Zeichick’s Take: Artificial Nostalgia



Email    print   
December 14, 2009 —  (Page 1 of 2)
Oh, to have worked or studied at SAIL back in the day. Of course, “in the day” was in the 1970s and early 1980s, when the Stanford Artificial Intelligence Laboratory was in its prime, long before AI became shorthand for “any technology that’s 20 years in the future—and always will be.”

When SAIL was at the cusp of computer science, as detailed in a recent essay in the New York Times, many researchers truly believed that artificial intelligence was solvable. Creating computers that would think—not merely follow algorithms—was a hard problem, to be sure. But not an impossible dream. The idea that you’d have a computer that would learn how to play chess, and be able to converse with humans well enough to pass the Turing Test, seemed to be a matter of just a few more transistors, a little more memory, choosing the right programming language and writing some better algorithms.

Hard, but solvable.

Optimism as Artificial Intelligence Pioneers Reunite,” written by John Markoff, talks about those glory days when John McCarthy and his team thought that a thinking machine would only take a decade to build. However, as the essay describes, by the mid-1980s, AI seemed further from creating artificial intelligence than ever before.

My own involvement in artificial intelligence comes from about that time. I studied AI a little, and from 1990–1992 I served as editor of AI Expert Magazine. (The publication is now gone, alas, but Google found my old writer’s guidelines squirreled away at Carnegie-Mellon Univ. Talk about a flashback!)

Editing AI Expert was a dream job: getting to hang out with the best and brightest in the AI community, and working with many brilliant computer science researchers as authors, attending conferences, and learning from a blue-ribbon advisory board. Ahh, nirvana.

What’s interesting is that many so-called “technologies” that we covered in AI Expert never became part of machine intelligence or artificial intelligence, but instead became part of the mainstream. Expert systems, for example, are a core part of many search engines and data mining systems. Object-oriented programming evolved out of AI. Virtual reality originated in AI research. Natural language processing. Object databases. Vision processing and image recognition. Those are all just software development today.



Related Search Term(s): artificial intelligence

Pages 1 2 


Share this link: http://sdt.bz/33984
 
Most Read Latest News Blog Resources

Add comment


Name*
Email*  
Country     


  • Comment
Loading




close
NEXT ARTICLE
Microsoft pivots toward business intelligence
The goal is to make business intelligence accessible "to the masses" Read More...
 
 
 
 
News on Monday
more>>
SharePoint Tech Report
more>>


   

 
 

Download Current Issue
FEBRUARY 2012 PDF ISSUE

Need Back Issues?
DOWNLOAD HERE

Want to subscribe?


 
blogs tab
Are you at risk for burnout?
Burnout is a severe problem and it can strike at any time. Here's how to tell if you are nearing the edge.
02/09/2012 02:16 PM EST

Agility, mom, and apple pie
If we're to evaluate the state-of-the-art in software development, we should start with the values espoused in the Agile Manifesto.
02/07/2012 11:57 AM EST

RIM woos developers with free tablet
How do you get more apps ported to the BlackBerry PlayBook? By giving every developer a free tablet, of course!
02/04/2012 01:57 PM EST

GitHire: Use Headhunters to Find Your Perfect Programmer
Are you a hiring manager tired of scouring the job boards? Check out this new service that will find 5 people interested in your jobs.
02/03/2012 12:17 PM EST

Facebook claims hacker cred
Facebook's SEC S-1 filing form includes a short essay on the Hacker Way by Mark Zuckerberg himself.
02/02/2012 08:26 AM EST

Ryan Dahl steps down
Ryan Dahl, creator of Node.js, steps back from his position as gatekeeper for the project.
02/01/2012 04:58 PM EST

 
Events calendar tab
2/13/2012 to 2/16/2012
Santa Clara
TechWeb

2/26/2012 to 2/29/2012
San Francisco
BZ Media

2/27/2012 to 3/2/2012
San Francisco
RSA

3/4/2012 to 3/7/2012
Las Vegas
IBM Tivoli

3/5/2012 to 3/9/2012
San Francisco
TechWeb