the number of positions you can take on these issues at *at least* 2^N Only if all issues are independent of one another. If few people "catch on" to your math theories, consider that it might be because they're inaccurate rather than of a level of genius beyond everyone else.
So, could this be the first step towards 3D screens? Like lenticular printing, your left eye sees an image from one angle and the right eye sees another.
When presented with a new game, the first thing you do is learn how to play. The second thing is to learn the best strategy to win. This is just concerned with the first part and that's the novelty - looking at human actions and learning what they're doing, not necessarily how to beat them.
It can learn games other than RPS. The point is that you give no information about what you're playing at all - just give it the video and the other inputs coming from the players and it tries to work out what's going on from scratch.
Well, it could just watch several people *pretending* to be intruders.