James and Jimmy presented this project 22 years ago and I keep coming back to it. The Afterlife project: converting the decomposing body of a loved one into a dry cell battery. Incredible stuff.
https://t.co/gf0qctgM9y
If we increasingly rely on LLM's trained on existing words, structures and phrasing, how does language evolve? How are new words created? What's the future for slang, patois and jargon?
Many moons ago, my team at X worked on the design of a robotics platform for what became the Everyday Robots project. Today that same robot features in this great article in the New York Times. So fantastic to see this work still in use by @GoogleDeepMind. https://t.co/LRfAK6VI89
It’s worth considering here the huge cultural impact of Chris Cunningham’s video for Björk’s ‘All is Full of Love’. It’s also worth remembering that this was produced over a quarter of a century ago. https://t.co/SrC6coN8Cl
We still have a major cultural problem when it comes to representing machine intelligence in the media. These are the header images from four AI stories from major news outlets in my feed today.
That’s 200 days without crisps/chips, and I think I’ve broken their spell. It’s also 19 days since I quit candy/sweets, which is proving to be a more significant challenge.
A beautiful side effect of aging is that I now require reading glasses. Far from being annoying, these make the pages of a book crystal clear, and the rest of the room fades away into blurry nothingness. The feeling of focus is wonderful.
Google Photos knows where I’ve been (location tagging) and the kinds of things I like to do (image recognition).
I’m surprised it doesn’t make vacation recommendations.
I have now gone six months without eating crisps/chips. Honestly, it was much easier than I thought. Tomorrow I am also stopping candy/sweets, which I think will be considerably more difficult. Here goes…