Technological advancements
- tarafarah7
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Re: Technological advancements
I couldn't agree with you more, Eryn! It's a constant debate in my mind on if developers are doing more good or more harm, when looking at the overall, big picture. I don't know!Eryn Bradshaw wrote: ↑01 Aug 2018, 12:40 I disagree, I think this technology is right around the corner. Just take a look at Sophia the Robot, granted she is scripted and programmed, but the aim is to get to the point where AI to be more self-thinking. But I think it's important for these people who are developing AI to stay morally good. At this point though, it's a race to see who can come up with actual AI.

- melissy370
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I totally agree with you, but then in most sci-fi movies I've seen, the problem arises when the slave robot don't want to be enslaved anymore. Then they evolve and become masters, and kill everyone.
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I absolutely agree. Technology is progressing so fast. We have facial recognition, machine learning, and "smart" everything from phones to home supplies. Having an autonomous AI isn't too far-flung.
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LOL, I loved the description of the old fashioned dial phone. 40 years is a long time for advancement, not so much for human life. The technology I would hate most are the mind control methods.Bianka Walter wrote: ↑01 Aug 2018, 14:35That's exactly what Eryn was saying. And I totally agree. I think that us 'normal' people down here on the ground would probably be quite shocked to learn where humankind is in terms of advanced tech.
Forty years is a LONG time for advancement. Where were we in 1978 with our boom boxes and cord phones (with that clicking circle that you had to wait till it got back to zero before you could dial the next number).
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Absolutely. It's actually quite interesting that so much of the technology we see is actually aimed at replacing people. Life would suck if I lost my job and replaced by a computer.melissy370 wrote: ↑01 Aug 2018, 18:56 I think not having sales clerks for department stores could be in our future. We already have restaurants that have machines that take your order. At our grocery stores we can check ourselves out. It doesn't seem far fetched that soon sales people will be obsolete also.
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I would definitely not survive in this world - I'm not a fan of flying. I'm that neurotic person that sits a few seats from you that has tears streaming down her face with nail marks in the armrest upon takeoff. I get a lot of odd stares.Gracedscribe wrote: ↑02 Aug 2018, 01:20 Yup! Totally possible that we may all have Franklins and wrist computers VERY soon. It's time to keep our eyes and ears wide open because things are happening at breakneck speed all around us. I think research and development have been aiming somewhere around this sphere of technology for quite a few years now. I do hope we won't all have to call a Chrome Wind a home, though.
I wouldn't mind my own Franklin though... someone to think for you when you can't. I think I would be ok with that!
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Topic closed.
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Oh, I remember those phones! A little, nostalgic part of me still likes them better than the push-buttons, if I'm honest. Though let's face it, many people don't even have landlines at all these days...Bianka Walter wrote: ↑01 Aug 2018, 14:35 Forty years is a LONG time for advancement. Where were we in 1978 with our boom boxes and cord phones (with that clicking circle that you had to wait till it got back to zero before you could dial the next number).
- Waragu Samuel
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