dvf1976
Durham
A story about this — 4 years ago
Ugh.
This book is like a techno-optimist’s response to the Unabomber’s manifesto. My problem is that the future espoused by Kurzweil is only slightly more appealing than the Unabomber’s.
Specifically, I don’t care for his timeline/predictions that humanity will be associating primarily with machines by 2019.
That seems like an inhuman future.
His idea of refinements and how much humanity will accept them also seems overly ambitious.
I would point to video games as an example of the refinements that a computer can “get closer to reality”... Every year, EA Sports’s claim that “It’s in the Game” gets a bit more appropriate.
But I think we’re a long way away from people paying $35.00 to have tickets to see folks play a video game.
If that’s a function of the time it takes humanity to accept computers or inherent limitations in computers, I’m not sure… Either way, his predictions seem off-base.

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