5/27/2008 2:33:25 PM
screw voice recognition (at least for now.. it's shamefully bad at the moment)emails and text messages is where communication is at.. and if you have a decent translation program to screen those emails and messages you aren't gonna be slowed down.
5/27/2008 3:20:01 PM
Speech-to-text programs work reasonably well. I know my mother has used them to write papers and such.
5/27/2008 3:42:15 PM
5/27/2008 4:17:26 PM
5/27/2008 9:00:38 PM
5/27/2008 9:25:17 PM
5/27/2008 9:52:02 PM
5/28/2008 1:12:16 AM
5/28/2008 2:10:38 AM
5/28/2008 2:14:08 AM
5/28/2008 2:47:24 AM
^^That's interesting, if you know the source of that I'd love to read it; the history of this stuff is fascinating. As far as I know, pinyin was never meant to replace hanzi. In fact Mao himself was very much into Chinese calligraphy so it's hard to imagine he'd want to get rid of characters.
5/28/2008 5:15:11 AM
5/28/2008 5:27:12 AM
5/28/2008 10:58:01 AM
English is the international language
5/28/2008 11:36:09 AM
5/28/2008 11:44:08 AM
5/28/2008 2:08:58 PM
The two of us don't inherently differ, I have my optimism about the future, but it looks completely different from yours.The shortest way I can put my stance:You, like many in your camp, have a simple problem of telling the future what to be like. If we're looking at even 30 years in the future, the form of advancement will be amazingly different from what we can predict.At the point we landed on the moon, it seemed perfectly reasonable that we would be on Mars in a decade or two, right? Given any particular time, take the fastest growing sector, project it out at the current rates, and that's the keystone of what the future looks like. Problem is, that's wrong. Industrialization changed the world, but limitations are eventually exerted downward forces on the massive engineering projects, and many of the biggest of something we built in the 70s haven't grown much since (tallest/largest building for example).Just look at the Spruce Goose, or the Titanic. The people from those times would be awfully confused as to how our technology is a great leap forward - because it takes more than what meets the eye.You right now can't go to the store and buy a processor that is 2^3=8 times as fast as what you could get 6 years ago. But it's much more common to get 4 linked together, and the same speed of processor may be cheaper, hugely energy efficient, and better designed. Plus, processor speed isn't the only spec of the world computer network. I see much more cause for optimism in solid-state storage technology, display technology, portability, (fingers crossed) network speeds, and integration into society. Again, a hard sell for someone from our time to fall in love with, who may be used to a bit different kind of progression.You won't see a sudden halt in advancement of processors as molecular limits are hit, it will be a gradual slowing, and yes, that's not even guaranteed, as we have hope for the memristor or various kinds of new technology. There are already lots of things computers do better than the human brain.
5/28/2008 3:45:18 PM
5/28/2008 6:53:18 PM
5/29/2008 5:23:20 AM
Uh, it's most commonly an attack on the movement in general. Oh dear, they see Kurzweil as a prophet, uploading as heaven, etc. I'll admit your apparent respect for the man breaks the mold. Most who use the religion argument dismiss him as a cult leader.
5/29/2008 1:44:08 PM
By the way, as far as basic knowledge goes, I'm still confused by your attempt to equate NLP and/or strong AI with perpetual motion machines, infinite free energy, and teleportation. You have yet to cite any physical laws to support this strange claim. On the reality of artificial intelligence, I'll quote Ben Goertzel:
5/29/2008 2:20:24 PM
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20080529-the-semantic-web-gets-a-boost-from-functional-mris.htmlHere's some moderately interesting new research. The conclusions reached in the article are of the "duh" variety, but the usage of biometric technology to enhance computing algorithms is only going to grow.
5/29/2008 11:55:45 PM
So, what's the going rate for a futurist? 5 moonbeams and 3 unicorn horns per hour?
5/30/2008 1:41:14 AM
5/30/2008 5:38:00 AM
5/30/2008 8:47:39 AM
5/30/2008 10:24:45 AM
http://www.cbc.ca/world/story/2008/05/30/brazil-tribe.htmlA tribe was found in Brazil that has never had contact with the modern world (hilarious picture there).What is relevant to this article, I think, is that just because we're humans doesn't mean we'll advance. It takes specific circumstances to cause technology to be created, it just doesn't happen because of past trends.
5/30/2008 11:15:42 AM
Oh, I agree. Under different conditions, we wouldn't advance. Luckily for us, we're not isolated in an Amazonian jungle. A catastrophic event could theoretically hurl the species back to that state. I don't see that as likely, but it could happen. Barring such change, though, the suggests evidence change will continue at an accelerating pace. We can choose to hinder or bolster this process. I want to encourage it.I question the methodology of basing predictions on current technical limitations. If you only foresee what you know, you'll always be wrong. Extrapolation has a better, though imperfect, record. Hard physical restrictions, on the other hand, I can accept. This relates to Smoker4's assertion. He equates NLP/AI with infinite free energy and accuses me of not knowing the basics. I don't get it. We have working models of language processing all around us. No such models of infinite energy or perpetual motion machines exist.[Edited on May 30, 2008 at 12:39 PM. Reason : haste makes waste]
5/30/2008 12:37:28 PM
5/30/2008 3:33:30 PM
5/30/2008 4:42:37 PM
I don't really have a response, but I must give props on the handling of the obligatory cynicism.
5/30/2008 5:39:13 PM
5/30/2008 7:50:40 PM
lol, before i searched for NLP i was thinking it was a part of the thingamabob.I always hated that stuff. Abstract as fuck. I don't think it even says much about NLP. I not sure it belongs in any of those circles (not to exclude the possibility of overlap).
5/30/2008 10:43:41 PM
I think it's a pretty safe bet that the optimal solution to NLP is NP complete.
5/30/2008 10:49:51 PM
^ that may be true, but the optimal solution would surpass what the smartest of the smart human would be able to determine, and that level of precision is not required.
5/30/2008 11:54:47 PM
but given that language problems don't have an 'optimal solution' at all I would question the applicability of this categorization scheme.
5/31/2008 12:05:42 AM
^ i think if someone/something knew the entire vocabulary for a set of languages, and all slang and figurative phrases and their origins, they would be able to find a translation that would be better in some way than one even a top expert could come up with.Here's an amusing site: http://www.blahblahfish.com/?selection=top_ratedYou put in a phrase, pick a language, and it converts your phrase to that language, then back again. [Edited on May 31, 2008 at 12:30 AM. Reason : ]
5/31/2008 12:16:15 AM
5/31/2008 7:02:34 AM
The precision of using a theoretical NP-complete algorithm in order to find the solution.
5/31/2008 11:10:45 AM
Holy circular reasoning
5/31/2008 5:27:27 PM
5/31/2008 8:35:58 PM
6/1/2008 6:31:04 AM
6/1/2008 6:39:31 AM
In the programming world, "foo" is commonly used as a placeholder variable for anything (commonly juxtaposed with "bar"-- foobar, get it?). It's kind of like 'lorem ipsum" if you're familiar with that. He wasn't trying to say like a Mr. T "i pity da foo'" kind of thing.
6/1/2008 9:10:59 PM
6/1/2008 10:27:37 PM
I remain somewhat confused by the defense of linguistic diversity and opposition to international tongue. While I agree establishing a universal language would be difficult under current circumstances, it's quite conceivable. Cultural dominance would be the most likely method. After all, people didn't used to speak English from Florida to California. Do y'all also desire linguistic fragmentation within the United States, or are you content to maintaining the current level of diversity? Would it be a good thing if I lost the ability to communicate easily with people from Texas? I'm sure developing a unique North Carolinian language incomprehensible to outsiders would have certain cultural and mental advantages. To some extent, this already exists. Various communities have radically different dialects. Yet most English speaker can move closer to the standard when needed, facilitating communication. Would it be better to widen our differences? If so, why? If not, then why wouldn't an international language be desirable?
6/1/2008 11:09:40 PM
^You're confused by linguistic diversity? What's so confusing about it?What makes economies tick isn't homogeneity, it's the ability of people to express preference. And therefore the existence of it.We'd have a very efficient free market, for example, if everyone only wanted white bread, and nobody wanted wheat bread (or artisan honey-crusted bread with sesame seeds). Marketing would be easy. Just make white bread. Did you ever stop and think that people speak different languages, and adhere to different cultures, because that's what they want? Take Mandarin for example. Although it has not been strictly the same over time, it is effectively one of the oldest continuously spoken languages on Earth. It expresses concepts in ways that English doesn't, using sounds we don't have. I believe the Chinese people are rightfully proud of their language.This discussion of linguistic fragmentation in the U.S. is a horrendous strawman argument. In China there are many different dialects which are all mutually exclusive to each other. Cantonese is not Mandarin, and they are as different as English and German. The whole world is not the United States. But do you think Hong Kong or Shanghai wants to be exactly the same as Beijing?Looking at economics and world culture purely from the standpoint of efficiency is silly. Economics / Business / etc. is only about efficiency once preference is taken into account. You don't even start drawing the lines until you understand what they represent. You don't start Hello Kitty airlines until you realize it's an international craze. Then you try to optimize route pricing.Likewise in the previous post, you asked me why miscommunication is such a big deal. You say that people communicate despite low proficiency in a given language. And yet, I say to you -- language is a major point of social stratification. Do you think people can make six figure incomes doing enterprise sales using a translator that causes them to mispronounce "chicken" as "kitchen?" Or that doesn't convey subtlety during a sensitive negotiation process? How about dating? How about languages like Japanese that have extensive notions of social hierarchy built into them, to be breached at your own peril?When you don't speak the language, properly, you're not part of the culture. Not all cultures assimilate people the way the U.S. does. It's profoundly arrogant to believe they will begin to just because some people can sometimes communicate through a translator. Language and culture are both overt statements of preference. Preference is just as valid in economics and global business as efficiency. By beginning to learn a language in earnest, you are expressing a preference for that culture. By deferring to an imperfect and (occasionally) silly machine, you are saying -- your culture is a burden, I only want to interact on a 'good enough' basis. I don't share your preference.Not exactly a strong foundation for the future of human interaction in a globalized marketplace, IMO. NLP has its place like all tools, and that's that. Downplaying linguistic and therefore cultural diversity is completely inane.
6/2/2008 1:30:05 AM
6/2/2008 1:56:58 AM
^is it really too hard for you to just write a reply instead of re-posting everything line by line? We're not in kindergarten here.First of all, you obviously don't get the point that in the U.S. we're rather willing to accept people who don't speak English absolutely fluently. That is us. The rest of the world is not us. So in point of fact, you WERE claiming something about cultural acceptance, you just didn't realize it because your viewpoint is entirely America-centric. And we definitely have limits.Having said that -- the notion that a language barrier "harms" people is so absurd, it's borderline psychotic. What's considered "harmful" in any reasonable discussion is relative to what's "normal." Your idea of normalcy is apparently a utopian world where everyone communicates equally well with each other, and anything other than that is a "harm." Pardon me if I don't exactly go along on your trip through the clouds. The air is thin up there.Back here in reality, where I live, there's no opportunity cost to the language barrier. The simple reason is that the language barrier exists because people want it. If some culture wants to exclude others by virtue of speaking a different language, then that's their choice and your religious notion that everyone should cross-communicate equally doesn't factor into the equation. Because that's _your_ viewpoint; it's not necessary in this world that everyone share your personal preferences. Hard to believe, huh?The fact is, I am sure that as of today that many countries _can_ "buy" fluency. There's nothing stopping national governments from instituting rigorous education from K (or equivalent) and up in some "world language" like English. China in particular could; they already tell their citizens what words to use for daily speech.But -- imagine this -- they don't want that. And in my mind, people being free to express their preferences in terms of language and culture is a "good" thing. People self-determining "who they are" is their first basic right. That's as about as desirable as it gets. If you need help with why that's good, well ... I won't go there.
6/2/2008 4:54:22 AM