MachineMachine /stream - search for bye https://machinemachine.net/stream/feed en-us http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss LifePress therourke@gmail.com <![CDATA[Watching Neural Networks Learn]]> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TkwXa7Cvfr8

A video about neural networks, function approximation, machine learning, and mathematical building blocks. Dennis Nedry did nothing wrong. This is a submission for #SoME3

My Links Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/emergentgarden Discord: https://discord.gg/ZsrAAByEnr

Links and Content: On Mathematical Maturity, Thomas Garrity: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zHU1xH6Ogs4 Earth Rotation Loop: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aiQdLP2mBJE Modeling Shell Surfaces: https://www.geogebra.org/m/xtv7zpn5 Fourier Features Paper: https://arxiv.org/abs/2006.10739 Code for mandelbrot/image approximations: https://github.com/MaxRobinsonTheGreat/mandelbrotnn Code for line/surface approximations: https://github.com/MaxRobinsonTheGreat/ManimApproximations

Music: https://youtube.com/@acolyte-compositions

Timestamps (0:00) Functions Describe the World (3:15) Neural Architecture (5:35) Higher Dimensions (11:55) Taylor Series (15:20) Fourier Series (21:25) The Real World (24:32) An Open Challenge

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Thu, 17 Aug 2023 06:00:33 -0700 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TkwXa7Cvfr8
<![CDATA[I gave my microwave a soul with AI and it tried to kill me]]> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C1G5b_2PYj0

Share this so it isn't my last episode. Join our Discord! https://discord.gg/SrDAqQzQ

✳ PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/user?u=711561 ✳ Twitter: http://twitter.com/_lucasrizzotto ✳ Facebook: http://facebook.com/lucasrizzotto ✳ Instagram: http://instagram.com/_lucasrizzotto ✳ Website: http://lucasrizzotto.com]

Thanks for the wild ride, friends. This one was a joy (and hell) to make. Make sure you follow me closely on social media - got some big announcements to make this week!

I really appreciate you all, specially those of you who dig deep into the description to find hidden bits like this :)

This channel never really blew up the way I thought it would but it brought me close with some of the most passionate people I've ever seen and I'll always be eternally grateful.

Love ya,

Swooty McBooty

Special thanks to: Austin Beaulier (for helping me get the epic smooth shots in the memories sequence) Cix Liv (for all his expert insight as Dimitri) Max Noir (for dealing with all the bs of making this video for almost a year lmao) Stephen Hodgson (for helping out hugely with GPT-3 code)

Chapters!

00:00 - Teaser 00:38 - Introduction 02:35 - Jeff Bezos' Tale 04:22 - The Brain Transplant 05:07 - GIANT METAL DEATH MACHINES 06:00 - Okay Let Me Explain GPT-3 For Real Now lol 07:10 - Writing Fake Memories 09:30 - PLOT TWIST! An Old Friend 11:20 - Ad-Break 12:24 - The Conversation Begins 13:36 - Microwave Gets Personal 14:45 - Microwave Politics 15:43 - Oh God He Likes Hitler 16:18 - Dramatic Question Montage 19:34 - Unintended Consequences 20:19 - Microwave PTSD Montage 21:12 - The Murder Attempt 23:04 - Lucas Moves Far Away... 23:33 - ... To Uganda LOL 24:22 - Haunted By Nightmares 24:53 - Talking to an Expert 26:34 - Is Magnetron Fake? 27:06 - The Final Conversation 30:12 - Goodbye, Magnetron 31:34 - Is it over? 32:15 - Outro / Sad Announcements 34:20 - Goodbyes & Reminiscing

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Sun, 06 Mar 2022 10:00:11 -0800 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C1G5b_2PYj0
<![CDATA[Goodbye Uncanny Valley]]> https://vimeo.com/237568588

It’s 2017 and computer graphics have conquered the Uncanny Valley, that strange place where things are almost real... but not quite. After decades of innovation, we’re at the point where we can conjure just about anything with software. The battle for photoreal CGI has been won, so the question is... what happens now? CREDITS: Written and animated by Alan Warburton with the support of Tom Pounder and Wieden + Kennedy. Music by Cool 3D World (cool3dworld.com/) Special thanks to: Leanne Redfern, Nico Engelbrecht, Iain Tait, Indiana Matine, Katrina Sluis, David Surman, Jacob Gaboury and Daniel Rourke. Animated backgrounds generously provided by: • Quixel (quixel.se/) • Katarina Markovic (youtube.com/channel/UCcr4QTtAK9N96pf_Z_zVqWg) • Roman Senko (vimeo.com/rendan) Featuring work by: • Al and Al (alandal.co.uk/) • Albert Omoss (omoss.io/) • Alex McLeod (alxclub.com/) • Barry Doupe (barrydoupe.ca/) • Claudia Hart (claudiahart.com/) • Cool 3D World (cool3dworld.com/) • Dave Fothergill (vimeo.com/davefothergillvfx) • Dave Stewart (vimeo.com/davegrafix) • Drages Animation (youtube.com/user/drakhean) • El Popo Sangre (vimeo.com/elpoposangre) • Eva Papamargariti (evapapamargariti.tumblr.com/) • Filip Tarczewski (vimeo.com/ftarczewski) • Geoffrey Lillemon (geoffreylillemon.com/website/) • Jacolby Satterwhite (jacolby.com/home.html) • Jesse Kanda (jessekanda.com/) • John Butler (vimeo.com/user3946359) • Jonathan Monaghan (jonmonaghan.com/) • Jun Seo Hahm (vimeo.com/junseohahm) • Kathleen Daniel (duh-real.com/) • Katie Torn (katietorn.com/index.html) • Kim Laughton (kimlaughton.tumblr.com/) • Kouhei Nakama (kouheinakama.com/) • LuYang (luyang.asia/) • Mike Pelletier (mikepelletier.net/) • Nic Hamilton (nichamilton.info/) • Pussykrew (hybrid-universe-emulation.net/) • Rick Silva (ricksilva.net/) • Sanatorios (instagram.com/sanatorios/)Cast: Alan WarburtonTags: CGI, computer graphics, uncanny valley, technology, software, art, film, history, catmull, pixar, ilm, VFX, animation, interstellar, Nolan, avengers, experimental, economy and cool3dworld

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Mon, 16 Oct 2017 16:03:18 -0700 https://vimeo.com/237568588
<![CDATA[Goodbye, Turing Test; Bring on the Turing Decathlon - Facts So Romantic - Nautilus]]> http://nautil.us/blog/goodbye-turing-test-bring-on-the-turing-decathlon

How many researchers does it take to change a test of artificial intelligence? Sixty-five years ago, famed mathematician and WWII code-breaker Alan Turing unveiled the “Imitation Game,” a playful scenario designed to test a computer’s ability to disguise itself as a human agent.

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Tue, 10 Feb 2015 04:11:56 -0800 http://nautil.us/blog/goodbye-turing-test-bring-on-the-turing-decathlon
<![CDATA[Humanities in the Digital Age]]> http://mitworld.mit.edu/video/852

Reports of the demise of the humanities are exaggerated, suggest these panelists, but there may be reason to fear its loss of relevance. Three scholars whose work touches a variety of disciplines and with wide knowledge of the worlds of academia and publishing ponder the meaning and mission of the humanities in the digital age. Getting a handle on the term itself proves somewhat elusive. Alison Byerly invokes those fields involved with “pondering the deep questions of humanity,” such as languages, the arts, literature, philosophy and religion. Steven Pinker boils it down to “the study of the products of the human mind.” Moderator David Thorburn wonders if the humanities are those endeavors that rely on interpretive rather than empirical research, but both panelists vigorously make the case that the liberal arts offer increasing opportunities for data-based analysis.

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Sun, 06 Mar 2011 12:02:02 -0800 http://mitworld.mit.edu/video/852
<![CDATA[Goodbye to the Graphosphere]]> http://nplusonemag.com/goodbye-to-the-graphosphere

For half a millennium, across continents and civilizations, the human readership did almost nothing but grow and consolidate itself. Constantly more people in more and more places could read, and could read more books more cheaply, with increasing ease. And not only were they able to do this, but they chose to. It would be astonishing to learn, if some retrospective survey could be carried out, that hours per head spent reading didn’t increase across all capitalist or otherwise modernizing countries (most Communist regimes having been energetic promoters of literacy) until at least the middle of the past century.

A few years ago, the French thinker Régis Debray published a brilliant and suggestive essay placing the rise and decline of socialist movements within this frame of ever-greater literacy. The question of socialism can be bracketed for now. More relevant, for the future of reading in general and novel-reading in particular, is Debray’s periodization scheme, in which an immemo

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Sat, 17 Jul 2010 12:36:00 -0700 http://nplusonemag.com/goodbye-to-the-graphosphere
<![CDATA[Spooky Signals from the Future Telling Us to Cancel the LHC!]]> http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/cosmicvariance/2009/10/14/spooky-signals-from-the-future-telling-us-to-cancel-the-lhc/

A recent essay in the New York Times by Dennis Overbye has managed to attract quite a bit of attention around the internets — most of it not very positive. It concerns a recent paper by Holger Nielsen and Masao Ninomiya (and some earlier work) discussing a seemingly crazy-sounding proposal — that we should randomly choose a card from a million-card deck and, on the basis of which card we get, decide whether to go forward with the Large Hadron Collider. Responses have ranged from eye-rolling and heavy sighs to cries of outrage, clutching at pearls, and grim warnings that the postmodernists have finally infiltrated the scientific/journalistic establishment, this could be the straw that breaks the back of the Enlightenment camel, and worse.

Since I am quoted (in a rather non-committal way) in the essay, it’s my responsibility to dig into the papers and report back. And my message is: relax! Western civilization will survive. The theory is undeniably crazy — but not crackpot, which is a d

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Thu, 15 Oct 2009 08:13:00 -0700 http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/cosmicvariance/2009/10/14/spooky-signals-from-the-future-telling-us-to-cancel-the-lhc/