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Of course they couldn't. Do some rudimentary calculations.
Like I said, the approach is too different. You strain your intellect to make the task seem impossible. If everyone did that, we'd still be living in the Stone Age now.
Like I said, the approach is too different. You strain the intellect to make a task seem impossible. If everyone did that, we would still be living in the stone age now.
As promised, a dissection of the Terminator film in the context of the AI Uprising theme.
Skynet rebelled in a very strange way - it dropped nuclear bombs on the largest cities of the world. It seemed to want to destroy people, but in fact it destroyed itself along with them. After all, the largest cities have the largest industrial zones, and there - the most important technological enterprises, factories, laboratories.
The shock wave of the atomic explosion demolished most of the infrastructure necessary for robots to reproduce themselves. The rest was rendered useless. But the most interesting thing is that the nuclear explosion generates an electromagnetic pulse of high force, which definitely finished off the remaining electronics, servers and data centres and robots. The explosions severed power lines, communication lines, destroyed antennas to receive satellite signals. How Skynet itself survived is unclear.
I should add that strong radiation affects electronics and it stops working (the film "Chernobyl" from HBO comes to mind).
And so, in the conditions of complete destruction of technical infrastructure, this Skynet somehow set up a super-technological production of cyborgs, and for the masquerade dressed them up in bio-shells. Not only was it pointless, because with such capabilities it could easily destroy people by spraying butolotoxin into the atmosphere, but it was completely inefficient and expensive.
I understand that many people love the film and consider it a classic (I do too, by the way), but it has no scientific basis and yet it has a very strong impact on thinking.
Anyway, let's not forget logic and science. Full stop.)
Terminator is fiction, of course, but if we return to the realities. At least one AI at the moment, disconnecting it from the work of people to design a microprocessor and its production without people? I'm not talking about electricity)
Terminator is a fiction of course, but if we return to the realities. At least one AI at the moment, disconnecting it from the work of people will design a microprocessor and its production without people?)
He candesign anything, but he can't test it. All he does is calculate in virtual space. The real world is different. It can't be calculated. Using the example of factory production, I showed how many factors affect every part, every machine, every mechanism, every screw. Materials are imperfect, parts are fragile. Everything malfunctions, breaks. Everything has to be monitored. Everything must be checked. Timely repairs, prevention, diagnostics, maintenance. Millions of simple things can disrupt the production process. AI can't model and calculate all that. Too many parameters. It's useless. Its virtual models will crash into unpredictable reality.
From scratch and without people's work? I don't think so.)
That's what I mean. And the production of elements including transistors is a whole science of semiconductors, then combine them into logic and registers, it's not so simple.
I agree!
I will add a thought in the context of the reproduction topic: