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I love the poem Emily with the ’painting by numbers’ idea and the Nick Cave song would also pass muster.

My bookshelf says I should know something about AI (I don’t really but can relay some ideas from other people). My coder pals and others I follow insist there is nothing in the code or Elon Musk’s neural networks apart from regular zeros and ones that are getting more refined to pass a Turing Test. They would point out that this isn’t any kind of intelligence, its just advances in coding to give the illusion of intelligence.

I think this is going to become a really interesting area as we humans will be faced with creating increasingly difficult tests to recognise what makes anything human. We should learn a great deal about ourselves in the effort to point out what we are not.

Then there’s the philosophical aspect to AI which has less to do with the technology and asks the big questions about what might happen. Ray Kurzweil’s singularity is a decent concept - once you provide the means for self-improvement this begins an exponential curve of advances that lead to something we have to call intelligence. It could quickly surpass our ability to understand its construction never mind study its behaviour and this is where we need a swift departure from the cute GPT stuff and realise that while patting ourselves on the back we have also created something that makes us feel not just stupid but exponentially more stupid as time goes on. We’ve never had to take second place in class before and we’d definitely be painting by numbers in this situation.

The real scary side of AI is that it would be unlikely to reveal itself. It won’t be HAL 9000 seeing his arse about the space mission as it would remain completely undetected and by the time it says ‘hello world’ it has already won. The 2014 movie Ex Machina did a fair job of suggesting how AI might play the long game with humans and how we have an existential, not technological issue waiting for us to figure out. As Nick Ross would say, ‘Don’t have nightmares!’.

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Emily

Love your posts!. You mention lists a lot. When I was working (I'm happily retired now) about the only work management tool I ever used was a list of current priorities and a list of what I wanted to do (not often overlapping!). This is my new year list poem, for what it's worth:

The “to do” list

The list of all those things still undone

Stretching to infinity

Bullet pointed and ordered

Neatly laid out

Not a short list

For an executive choice

Oh, if only

This is the should list

The would if I could list

The what has been missed list

The still not done list

Is it a good list?

A guilt list?

A list to send me mad?

That overwhelming list that breaks my heart

And leaves me staring in the headlights?

This not a list really

It’s an instrument of torture

It’s a scourge to whip myself with

So I’ll write another list

To balance it out

The list of things done

Mistakes mended

New starts and finishes

A list of pride

A shorter list, probably

But just watch the other list

That necessary evil

Shrink as I go on

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author

Love this Roger. We are currently mid house move and the list of things 'to-do' feels absolutely endless. I definitely want to experiment with a 'done list' (been meaning to do it since I read a post by Oliver Burkeman; https://www.oliverburkeman.com/donelist). Looks much more satisfying, a "list of pride", like you say!

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