Showing posts with label singularity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label singularity. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Ray Kurzweil: Bridge to Bridge System Towards an Everlasting Life

Futurist Ray Kurzweil of the Singularity fame and now a director of Google says that immortality may be near

From Daily Mail (hat tip EPJ)
Google engineering director and futurist Ray Kurzweil believes we are close to realizing everlasting life and is dead-set on getting us there.

The inventor and noted author believes the key to such a scientific breakthrough is a system of 'bridges' that enable the body to move from strength to strength over time.

The youthful 65-year-old currently takes 150 supplements a day, which he argues if the first bridge.

The idea is to build enough bridges to ensure the body holds out long enough for life-lengthening technology to come into its own.

He has likened the biology of the body to computer software and believes we are all 'out of date'.

In an interview with Canadian magazine Maclean's, Kurzweil says he hopes the supplements will keep him healthy enough to reach the 'nanotech revolution'.

'I can never say, “I’ve done it, I’ve lived forever,” because it’s never forever,' he said.

'We’re really talking about being on a path that will get us to the next point.

'Bridge one: Stay as healthy as possible with diet and exercise and current medicine.

'The goal is to get to bridge two.

'Bridge two (is) the biotechnology revolution, where we can reprogram biology away from disease.

'And that is not the end-all either.

'Bridge three is to go beyond biology, to the nanotechnology revolution.

'At that point we can have little robots, sometimes called nanobots, that augment your immune system.

'We can create an immune system that recognizes all disease, and if a new disease emerged, it could be reprogrammed to deal with new pathogens.'

Such robots, according to Kurzweil, will help fight diseases, improve health and allow people to remain active for longer.
Read the rest here.

In my view, if Mr. Kurzweil is right, then the coming generation will benefit from this.

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Doug Casey: The Human Species will Evolve to Other Species

The visionary Doug Casey believes that people will continue to evolve in line not only with the changes in the environment, but also along with the changes in technology or through adaption to technology

Once humans get established in space, evolution will take over – and take off. Before then, however, and likely even before we leave the planet, I'll bet there's going to be a lot of intentional, as opposed to natural, genetic alteration. It will start with efforts to eliminate undesirable genes that predispose one to heart disease, cancer, or genetic disorders. But while we're at it, why not also select for blue eyes, taller, more muscular frame, greater intelligence, and anything else people might want their children to have? Some people won't want to go that route, preferring to leave things to nature, but their children will be at a disadvantage to those whose parents have selected superior genes. That could lead to speciation along several lines.

Read the rest here.

I encountered this article earlier.

But having been immersed in too many readings, it took Bob Wenzel’s post to remind me to share with you this, what I think is a, significant outlook.

If I am not mistaken, Mr. Casey may have been reading futurist Ray Kurzweil’s Singularity is Near.

Friday, February 11, 2011

Will Humans Achieve Immortality By 2045?

So says Ray Kurzweil, chief proponent of Singularity is Near –“an era in which our intelligence will become increasingly nonbiological and trillions of times more powerful than it is today—the dawning of a new civilization that will enable us to transcend our biological limitations and amplify our creativity.”

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From Time’s Lev Grossman

Here's what the exponential curves told him. We will successfully reverse-engineer the human brain by the mid-2020s. By the end of that decade, computers will be capable of human-level intelligence. Kurzweil puts the date of the Singularity — never say he's not conservative — at 2045.

Read the rest here

Ray Kurzweil’s betting on the exponential growth of human ingenuity which converts technology into our life preserver.

Saturday, June 05, 2010

Technology Curve: Terrific Advances In Supercomputers

The technology curve has indeed been accelerating as the capacity of supercomputers continually soar.


This update from the Economist,

``AMERICA's dominance in the field of supercomputing has slipped over the past decade, according to the latest TOP500 chart, a biannual list of the world's fastest number-crunching machines. Having accounted for 56% of the top 50 machines a decade ago, America now accounts for 40%. Japan has lost ground too, while Britain and Germany have held steady. The greatest gains have been made by France, due in part to the use of supercomputers in the energy industry, and China, which had no supercomputers in the top 50 a decade ago, but now has four, including the world's second-fastest machine, at the National Supercomputing Centre in Shenzhen. Other countries have also moved up the rankings, which indicates that supercomputers are more widely distributed around the world than they used to be: the top 50 machines include computers in South Korea, Saudi Arabia, Switzerland and India."

The loss of the dominance of the US in this field does not exhibit a zero sum based competition, where one's gains translates to the loss of the others, which appear to be the undertone of the article.

What's truly happening is that the progress in technological innovation in supercomputers have been more diffused globally where more nations have been participating in the growing pie.


The general advances in the capability of supercomputing from Top500.org illustrates of the dynamics of the growing pie. The progress has been breath-taking.


In my view it's merely the motions of Moore's law at work, and possibly Ray Kurzweil's technological singularity.

And this has been fuelled by competition, globalization and collaboration.

And it would be a mistake to gloss over the implications of such remarkable progress in technology innovation to the real economy.

Read more interactive graph of supercomputers from BBC here