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<< Headlines are listed according to date posted <-> Articles are organized by date published >> DECEMBER
DECEMBER 2002: December 23, 2002 [issue date]: The
Dream of Mechanical Life - Man and automata. By Hugh Ormsby-Lennon.
The Weekly Standard (Volume 008, Issue 15). "A spate of new books
[editor's note: 13 to be exact] addresses eighteenth-century automata,
ventriloquists' dummies, and puppets--together with more recent avatars of
chess computers, artificial intelligence, androids, robots, and cyborgs.
Does 'computerization' challenge human identity as ominously as
'mechanization' previously seemed to? ... So, does artificial intelligence
transcend Freudian nightmare now that it has come to suggest not itinerant
showmen or tinkerers with clockwork but university scientists, computer
moguls, and global corporations? Or does a scientist with an uncanny
puppet always remain mad or charlatanical?" December 20, 2002: Charles
Rosen -- expert on robots, co-founder of winery. By Wyatt Buchanan.
San Francisco Chronicle. "Charles Rosen, who pioneered artificial
intelligence in the 1960s and 1970s and helped found one of California's
best known wineries, died in Atherton on Dec. 8, one day after his 85th
birthday. ... Mr. Rosen did his groundbreaking artificial intelligence
work while at Stanford Research Institute, known now as SRI International,
a Menlo Park nonprofit research and development organization. His success
came from his ability to find the edge of creative thought and innovation
in his discipline and to push past the known limits, friends and
colleagues say, developing things like neural networks in machines and
Shakey, the first robot to see and learn on its own." December 20, 2002: When the web starts
thinking for itself. By David Green. vnunet's Ebusinessadvisor. "The
so-called semantic web is an extension of the current web in which data is
given meaning through the use of a series of technologies. ... Ontologies
provide a deeper level of meaning by providing equivalence relations
between terms (i.e. term A on my web page is expressing the same concept
as term B on your web page). An ontology is a file that formally defines
relations among terms, for example, a taxonomy and set of inference rules.
By providing such 'dictionaries of meaning' (in philosophy ontology means
'nature of existence') ontologies can improve the accuracy of web searches
by allowing a search program to seek out pages that refer to a specific
concept rather than just a particular term as they do now. While XML, RDF
and ontologies provide the basic infrastructure of the semantic web, it is
intelligent agents that will realise its power. An intelligent agent can
best be described as a piece of adaptive computer coding that is capable
of reasoning and that learns from our behaviour and preferences, thus
delivering what is called 'proactive personalisation'. There are many
thousands of different agents (or bots as they are also known), each
performing specific, specialised tasks, for example search bots, chatter
bots and shopping bots). An important aspect of agents is that they are
sociable and can interact and communicate with humans and other agents.
... When broken down into a series of explicit search statements and
appropriate content sources to search, a simple user information request
is revealed to be a complex task. Automating such tasks will result in an
ever-larger role for artificial intelligence technologies such as agents.
One key concern about the brave new world of bots is that, by increasing
their autonomy, their accountability will be lost. ... There is a need to
construct boundaries, such as user-determined privacy settings, to safely
contain such interactions." December 19, 2002: Artificial
intelligence pioneer Saul Amarel of Rutgers dies at 74. Associated
Press / available from Newsday / also
available from CBS 2. "Saul Amarel, a pioneer in artificial
intelligence and founder of the computer science department at Rutgers
University, has died of cancer. ... He was known internationally for his
work in computer simulation methods, network synthesis and
'hypercomputing,' and for organizing collaborations of scientists to use
artificial intelligence. Artificial intelligence joins science and
engineering to understand how humans and machines process information,
then applies that knowledge in designing machines smart enough to do human
tasks and ones beyond human intelligence. ... [H]e also ran the National
Institutes of Health's first project on use of computers in such diverse
fields as biomedicine, engineering design and ecology.... Amarel served as
director of the Information Sciences and Technology Office of the Defense
Advanced Projects Agency from 1985 to 1988." December 19, 2002: Art
Gallery Features 'Fantasy Underfoot.' By Carl Hartman. Associated
Press / available from The Herald Tribune. "Ken Feingold represents the
newest of media. His two silicone heads lie in a cardboard box filled with
plastic packing foam, looking as if they came from a robot factory of the
future. The mouth of each is placed close to an ear of the other. 'Through
a rambling conversation driven by their rudimentary artificial
intelligence, they now attempt to understand their predicament in a futile
but dogged manner,' Matthew Biro, a University of Michigan contemporary
art instructor, wrote in the show's catalog." December 19, 2002: The
end of history, tech version? - Some tech prophets see humans made
irrelevant by machines. But there's a choice. By Kenneth James. The
Business Times. "Seated across the table, they posed their questions
earnestly: Do you think machines will become more intelligent than people
in the next 100 years? Won't that present a danger to humankind? What can
be done to keep that from happening? Disturbing questions, these. And the
two final-year business school undergrads were clearly anticipating
disturbing answers. The interview was one of several they were conducting
for a project, and the research topic pretty much spelt out where they
were coming from: 'Chaos from technology: Where is the future taking us?'.
Even more telling were the authorities they cited: Moravec, Kurzweil, Joy,
among others. ... But are we really careening towards a future where our
destiny is determined by super-intelligent machines? Is it foolish to
expect that humans will continue to be in control even when machines are
demonstrably more intelligent in every way?" December 18, 2002: This
holiday's a bust for tech toys, but next year could be hot - Let's
talk about hot technology gifts for NEXT Christmas. Column by Kevin Maney.
USA Today. "But by next holiday season, you might be gift-wrapping amazing
new stuff: Trophy Wife Barbie. This comes at the convergence of a couple
of ripening technologies: artificial intelligence (AI) and radio frequency
identification tags (RFID). Great strides in AI software plus ever more
powerful computer chips are making it possible to give small things
limited decision-making capabilities. RFID uses radio sensors on tiny tags
to allow objects to communicate with each other or with a wireless
computer network. Thus we get a doll who can shop -- on her own. ...
Personal robots. First, you have to shake the idea that a robot is going
to be like Rosie on The Jetsons or that hot water heater on tracks that
passed for a robot in Lost in Space. It's probably going to be small and
more about smarts than mechanics --something like R2D2. Early signs are
here. Sony has sold more than 50,000 Aibo electronic dogs since
introducing them in 1999. But this year, Aibo made a giant evolutionary
leap, acquiring software that lets it recognize its owner's face well
enough to find him in a crowd. One popular curiosity this year is Roomba,
a robot vacuum cleaner from iRobot. Another little company, Evolution
Robotics, has developed a robot that looks like a laptop on wheels, and
can 'see' where it's going by taking three photos a second and analyzing
them." December 17, 2002: A Massive
undertaking. By Peter McMahon. EXN [Discovery Channel Canada]. " EXN
producer Peter McMahon talked to Weta Digital's Stephen Regelous, who
created Massive, the artificial-intelligence-powered software that's
responsible for the vast swarms of battling orcs, humans and elves in the
Lord of the Rings movie trilogy. Massive was originally developed to allow
large crowds of computer-generated movie characters to interact as if they
each had minds of their own. Now, Regulous says the software could even be
reverse-engineered to use simulated A.I. in controlling large groups of
real-life robots on missions where it's useful for them to be able to
think for themselves." December 17, 2002: A.I. Cop on the
Beat. By Alexandra Robbins. PC Magazine. "Coplink, an
artificial-intelligence–driven search engine for crime characteristics,
scans multiple databases for connections among names, vehicles, physical
descriptions, and other aspects of a crime or criminal. Developed by
Hsinchun Chen, director of the University of Arizona Artificial
Intelligence Laboratory, Coplink began in 1997. Five years later, Chen has
deployed Coplink at six agencies and is developing an information-sharing
and analysis program with the CIA." December 17, 2002: Building
the Sensitive Robot. Stories of modern science by Ellen Beck. United
Press International. "Vanderbilt researchers Nilanjan Sarkar and Craig
Smith are working on a robot that can sense human emotion. 'Psychological
research shows that a lot of our communications, human to human, are
implicit,' Sarkar says. ... The key to the project is determining whether
a robot can sense the psychological state of a human." December 17, 2002: Research
seeks emotion-sensing robot. By Scott R. Burnell. UPI /available from
The Washington Times. "'We are not trying to give a robot emotions,' Smith
said. 'We are trying to make robots that are sensitive to our emotions.'As
the project develops, the team hopes to integrate other inputs, such as
voice- and face-recognition software, to refine the rules, Sarkar told
UPI. ... Research has shown students learn most effectively in an optimal
challenge level that avoids both frustration and boredom, Sarkar said.
Accurate monitoring of physiological data would help a computer alter a
task's difficulty to maintain that optimal state. ... The research is
right on target in terms of helping robots and humans interact more
effectively, said Robin Murphy, a professor of computer engineering at the
University of South Florida in Tampa and director of the Center for
Robot-Assisted Search and Rescue. December 17, 2002: Robot
Says: I Shrink I Am, I Shrink I Am - Scientists trying to create
robots that sense human emotions. By Robert Preidt. HealthScout.
"Vanderbilt University researchers are trying to create a robot that can
sense your emotions and respond appropriately. In an article in the
December issue of Robotica, the researchers report they've taken the first
steps towards creating a touchy-feely robot that can sense your
psychological state. There are two parts to this project. The first is to
develop a system that accurately detects a person's psychological state by
analyzing information from number of physiological sensors -- for example,
one would measure heart rate. The second part is to have a robot process
this information as soon as it's collected, and convert it into a form
that can be processed by a computer." December 17, 2002: Library technology
developments. News Analysis by Gryphon. IT-Director.com. "Other
technologies on the horizon for library and information services include
artificial intelligence within library web sites and web based open source
work. All these development herald much greater automation and the ability
to derive much more information from library and research services with
greater ease and on a more timely basis." December 16, 2002: Exploring
space will require new robots. By Carole Rutland. Ledger-Enquirer.
"Disguised as futuristic ants, newly designed artificial intelligence will
be able to venture into the nooks and crannies of space as never before
possible. They're tiny and weigh in at about 2.2 pounds, but they could
fan among the hundreds of thousands of asteroids and begin to explore.
They're called ANTS -- it's an acronym for Autonomous Nano Technology
Swarm, a fleet of tiny insect-like spacecraft which could cruise all by
themselves to the asteroid belt." December 16, 2002: Going
for the high hanging fruits of IT. By Ladi Ogunneye. The Daily Times
of Nigeria. "The Nigerian Information Technology professional as well as
the companies needs to be challenged. Government action relating to
certain Information technology projects seems to suggest lack of
confidence in the professionals and/or companies. ... United States of
America provides a good example of this. In 1957 the erstwhile USSR
launched Sputnik, the first artificial earth satellite. This was during
the cold war period. Shortly thereafter, President Sweight D. Eisenhower
[sic] set up the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA), which
later became DARPA, and challenged it to establish the United States lead
in Science and Technology (at that time, applicable to the military). That
challenge produced what has today become one of the scientific wonders of
our time, the Internet. This is not all, a look at the technical
literature reveals that there has been immense contributions of this body
in such areas as reduced instruction set processors, specialised graphics
engines, RAID disks, robotics and artificial intelligence tools. DARPA has
lived up to the challenge of maintaining the US superiority in
high-performance computing and communication devices, networking and
information assurance, embedded software (i.e. software which operates in
close coupling with complex and sometimes distributed dynamical systems,
seamless user interfaces for the warfighter and ubiquitous computing and
communication resources). ... The above list of contributions of DARPA is
no doubt laden with research and development (R&D) content. This
suggests the need for investment in R&D. The nation’s hope to be
globally competitive is meaningless if its offerings add no
value." December 16, 2002: Ngee
Ann lecturers find way to make computers think like a human brain. By
Ca-Mie De Souza. Channel NewsAsia. "Two lecturers at Ngee Ann Polytechnic
said they had discovered a way to make computers think like a human brain.
... Like a library which arranges its books in categories, the team said
the brain's grey matter functioned in much the same way. So they designed
the 'Digital Gray Matter' technology, which allows computers to store and
classify information. ... Dr Alexei Mikhailov, Lecturer at Ngee Ann
Polytechnic, said: 'I believe now we can significantly improve artificial
intelligence tools. They will become cheaper, they will become more
intelligent and it will not just improve the quality of life, but it could
also save our lives.' ... At the moment, artificial intelligence is
already used in robots - in a US$1 billion market that's growing at 45
percent a year. Dr Pok Yang Ming, Lecturer at Ngee Ann Polytechnic, said:
'Artificial intelligence has been in place over the last 20 to 30 years.
All these are discovered outside Singapore. But neural cortex or the
Digital Gray Matter is discovered in Singapore.'" December 16, 2002: The World According to
Google. By Steven Levy. Newsweek / available from MSNBC. "By a winning
combination of smart algorithms, hyperactive Web crawlers and 10,000
silicon-churning computer servers, Google has become a high-tech version
of the Oracle of Delphi, positioning everyone a mouseclick away from the
answers to the most arcane questions—and delivering simple answers so
efficiently that the process becomes addictive. ... Google’s uses are
limited only by the imaginations of those who punch in 150 million
searches a day. ... By empowering the masses to make use of the
multi-terabit glory of the Web, Google has made supersleuths of us all.
Privacy advocates are going crazy at the Pentagon’s plan to track
citizens’ purchases, Web-site visits and phone calls. But as my search for
the eBay seller indicates, with Google everybody is Big Brother. ... From
the office [Sergey] Brin and [Larry] Page share ... the cofounders dream
up even wilder plans. 'The ultimate search engine would be smart; it would
understand everything in the world,' says Page." December 16, 2002: The
ghost hunters - Scientists and novelists share insights into the enduring
mystery of human consciousness. By Jay Tolson. U.S. News & World
Report. "Consciousness, though long an indirect concern of fiction, has
recently become the explicit preoccupation of many literary novelists–at
the same time that scientists in many fields have taken a renewed interest
in the subject. This is more than a coincidence, [David] Lodge says. ...
On the science side, Lodge points to a confluence of new approaches,
theories, and technologies. These include advances in computer science
that give promise of constructing artificial intelligence and even
consciousness itself; a new understanding of the neurochemistry behind
different mental states and moods; and a host of brain-scanning and
brain-imaging techniques. All have boosted confidence that close scrutiny
of the brain (the hardware) will eventually explain mind and consciousness
(the software), thus dissolving the mystery of the 'ghost in the
machine.'The various expressions of this new confidence have themselves
attracted the attention of many first-rate novelists. Jonathan Franzen's
bestselling novel, The Corrections, for example...." December 15, 2002: Robotic
Warfare - part of The 2nd Annual Year in Ideas. By William Speed Weed.
The New York Times Magazine (no fee reg. req'd). "This year at Edwards Air
Force Base in California, the biggest advance yet in robotic warfare took
its first flight: the UCAV, or Unmanned Combat Air Vehicle. Like the
Predator, the UCAV has no human on board. Unlike the Predator, the
kite-shaped UCAV is an autonomous plane that flies itself without constant
direction from any human being. Its ground-based controller (notably not
called a pilot) programs missions with a computer, but he does not direct
the aircraft moment by moment. ... The Army is developing the Unmanned
Ground Combat Vehicle, a tank that can autonomously negotiate landscapes
and fire weapons. And the Navy plans to build a robotic killer submarine.
... Beyond the obvious advantage of keeping Americans out of harm's way,
robotic systems have other advantages. Robotic planes and subs don't have
to accommodate human safety needs, so they're cheaper to build. Not only
can computers think faster than humans, they'll also never suffer from the
emotional stress of battle. Moreover, computers can communicate with each
other at lightning speed. ... The Air Force's [ Col. Michael] Leahy
insists that, though total autonomy is technologically feasible, it is not
morally allowable. 'A human must always be in the loop to authorize
weapons release,' he says." December 15, 2002:
RoboVac - part of The 2nd Annual Year in Ideas. By Virginia Heffernan.
The New York Times Magazine (no fee reg. req'd). "Of all the works of
prophecy of the last century -- '1984,' 'Brave New World,' 'Atlas
Shrugged' -- the one that appears to have generated the most hope about
the future is 'The Jetsons,' the cartoon series that had its premiere in
1962. On that show, the chipper Jetson family boasted, in addition to a
Zippo-size encyclopedia and a telephone with a video screen, a robot named
Rosie who took care of household chores. So many other utopian dreams were
dashed long ago, but the fantasy of a happy, chore-loving robot has
remained vital into the 21st century, and this year a Massachusetts
company called iRobot offered Roomba, America's first affordable robot
vacuum cleaner." December 15, 2002: At last ... a robot that really
can think. By Eva Langlands. Sunday Herald. "It cooks, cleans and
washes your windows at the touch of a button -- and even matures with age.
Thinking robots that evolve like humans could soon be fact rather than
fiction, thanks to a group of Scottish scientists set to develop the
world's first real-life R2-D2. Until now, scientists have attempted to
create thinking robots by installing a complex processing network but the
systems have failed to operate autonomously in advanced tasks. The new
technique, however, allows the robot to evolve in a developing
environment, enabling it to become more complex and sophisticated over
time, like humans. ... Current models can wash windows, mow the lawn, or
even operate as artificial limbs. They could also replace humans in the
event of an earthquake or dangerous levels of radiation, and perform
exploratory tasks underwater. ... 'We are on the cusp of a huge tidal wave
of artificial intelligence. It could be about to take off in the same way
as the internet did a few years ago.'" December 14, 2002: Radical
robot squad joins the rescue team. By Deborah Smith. The Sydney
Morning Herald. "This week the team received a $10 million funding boost
from the Federal Government to set up a new robotics centre with the
University of NSW and University of Technology, Sydney. The think tank,
called the Centre of Excellence for Autonomous Systems, will be headed by
Field Robotics' director, Professor Hugh Durrant-Whyte. .Mr[Frederic]
Bourgault says autonomous systems are a fusion of machines, computers,
sensing systems and software. They are designed to operate in 'dirty,
dangerous and difficult places such as mines shafts or earthquake sites.'
Members of the Sydney team had a breakthrough in finding a way to allow a
robot dropped in a new location to move around and map its surroundings
while keeping a track of its own position. Previously robots have been
unable to do both tasks at once. The new mapping system does not rely on
the robot using independent information such as global positioning system
satellites...." December 13, 2002: Will technology ever be as
intelligent as us? By Liz Simpson. Computing /vnunet.com. "Ask any
stranger, 'Do you have the time?' and they look at their watch. Not many
of us would be fazed by that request, or the reply 'Time for what?' Our
brains cope with understanding and responding to such ambiguities of
communication, while computers, so far, do not. But one day they will,
thanks to artificial intelligence pioneer Doug Lenat. At the Austin, Texas
offices of Cycorp, Lenat and his team have been working on machines that
are smart, in the way that humans using common sense are smart. ...
artificial intelligence provided the perfect platform for a man who once
said: 'How many people have in their lives a two to 10 per cent chance of
dramatically affecting the way the world works? When one of those chances
comes along, you should take it.'Lenat's contribution to the world is a
program called Cyc (as in 'en-cyc-lopaedia'), said to be the world's
largest extra-sentient body of common sense and perhaps, one day, this
planet's first digital consciousness." December 13, 2002: New
Blood Test Spots Cancer - Could Be Available as Early as 2004. By
Charlene Laino. WebMD Medical News. "In what's being called one of the
biggest advances in cancer research in years, scientists have developed a
blood test that can detect cancer with a greater than 90% accuracy. This
artificial intelligence -- already tested for cancers of the breast,
ovary, and lung -- could one day be used to detect many types of cancer.
... 'All that's needed [for the quick fingerstick test] is a single drop
of blood,' [Emanuel] Petricoin says. 'The computer does the rest.' ... In
tests on several hundred blood samples, some taken from women with ovarian
cancer and others from healthy women, the test proved 'an astonishing'
100% accurate in detecting cancer, even at the earliest stages, Petricoin
said." December 13, 2002: Gift
ideas for the serious gamer on your list - Play a realistic round of
video golf with Tiger & Sergio. By Steve Makris. The Edmonton Journal
/ available from Canada.com. "For
every season there is a sport, but in computer and video gaming any sport
is just a click away, year round. Today's computer sports games have taken
on a life of their own. Their AI (artificial intelligence) has human-like
quality and the graphics and multi-speaker sounds resemble that of real TV
events." December 13, 2002: Revving up the
rovers. By Molly Bentley. BBC. "With launch dates just six months
away, Nasa's science team is making final preparations to send two rovers
into space in an effort to understand the past environment of Mars. ...
[T]he twin rovers will cover more ground in a day - 100 meters - than
Sojourner did in its entire mission. And the rovers are designed with
autonomous capabilities. Once Earth transmits their daily assignments,
they fulfil them on their own." December 13, 2002: Tech, and
the Future of Finance - Futurist James Canton offers predictions on
how technology will impact CFOs in 2003 and beyond. By Marie Leone.
CFO.com. "CFO.com: Which transformational technology will CFOs
test-drive first? Canton: CFOs will gain the most from building
financial systems that have complete financial knowledge transparency. In
practical terms, financial managers will close the books, get an accurate
cash picture, and identify and locate assets all in real-time. In
addition, CFOs will use artificial intelligence (AI) for decision-support
once the technology is embedded in back-end software. AI agents will
retrieve internal and external data on a daily basis, to send, for
example, automatic messages to notify the CFO if a particular budget is
incomplete, or if too much cash is being is moved from a particular
account. CFO.com: Will these back-end systems be smart enough to
sniff out accounting fraud? Canton: If we program them that way.
The software robots -- fraud agents -- will identify irregular accounting
patterns. Whether the irregularity turns is intentional or just a mistake,
is another matter. As more financial systems become connected in data
warehouses, the use of agents will increase. ... CFO.com: When
will AI-based decision support systems hit the mainstream?
Canton: Within five years we'll witness the rise of the neural net,
genetic algorithm, and expert systems that provide advice for CFOs and
treasurers -- such as what is the best play to make for an overnight
investment. The systems will create 'expert behavior' rules from massive
databases that are filled with previous transaction data and outcomes.
Eventually CFOs will use financial software agents to 'clone' their
expertise for true multi-tasking." December 13, 2002: Digital
Actors in Rings Can Think. By Courtney Macavinta. Wired News.
"[Stephen] Regelous created Massive, the special-effects program behind
the colossal battles in The Lord of the Rings film trilogy. Using Massive,
the Oscar-winning Weta Digital team pulled off anticipated scenes for the
latest installment, The Two Towers -- such as the battle at Helm's Deep --
by digitally generating smart crowds to supplement the live action. The
computer-generated characters, called agents, have minds of their own.
'Every agent has its own choices and a complete brain,' Regelous said.
'The most important thing about making realistic crowds is making
realistic individuals.' ... Agents aren't robots, though. Each makes
subtle responses to its surroundings with fuzzy logic rather than yes-no,
on-off decisions. ... For inspiration, Regelous didn't watch war movies as
you might expect. Instead he experimented with artificial intelligence by
growing digital plants, and studied how people avoided each other on
crowded streets." December 12, 2002: The
race to computerise biology. The Economist Technology Quarterly. "It
is in data mining, however, where bioinformatics hopes for its biggest
pay-off. First applied in banking, data mining uses a variety of
algorithms to sift through storehouses of data in search of 'noisy'
patterns and relationships among the different silos of information. The
promise for bioinformatics is that public genome data, mixed with
proprietary sequence data, clinical data from previous drug efforts and
other stores of information, could unearth clues about possible candidates
for future drugs." December 12, 2002: Fire guts
Edinburgh's AI library. By Tim Richardson. The Register. "In a
statement the university said: 'We have also lost the Artificial
Intelligence Library - a collection of AI literature unique in the world,
an irreplaceable archive accumulated over the 40 years of Edinburgh's
leadership in the field, since its beginning in the 1960s. Although we
have lost this archival collection, and many researchers have lost their
personal archives, most of our current research data is stored
electronically. We have recently rolled out a state of the art distributed
computing environment, and, in this respect at least, we are well placed
for disaster recovery,' it said. ... Informatics at Edinburgh brings
together Artificial Intelligence, Computer Science, and Cognitive
Science." December 12, 2002: Pacifist
Leonardo may have made mistakes to foil warlords. By Tom Leonard. The
Telegraph / available from The Sydney Morning Herald. "Leonardo da Vinci
inserted a series of deliberate flaws into his inventions, perhaps to
prevent them being put to military use, a new television series says. ...
Five designs - for a tank, glider, parachute, diving suit and robot - were
built for the series by enthusiasts and tested by experts. ... Mr
[Michael] Mosley believes the clue lies in one of the notes Leonardo made
beside his aqualung design. It reads: 'Knowing the evil in men's hearts
they will learn how to kill men on the seabed.'" December 11, 2002: Europe
- Are robots after your job? After the hype, a new generation of
artificial intelligence systems shows promise for solving real business
problems, says Business Europe. Available from ebusinessforum.com. "The
hype surrounding AI in the 1980s prompted developers to make extravagant
claims for the sophistication of their products, only for these to be
discredited and business interest to wane. However, today's fully fledged
web-enabled infrastructure, coupled with the explosion in personal
computing of recent years, has revived business interest in AI solutions.
... John Kingston, senior research fellow at the Artificial Intelligence
Applications Institute in Edinburgh, says this shift in focus is
symptomatic of the AI industry's attempt to shake off the old hype for
more practical solutions. 'In the past, the principal benefit of AI was
always seen to be that it would save money through increasing staff
productivity. At present, however, AI is better at supporting accurate
decision-making. Amid huge quantities of data, an AI system can support
its decision well and trace the path that led it to that point.' This
practical business focus is not the only reason AI is undergoing a
renaissance. 'Today companies prefer to avoid the AI moniker,' said Shashi
Buluswar, co-author of the McKinsey report. 'Now that the technology can
demonstrate its applicability to real business issues where in the past
its appeal was more conceptual, the term 'business intelligence' is
preferred.' ... As yet, roll-out of AI business systems remains largely
limited to the US and Japan, but the academic exchange between these
countries and Europe is beginning to filter down to the business level.
While the lack of standardisation remains an obstacle, Mr Buluswar said
this too will soon be overcome." December 11, 2002: Turning
ideas into assets. Opinion by ND Batra. The Statesman. "Consider, for
example, Cognitive Science, a multidisciplinary area that includes
psychology, euroscience, sociology, and computer science. At the highest
level, it is associated with the study of artificial intelligence and
autonomous systems, but at the mundane level its ideas are being
increasingly used to study 'the psychology of acquisition and the science
of material desire', for better marketing and placement of products --
anything from toys and cereals to jeans. What’s wrong with that, ask some
professors who make a lot of money in consultations. Many of us do have
qualms about turning the academia into a handmaid of the marketplace
(imagine Victoria’s Secret and Heinz EZ Squirt Ketchup Boxer Shorts) but
in America various fields of intellectual endeavour are not hermetically
sealed. Ideas flow from one field to another and flourish wherever they
find the best applications, whether it is the shopping cart or fighting
terrorism. " December 11, 2002: Software
gambler takes on the tipsters. By Paul Marks. New Scientist. "Alan
McCabe, an IT researcher at James Cook University in northern Queensland,
has developed a software-based results tipster for Australian Rugby League
- although it could just as easily be adapted for soccer, baseball or
cricket. The program outperforms the best human tipsters. McCabe unveiled
his Artificially Intelligent Tipster - MAIT for short - at AI 02, an
artificial intelligence conference in Canberra last week. The project is a
spin-off from research into handwriting recognition. ... Across the
season, MAIT is outperforming human tipsters and getting its predictions
right more than 66 per cent of the time." December 11, 2002: Honda
Shows Off Upgraded Walking Robot. By Yuri Kageyama. The Associated
Press / available from the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. "Honda Motor Co.
may have come up with the most attentive and perhaps honest car dealer
ever in its child-size walking robot Asimo. The four-foot-tall machine,
shown to reporters Wednesday, already knew how to walk, climb stairs and
recognize voices. An upgraded version now also understands human gestures
and movement. ... Asimo uses the visual information taken by a camera in
its head to recognize 10 different preprogrammed faces and will call out
that person's name. ... In a demonstration at Honda headquarters in Tokyo,
the new robot understood where a person is pointing and moved in that
direction. ... Asimo -a name based on the Japanese word for
'legs'...." December 10, 2002: Tech's
best - This is the 'wow' stuff. CyberSpeak column by Edward C. Baig.
USA Today. "The common theme uniting Vonage DigitalVoice, XM Satellite
Radio, Roomba and most of the other products and services that captured my
fancy these past 12 months: Each earned kudos by shattering conventions
and pushing the state of the art. ... Roomba may be my favorite new
product of the year, if only because the efficient sucker relieves me of
at least one unpleasant household chore. The robotic vacuum cleaner costs
just $200 (a genuine breakthrough) and is shaped like a flying
saucer." December 10, 2002: Enterprise
technology -- the twenty year leap. By Rupert Goodwins. ZDNet UK. "The
average worker of 2002 has more technology at their fingertips than many
entire organisations would have commanded in the early 1980s. ... ome
other traditional 'office of the future' ideas will at last become common.
As workplaces become stuffed with more wirelessly networked devices --
including fabric components like lighting, heating, security and fire
sensors -- and voice recognition finally gets good rather than acceptable,
you'll be able to ask questions of your systems wherever you are. ... A
lot of artificial intelligence research, currently of academic interest,
will mean data doesn't just sit there as patterns of bits on a disk, but
will carry with it a whole skein of links to related
concepts. December 10, 2002: Biotech
boom is big business for IT. By Graeme Philipson. The Sydney Morning
Herald. "Interesting things will still happen in computers, but the
excitement will be elsewhere as IT is used to facilitate advances in other
fields. A good example of this is biotechnology, where the crossover with
IT is called bioinformatics. Bioinformatics is a term for the use of IT in
biotechnology. ... Computers are particularly suited to genomics (the
study of an organism's genes), and proteomics (the study of similarly
large groups of proteins). Workers in both fields generate vast amounts of
data. So do many other biotechnological activities, such as
high-throughput testing and various types of scanning. ... There is no
doubt that biotechnology will be an enormous area. It may even be the
future of computing, as computational biology and 'in-silico'
experimentation merge with robotics and artificial intelligence. I have
written about how German scientists now have cells and chips communicating
directly with each other. Perhaps we are headed for hybridisation with
computers. Computers can model our bodies and model our minds. They can
plug into our organs, and maybe soon our brains. The future may be much
closer than we think." December 10, 2002: Darpa puts thought into
cognitive computing. By R. Colin Johnson. EE Times. "A program that
may push cognitive technology to a new level is being launched by the
Department of Defense. The DOD, a longtime supporter and user of
artificial-intelligence systems, aims to build what it is calling an
'enduring personalized cognitive assistant,' or Epca. The system will be
able to 'reason, use represented knowledge, learn from experience,
accumulate knowledge, explain itself, accept direction, be aware of its
own behavior and capabilities as well as respond in a robust manner to
surprises,' according to a Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
(Darpa) Broad Agency Announcement. ... 'What we are really after with the
enduring personalized cognitive assistant is to get people working on a
multiyear path to bring all the pieces together,' said director Ronald
Brachman, who will co-head the initiative along with deputy director
Zachary Lemnios. ... 'People say that neural networks and AI were not
successful because we don't have humanoid robots walking around, but they
don't realize that there are hundreds of applications of this technology
that we use every day without thinking,' Brachman said. 'Machine-learning
techniques are now built into a variety of commercial systems, finding
credit card fraud, evaluating mortgage applications, detecting illegal
telephone calls and recognizing speech.' He maintained that 'AI planning
algorithms were successful in Desert Storm and are being used every day by
the military in complicated logistic situations.'" December 10, 2002: Human
or Computer? Take This Test. By Sara Robinson. The New York Times
(no-fee reg. req'd). "As chief scientist of the Internet portal Yahoo, Dr.
Udi Manber had a profound problem: how to differentiate human intelligence
from that of a machine. His concern was more than academic. Rogue computer
programs masquerading as teenagers were infiltrating Yahoo chat rooms,
collecting personal information or posting links to Web sites promoting
company products. ... The roots of Dr. Manber's philosophical conundrum
lay in a paper written 50 years earlier by the mathematician Dr. Alan
Turing, who imagined a game in which a human interrogator was connected
electronically to a human and a computer in the next room. The
interrogator's task was to pose a series of questions that determined
which of the other participants was the human. ... Dr. Manuel Blum, a
professor of computer science at Carnegie Mellon who took part in the
Yahoo conference, realized that the failures of artificial intelligence
might provide exactly the solution Yahoo needed. Why not devise a new sort
of Turing test, he suggested, that would be simple for humans but would
baffle sophisticated computer programs. Dr. Manber liked the idea, so with
his Ph.D. student Luis von Ahn and others Dr. Blum devised a collection of
cognitive puzzles based on the challenging problems of artificial
intelligence. The puzzles have the property that computers can generate
and grade the tests even though they cannot pass them. The researchers
decided to call their puzzles Captchas, an acronym for Completely
Automated Public Turing Test to Tell Computers and Humans Apart (on the
Web at www.captcha.net)." December 10, 2002:
Berkeley student bound for Oxford as Rhodes scholar - Son of
immigrants preaches 'cycle of goodness'; aspires to start program for
Indians. By William Brand. The Oakland Tribune. "A University of
California, Berkeley, senior who wants to use breakthroughs in artificial
intelligence to help create a better world is among 32 Rhodes scholars
chosen this year by a national selection committee. ... The scholar,
21-year-old Ankur Luthra, is pursuing a double major in electrical
engineering/computer science and business administration. ... His
fascination with computers and artificial intelligence -- writing software
to give machines human abilities -- began in childhood, he said. 'The idea
of being able to sit down with nothing but a blank sheet of paper and
making something out of nothing captured my imagination,' he said."
December 10, 2002:
Buildings in Old Town to be razed. By Kirsty Scott. The Guardian.
"Most of the historic buildings ravaged by a fire in the heart of
Edinburgh's Old Town at the weekend are to be demolished. ... Edinburgh
University, whose renowned school of informatics was damaged, said about
£500,000 worth of equipment had been lost and a library on artificial
intelligence had been destroyed. 'It is world-class research that has been
damaged,' a university spokeswoman said. 'A lot of the computer work is
backed up at other sites, but there has been the total destruction of the
AI library.'" December 10, 2002: Park
plugged in to Singaporean skills. New Zealand Herald. "AUT Technology
Park chief executive Jonathan Kirkpatrick relishes a point of difference
between the incubator that he runs and other Auckland incubators. This
difference is that his group has links with a Government-sponsored
business incubator in Singapore. ... Technology Park enables entrepreneurs
and researchers to investigate and realise the commercial potential of
their ideas in fields such as robotics, artificial intelligence, neural
computing, mobile, bio-medical and educational
technologies." December
9, 2002: Making
his mark on the Internet map - Tim Bray's inventions have catapulted
him to an elite class of geeks with clout. By Pauline Tam. Ottawa Citizen
/ available from Canada.com. "Plug in the wrong keywords, and the wrong
results come out.And that's the problem, according to Bray. Most of the
information on the Web is designed to be read. But what if computer
programs could do much of that reading for us? What if, instead of search
engines, software agents could roam from page to page, automatically
translating information into easy-to-use maps? Bray, who's 47, has spent
much of his career improving ways to search, and he has found no better
tool than an old-fashioned map. He believes with pictures to prompt us
instead of lists of text, surfing the Web would feel like a guided walk
rather than the chaotic wandering it is now. December
9, 2002: In the
Future, We'll All Be Harry Potter. Jakob Nielsen's Alertbox. " By
saying that we'll one day be like Harry Potter, I don't mean that we'll
fly around on broomsticks or play three-dimensional ballgames (though
virtual reality will let enthusiasts play Quidditch matches). What I do
mean is that we're about to experience a world where spirit inhabits
formerly inanimate objects. Much of the Harry Potter books' charm comes
from the quirky magic objects that surround Harry and his friends. Rather
than being solid and static, these objects embody initiative and activity.
This is precisely the shift we'll experience as computational power moves
beyond the desktop into everyday objects." December
9, 2002: Teen
Wins $100,000 Science Scholarship - Mass. High Schooler Steven Byrnes
Wins $100,000 Scholarship for Work on Elusive Math Theorem. The Associated
Press / available from ABC News. "A high school senior who developed a
theorem that could potentially apply to code-cracking and artificial
intelligence won a $100,000 scholarship on Monday. ... Organizers said it
represented a breakthrough in a famous poset game called Chomp that was
invented in the 1970s. Two-player poset, or partially ordered set, games
are important to the growing field of discrete mathematics for their
potential use in artificial intelligence and secure codes on computer
networks." December
9, 2002: More
products arising to fight flood of spam - Perfect solution to junk
e-mail yet to be found. By Francine Brevetti. San Mateo County Times. "If
you think the spam has piled up in your e-mail's inbox recently, consider
that this unwanted communication actually might be good for the economy.
In the last year more than two dozen new companies offering spam-fighting
technology -- especially aimed at businesses -- have come to the market,
according to analysts. Several of them originate in the Bay Area. ...
[Joyce] Graff said her corporate clients calculate the amount of spam they
get on their networks represents between 30 and 50 percent of their
e-mail. ... Jeff Ready, Corvigo's chief executive officer, said Corvigo
uses natural language; its technology reads a message in context, it does
not merely scan for certain words. 'We deploy our artificial intelligence
on our hardware,' he said. 'It sits between their firewall and their mail
server, traffic comes in and our box filters the
messages.'" December
9, 2002: Too
Much Information. Comment by Hendrik Hertzberg. The New Yorker. "When
it comes to concocting fevered visions of the future as a way of
illuminating the present ... no literary divinator gets it righter than
the sci-fi pulp master Philip K. Dick, author of 'Clans of the Alphane
Moon' and dozens of other books, and inspirer of some of Hollywood's
spookiest dystopias, including 'Blade Runner,' 'Total Recall,' and
'Minority Report.' And this is odd, given that he has been dead for twenty
years. Too bad he's not still around. It would be interesting to get his
take on the Information Awareness Office of the Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency of the Department of Defense. ... The 'example
technologies' which the Office intends to develop include 'entity
extraction from natural language text,' 'biologically inspired algorithms
for agent control,' and 'truth maintenance.' One of the Office's thirteen
subdivisions, the Human Identification at a Distance (HumanID) program, is
letting contracts not only for 'Face Recognition' and 'Iris Recognition'
but also for 'Gait Recognition.' ... The Information Awareness Office is
working on some really cool stuff that will eventually turn up at
Brookstone and the Sharper Image, like a Palm Pilot-size PDA that does
instantaneous English-Arabic and English-Chinese translations. ... But the
Office's main assignment is, basically, to turn everything in cyberspace
about everybody ... into a single, humongous, multi-googolplexibyte
database that electronic robots will mine for patterns of information
suggestive of terrorist activity. Dr. Strangelove's vision—'a chikentic
gomplex of gumbyuders'—is at last coming into its own. It's easy to
ridicule this—fun, too, and fun is something the war on terrorism doesn't
offer a lot of—but it's not so easy to dismiss the possibility that the
project, nutty as it sounds, might actually be of significant help in
uncovering terrorist networks. The problem is that it would also be of
significant help in uncovering just about everything, including the last
vestiges of individual and family privacy." December
9, 2002: They,
Robots. Book Currents column by Mark Rozzo. The New Yorker. (Printer
friendly version available here.)
"In 1739, the French inventor Jacques de Vaucanson unveiled his latest
startling creation: an anatomically convincing, yet wholly mechanical,
duck—one that quacked, ate grain, and, most impressively, excreted.
Vaucanson's mechanical duck was a sensation, and, as Rodney A. Brooks
relates in his engaging FLESH AND MACHINES: HOW ROBOTS WILL CHANGE US
(Pantheon), one of the celebrated early attempts to replicate—or, at
least, imitate—life. Brooks ... tells the odd history—from that
Enlightenment duck to Deep Blue, a computer program that famously beat
Garry Kasparov at chess—of what he calls 'mankind's centuries-long quest
to build artificial creatures.' ... [I]n BUILDING BOTS (Chicago Review)
... [William] Gurstelle examines the growing popularity of 'combat
robotics,' a sport that he predicts could soon 'grow into another
NASCAR.'" December
9, 2002: A
Few Good Toys. By Dyan Machan. Forbes. "As the U.S. Army prepares for
war in Iraq (and beyond), it has been moving fast to transform itself from
a Cold War relic into a deadly, rapidly deployable force. ... Technology
will play a big role in this evolution, and that is the purview of A.
Michael Andrews , the Army's 56-year-old deputy assistant secretary for
research and technology. Andrews, a civilian electrical engineer with the
rank of a two-star general, oversees 21 labs, 8,600 scientists and
engineers and a $1.5 billion-a-year budget. ... Andrews gets his
inspiration from science fiction like Star Trek and the books of Arthur C.
Clarke, as well as nonfiction.... Show Time: A young recruit stands before
a 150-degree wraparound movie screen, studying a military drama created by
computer-graphics artists. ... When the recruit heads for the field,
abandoning the child, the mother goes ballistic as the news cameras roll.
"This is crisis decision making," says Richard Lindheim, executive
director of the Institute for Creative Technologies in Marina del Rey,
Calif. The Army granted the institute an initial $45 million a year to
create simulations using Hollywood talent. ... Attack of the Drones: he
Predator, the unmanned airplane that incinerated a carload of al Qaeda
suspects in Yemen last month, is on its way to becoming the size of a
sparrow ... future versions will fly themselves via delicate image sensors
and global positioning system data. Commercial uses: Farmers could send
out a flock of drones to monitor crops...." December 9, 2002: Fire destroys
librarian's work. BBC. "Olga Franks is employed by the School of
Informatics at the University of Edinburgh and has helped collate the
department's artificial intelligence collection for two decades. Books,
journals and research papers, which were housed at 80 South Bridge, were
completely destroyed when fire swept through Scotland's capital on
Saturday night. Ms Franks said: 'I feel simply desperate. I was one of the
original librarians in the department and I saw this work grow from the
size of a cupboard to an immense library. ... The artificial intelligence
collection was divided into three sections and contained some 5,000 books,
800 journals and 35,000 research papers published by the department. The
library, which charted a 40-year history of the subject, became housed in
80 South Bridge in 1985." December
9, 2002:
Edinburgh fire - Demolition threat. CNN Europe. "More than 80
firefighters were still tackling the blaze on Sunday afternoon, and fire
crews from areas around the city were drafted in to help. Research work on
artificial intelligence was destroyed at one of the university's bases for
its School of Infomatics, an internationally acclaimed centre for research
and teaching." December
8, 2002: Fire
tears through Edinburgh. The Associated Press / available from The
Globe & Mail /
also available from The Austin American-Statesman. "A fire tore
through Edinburgh's medieval Old Town, destroying 13 buildings, and
firefighters working to control the blaze in the neighborhood's narrow
cobblestone alleys said Sunday it would likely take two more days to put
it out completely. ... Edinburgh University said research work on
artificial intelligence was destroyed when one of its buildings was
damaged. A spokesman said researchers would have back up records,
however." December
7, 2002: Sci-Fi
Tales Propel Space Tech. By Kendra Mayfield. Wired News. "Now, the
European Space Agency hopes to recognize young writers and inspire future
astrophysicists and astronauts by sponsoring a science-fiction writing
contest. The Clarke-Bradbury International Science Fiction Competition for
2003 is open to writers ages 15 to 30. Contestants can submit short (2,500
words maximum) stories about space travel, exploration or settlement. The
deadline for entries is Feb. 28. ... Last year, the ESA conducted a
detailed survey of early sci-fi writing, artwork and film to determine
whether any of the concepts and technologies envisioned could be used as
inspiration for current and future spacecraft and missions. The agency
collected more than 250 concepts from scientists, engineers,
science-fiction writers and laypeople. An illustrated brochure [link]
showcases these ideas, some of which European space researchers could
eventually develop in the real world." December
6, 2002: We'll All Be
Under Surveillance - Computers Will Say What We Are. By Nat Hentoff.
The Village Voice. "Orwell died in 1950. Prophetic as he was in
1984, however, he could not have imagined how advanced
surveillance technology would become. ... Our government's unblinking eyes
will try to find suspicious patterns in your credit-card and bank data,
medical records, the movies you click for on pay-per-view, passport
applications, prescription purchases, e-mail messages, telephone calls,
and anything you've done that winds up in court records, like divorces.
Almost anything you do will leave a trace for these omnivorous computers,
which will now contain records of your library book withdrawals, your
loans and debts, and whatever you order by mail or on the Web. As
Georgetown University law professor Jonathan Turley pointed out in the
November 17 Los Angeles Times: 'For more than 200 years, our
liberties have been protected primarily by practical barriers rather than
constitutional barriers to government abuse. Because of the sheer size of
the nation and its population, the government could not practically abuse
a great number of citizens at any given time. In the last decade, however,
these practical barriers have fallen to technology.'" December
6, 2002: 'The
Two Towers' - The Movie You're Not Gonna Miss. Movie review by Kurt
Loder. MTV News. "It was the world premiere of 'The Lord of the Rings: The
Two Towers,' the second installment of director Peter Jackson's monumental
visualization of the J.R.R. Tolkien fantasy classic. ... This new
generation of computer technology, deployed with consummate artistry, is
at the heart of the film's extraordinary visceral impact. Never before
have live action, scale-modeling and digital animation been so seamlessly
interwoven: Some of 'The Two Towers' battle scenes clamor with an almost
documentary realism. ... In the astonishing 20-minute sequence in which an
army of 10,000 hideous Uruk-hai warriors storm the bastion of Helm's Deep,
each figure, seen from above, appears to move in its own distinct ambit.
This effect was accomplished through the use of something called MASSIVE,
a proprietary software program developed by the New Zealand effects
company WETA Digital. As explained in the movie's copious production
notes, MASSIVE is a venture into the area of artificial-intelligence
technology, allowing the creation of vast numbers of digitized characters
-- or 'agents' -- each of which is able to draw randomly from a set of
programmed responses in any given situation. In short, they can
effectively make their own decisions." December
6, 2002: Real love
from fake dogs? Cosmic Log by Alan Boyle. MSNBC. "We know that real
pets can make a positive impact on the health of senior citizens — but
could robot pets have the same effect? That’s what Purdue University’s
Center for the Human-Animal Bond plans to find out, in cooperation with
the University of Washington. ... In another facet of the investigation,
the researchers found that some Aibo owners formed a strangely organic
relationship with their inorganic pets. University of Washington
psychology professor Peter Kahn said one owner reported that when he got
dressed in the morning, he turned his Aibo in another direction for
modesty’s sake. ... There’s nothing wrong per se with the no-muss, no-fuss
robotic interaction, Kahn said, but there is a nagging worry: 'Our concern
is that it’s replacing interaction with real animals,' he said. Would
children raised with robotic pets develop the same sense of responsibility
for their fellow creatures? That’s giving psychologists like Kahn
something to think about. ... Can a robo-companion serve as a comforter?
Or does this trend serve as a somewhat sad social
commentary?" December
5, 2002: Full
Analysis - PolyAnalyst mines data and text, and its engines run the
algorithmic gamut. Product review by Greg James. Intelligent Enterprise.
"Megaputer Intelligence Inc., the U.S.-based corporation behind
PolyAnalyst, traces its roots back to the Artificial Intelligence (AI)
Research and Development group at Moscow State University. PolyAnalyst
made its debut in 1994, with continual enhancements ever since. Version
4.5 adds decision forests, transactional market basket analysis, and link
analysis to the base product. Notably, it's also the first of several
commercial packages to offer integrated text mining within the same system
as numeric data mining. Until recently, text and numeric mining were
separate endeavors. ... A classic application of this brand of text mining
is the analysis of customer feedback in call center logs. PolyAnalyst can
scan through these comment fields, extract the important concepts and
terms, and turn these results into numeric values that data miners can
further analyze with Link Analysis, Classification, Clustering, and so on.
PolyAnalyst's Text Mining exploration engine provides both directed and
undirected modeling." December
5, 2002: Research
examines robot-assisted therapy. United Press International.
"Computerized 'pets,' such as those coming from Japanese electronics
makers, could approach their flesh-and-blood counterparts in providing
people with social interaction stimuli, scientists said Thursday. Purdue
University is running a year-long study that puts an 'AIBO' robot dog for
six weeks in the homes of people 65 years and older who live alone, said
Alan Beck, director of the Center for the Human-Animal Bond in Purdue's
School of Veterinary Medicine. Cats and dogs have the well-documented
ability to improve patients' stress levels, blood pressure and other
factors. Using robots could do the same while alleviating a medical
staff's worries about possible animal drawbacks, such as the need for
feeding and exercise, Beck said. ... Japanese researchers have done
similar studies with Paro, a fairly simple, 'baby seal' creation with a
few novel twists to appear more true-to-life." December
5, 2002:
Building a Better Cat. By Saul Hansell. The New York Times (no-fee
reg. req'd). "[T]he development of the FurReal cat may also suggest that
the electronic toy industry is beginning to grow up, subordinating the
gadgetry to classic, open-ended modes of play. 'You don't want the
technology in a toy to be visible,' said Judy Ellis, the chairwoman of the
toy design department at the Fashion Institute of Technology. 'The first
robot pets were very cool-looking, but a child doesn't relate to a shiny
surface. A child can relate to a furry cat.' Indeed, Mr. [Leif] Askeland
passed up some of the technological features used in other robotic pets
like infrared sensors so more money could go into the feel of the cat's
fur and the look of its eyes. 'You can make tricks that you would do one
time,' Mr. Askeland said. 'We preferred to focus on the emotional aspects
of play. Nurturing and friendship are things that stay with you for a
lifetime.' ... Hasbro said that the cat, whose target audience is 6-
to-12-year-old girls, has found a second one: people in nursing homes who
want the companionship of a cat without the litter box." December
4, 2002: The
World Is My Cubicle - Welcome to the future. Opinion by Alan Thwaits.
Canada Computes. "Cyberpunk offers readers a whole host of guilty
pleasures. ... Best of all, though, cyberpunk is writing that's all about
technology -- and about how human beings deal with the consequences of the
technology they've developed. The best of [William] Gibson's work, in my
not-so-humble opinion, is contained in his so-called 'Sprawl' trilogy,
which comprises the novels titled Neuromancer, Count Zero and Mona Lisa
Overdrive. In Neuromancer, which was first published in 1984, Gibson
coined the term 'cyberspace,' essentially inventing the concept. ... Case,
the main character of Neuromancer ('hero' is definitely the wrong word),
is a cowboy, a console jockey, who makes his living by jacking into
cyberspace, the 'consensual hallucination that was the matrix,' in order
to steal data for his employers. ... The story is about his chance to get
back in the action in a big way. Along the way, he gets involved in
economic espionage, a family business made up of generations of clones,
and a leap in the evolution process of artificial intelligence, which has
immense implications." December
4, 2002: Will
Smith Set to Get Robotic Costars. By Stephen M. Silverman. People.
"Will Smith has never been accused of being a mechanical actor, but that
label may apply to his next role. Variety reports that the 'Men in Black'
star, 34, is set to star in the futuristic sci-fi thriller 'I, Robot,'
based on an Isaac Asimov short-story collection from the 1940s that is
credited for setting the groundwork for such films as 'The Terminator' and
'A.I. Artificial Intelligence.' ... Asimov's source material consisted of
nine short stories that all contained the same three laws of robotics,
notes Variety. Those laws are, 'A robot may not injure a human or, through
inaction, allow a human to come to harm; a robot must obey orders given to
it by a human, except where it would conflict with the first law; and a
robot must protect itself, as long as that protection doesn't violate
either the first or second law.'" December
4, 2002: Lego
robot challenge aids learning. By Jane Wakefield. BBC. "Playing with
Lego was once limited to building a tower of brightly coloured bricks but
that was far from the case during a day of robot building at BT's research
lab in Ipswich. Teams from 22 schools in East Anglia were set the task of
designing, building and programming robots out of smart Lego. ... Unlike
the more war-like robots of Robot Wars, these creatures were designed with
a rather more constructive purpose as the theme of the day was how robots
could help in cities with environmental problems. The children came up
with ideas such as a robot that could clean up the streets of London by
picking up litter. Or a giant robot with long legs to stride over the
traffic-bound streets of New York to provide emergency aid in the event of
crashes. The day was sponsored by the Cambridge-MIT Institute (CMI), a
transatlantic partnership between BT's research arm BTexact and the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Boston, US. ... The project is
designed to change the geeky image of technology and show how it can be
both educational and fun." December
3, 2002: Mars
rover inspires toy robot. BBC. " Drawing inspiration from the US space
agency's Mars rover, scientists in the US are working on creating a robot
that can teach children about science. Researchers at the Robotics
Institute at Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) have already created a
simple version of the rover, called a Trikebot. ... The CMU team says that
although the rover is intended as a toy for children, there is a serious
side to its work. The team hopes children will learn about the abilities
and limitations of robots." December 3, 2002:
Making
'bots pulls students in. National contest hopes to battle trend and
draw more teens to engineering field. By Cathy Kightlinger. The
Indianapolis Star. "With enrollment in engineering-related college courses
dipping across the country, educators hope that growing participation in
middle and high school-level robot-building competitions will spark
renewed interest in those fields. In one such competition, called FIRST
Robotics, students build robots out of metal, small motors, electrical
wiring and, in some cases, colorful Legos. Unlike Comedy Central's
"Battlebots," these robots are built to perform tasks -- not annihilate
each other. ... Across the country in 1983, more than 441,000 students
were enrolled in undergraduate engineering and technology programs. By
1999, that number had dipped by nearly 80,000, according to the National
Science Board. ... Perry Meridian senior John Prather changed his career
plans after participating on the Far-Southside school's FIRST team. The
senior had considered becoming an accountant until about two years ago,
when he joined the team. Now he wants to become a computer or electrical
engineer. 'Starting from the first year I got on it, I thought it was
going to be something fun to do,' he said. 'Then I started learning things
I never expected to learn.' ... 'We're kicking the kids out at 11 p.m. on
a Friday night. We have to push them out.' The FIRST Robotics program
began in 1992 as the brainchild of scientist and inventor Dean Kamen, the
man behind the portable dialysis machine and the stair-climbing
wheelchair." December 3, 2002:
LEGO
team performs at preschool. The Baxter Bulletin. "Pinkston Middle
School's FIRST LEGO Team, The Manic Mechanics, recently demonstrated its
2002 Challenge "City Sights" to preschoolers at Noah's Ark Preschool. ...
They hope their effort will spark the interest of younger children and get
them excited about being on a FIRST (For Inspiration and Recognition of
Science and Technology) LEGO team when they are older, according to a
recent press release. ... This year's task is to build a robot to help in
urban development and repair. Teams learn to become innovative and
original in their construction of these robots. The teams also have
research projects pertaining to the challenge each year, the release
said." December
3, 2002: Bioterror
monitoring software offered free to aid health groups. By Christopher
Snowbeck. Post-Gazette. "Experimental software developed in Pittsburgh to
detect evidence of a bioterror attack by monitoring activity in hospital
emergency rooms is now being made available free to public health
organizations across the country. ... The computer program, called the
Real-time Outbreak Disease Surveillance System [RODS], was developed at
the BioMedical Security Institute, a collaboration between Pitt and
Carnegie Mellon University." December
2, 2002: Futuristic
Prostate Screening. By Rebecca Somach. WHOI News. "Using artificial
intelligence technology, researchers at Eastern Virginia Medical School
are teaching computers to recognize the genetic patterns associated with
prostate cancer. Using blood samples collected and stored from hundreds of
men in Virginia, the program was able to predict prostate cancers with a
96 percent accuracy rate. Currently, the program is being validated at
seven institutions across the U.S." December
2, 2002: Networking
stops working. By Scott Kirsner. The Boston Globe (page C1). "The
inventor, author, and entrepreneur Ray Kurzweil, who also occasionally
performs live music as the digitally rendered songstress Ramona, will
undertake a new venture next year: publishing a subscription e-mail
newsletter. He's busy with two other projects as well. ... Kurzweil
predicts that an event he calls 'the singularity' - the merger of human
and computer intelligence - will occur before the end of this century.
Kurzweil's latest book, titled 'The Singularity is Near,' will be out in
late 2003. ('Unless,'' he writes via e-mail, ''I can find some
time-warping or mental cloning technology which might speed things up.')
Kurzweil is a recipient of the National Medal of Technology, the inventor
of the first text-to-speech reading machine for the blind, and the
president of several Wellesley-based technology
start-ups." December
1, 2002: Fed
info 'tool for tyrants' - Information database would track all
citizens. By Bob Keefe. Cox News Service / available from York Sunday
News. "Deep within the Defense Department, government scientists are hard
at work trying to build a massive database of personal information about
everyone in the United States -- including details on everything from
credit card transactions to medical records and travel reservations -- in
an attempt to weed out terrorists. ... The Pentagon wants the
controversial system to not just store and retrieve data, but also use
artificial intelligence to automatically analyze each and every piece of
it and generate its own ideas about potential clues to terrorism. And the
TIA computers must quickly analyze data in any form -- in foreign language
documents, in fingerprints, pictures or even sounds. That's the sort of
job that requires countless hours by teams of analysts at the FBI and CIA
today." December
1, 2002: In
UT program, 'citizen-scholars' put knowledge to work. By Rich
Cherwitz, Sarah Rodriguez and Julie Sievers. The Austin
American-Statesman. "Ask computer science doctoral candidate Harold Chaput
what artificial intelligence and digital technology, the subject of his
dissertation, have to do with the lives of people, and you'll see the
passion driving his research. 'Technology,' said Chaput, 'is a tool for
doing important, fascinating, powerful, beautiful things.' Chaput founded
the Austin Museum of Digital Art, the first museum in the world to focus
exclusively on digital art. It holds monthly art events, annual
exhibitions, and gives local youth organizations access to digital art and
technology. Work with AMODA introduced Chaput to the Griffin School, a
private school for at-risk youths. In addition to joining the advisory
board, Chaput teaches classes in computer programming and Web design. Not
content with laboratory research, Chaput is using his intellectual
resources to make a difference in the lives of Austin residents. He is one
example of how graduate students are 'citizen-scholars.'" December
1, 2002: Big
disaster, teeny packages. By James N. Gardner. The Oregonian. "Michael
Crichton is the undisputed master of the techno-thriller genre. ... The
underlying scientific developments in "Prey" are nanotechnology (precision
engineering at the molecular level) and artificial life (the younger,
scarier cousin of artificial intelligence). These fields of research have
generated dire warnings from the likes of Bill Joy, the chief science
officer at Sun Microsystems, and Sir Martin Rees, the Astronomer Royal of
England. Joy, for instance, cautions that self-replicating nanodevices,
only a few molecules in volume, could conceivably infect and fatally
degrade our technological infrastructure -- and that no power on Earth
would be able to stop the tiny machines once they began reproducing. In
Crichton's hands, this horrifying possibility comes to life. ... Computer
guru Ray Kurzweil has predicted that before the 21st century ends,
thinking machines will have raced far ahead of humanity in terms of sheer
mental ability. ... This is the disquieting specter of artificial
intelligence research succeeding beyond our wildest dreams or nightmares.
But as Crichton chillingly demonstrates, fast-moving research in
nanotechnology and artificial life technologies, some of it funded by the
military, raises an even creepier possibility...." December 2002/January 2003: Gentlemen,
Start Your Robots. Self-reliant roadsters will race for a hefty
Pentagon prize. By David Talbot. Technology Review. "Sometime in 2004,
robots will drive the roughly 400 kilometers from Los Angeles to Las
Vegas. Competing in a combined on- and off-road race across deserts and
mountains, they’ll be advancing the technology of autonomous vehicles and
vying to clinch a $1 million cash prize." December
2002/January 2003: Immobots
Take Control. By Wade Roush. Technology Review. "From photocopiers to
space probes, machines injected with robotic self-awareness are reliable
problem solvers. ... But Deep Space One had something Mars Polar Lander
lacked: an onboard robot able to think autonomously and handle the
unexpected. Using its engineering knowledge, the robot tried to repair the
switch by toggling it on and off. When this failed, it devised a
successful plan to complete the navigation maneuver, and the craft
proceeded unharmed. The robot that saved Deep Space One was in the
vanguard of a new breed of machines poised to have a big impact in space
and here on Earth. Quite unlike the metallic contraptions that march
stiffly through sci-fi movies or the mindless, stripped-down devices that
heft parts on our assembly lines, the new robots have more brain than
brawn. Each possesses a detailed picture of its own inner workings—encoded
in software-based models—that gives it the ability to respond in novel
ways to events its programmers might not have anticipated. Because many of
these inward-focused, self-reconfiguring machines don’t move, some
computer scientists call them immobile robots, or 'immobots.' ... A
deep-space probe obviously requires much more autonomy than, say, a
photocopier. But heavily used office machines must meet a similar demand
for reliability and efficiency... 'This distinction between telling a
system how to do its job and telling the system the end result you want is
very fundamental,' says Robert Morris, director of IBM’s Almaden Research
Center in San Jose, CA. IBM is working to build what it calls 'autonomic'
characteristics -- model-based features, as well as others that employ
classic heuristic programming -- into products such as Web servers and
storage networks. These features will allow the products to reconfigure
themselves for optimal performance, depending on what’s being asked of
them." December
2002: Playing to
Win - Computer and video games are a bigger business than the movies,
and the biggest force in games is Electronic Arts...." By Chuck Salter.
FastCompany (Issue 65, page 80). "Welcome to the entertainment industry of
the 21st century, where video games are serious business. Last year, U.S.
computer- and video-game revenue surpassed domestic box-office receipts,
and this year, the game industry is expected to widen that gap with more
than $10 billion in sales. ... [Bruce] McMillan was playing FIFA [Soccer]
at the game's highest level, where the artificial intelligence is at its
best. 'It studies your tactics and looks for play patterns,' he says. 'The
move you used to score the first time won't work the next time you try
it.' After taking a 1-0 lead, he was stymied in the second half, unable to
penetrate, and he tried in vain to fend off the computer's attacks on his
goal." December
2002: God
Is the Machine. In the beginning there was 0. and then there was 1. A
mind-bending meditation on the transcendent power of digital computation.
By Kevin Kelly. Wired Magazine. "From this perspective, computation seems
almost a theological process. It takes as its fodder the primeval choice
between yes or no, the fundamental state of 1 or 0. After stripping away
all externalities, all material embellishments, what remains is the purest
state of existence: here/not here. Am/not am. ... All creation, from this
perch, is made from this irreducible foundation. Every mountain, every
star, the smallest salamander or woodland tick, each thought in our mind,
each flight of a ball is but a web of elemental yes/nos woven together. If
the theory of digital physics holds up, movement (f = ma), energy (E =
mc2), gravity, dark matter, and antimatter can all be explained by
elaborate programs of 1/0 decisions. ... Our awakening to the true power
of computation rests on two suspicions. The first is that computation can
describe all things. To date, computer scientists have been able to
encapsulate every logical argument, scientific equation, and literary work
that we know about into the basic notation of computation. Now, with the
advent of digital signal processing, we can capture video, music, and art
in the same form. Even emotion is not immune. Researchers Cynthia Breazeal
at MIT and Charles Guerin and Albert Mehrabian in Quebec have built Kismet
and EMIR (Emotional Model for Intelligent Response), two systems that
exhibit primitive feelings. ... A third postulate ties the first two
together into a remarkable new view: All computation is one. In 1937, Alan
Turing, Alonso Church, and Emil Post worked out the logical underpinnings
of useful computers. They called the most basic loop --which has become
the foundation of all working computers -- a finite-state machine. ...
When John von Neumann and others jump-started the first electronic
computers in the 1950s, they immediately began extending the laws of
computation away from math proofs and into the natural world. They
tentatively applied the laws of loops and cybernetics to ecology, culture,
families, weather, and biological systems. Evolution and learning, they
declared, were types of computation. Nature computed. If nature computed,
why not the entire universe?" December
2002: A
Smarter Way to Sell Ketchup - This is your brain. This is your brain
in the marketing department. Any questions? By Alissa Quart. Wired
Magazine. "Cognitive science, which draws on psychology, neuroscience,
sociology, and computer science, has an illustrious history. The
discipline has brought us innovations in artificial intelligence,
cybernetics, and neural networking. But increasingly, it's about ketchup.
Cognitive science isn't just being put to work for better marketing - it's
also helping to make more sophisticated products. There's cog-sci
fieldwork behind cereal ads, and lab experiments support the marketing of
jeans. Cognitive scientists are investigating why kids might feel positive
about, say, Coke but hate Pepsi; or why Zoog is a catchy add-on to the
Disney brand." December
1, 2002 [issue date]: The
Robot Evolution - MIT's Rodney A. Brooks is among researchers leading
the charge to develop a smarter and more useful artificial creature. By
Jill Jusko. Industry Week. "The manufacturing industry is no stranger to
robots. Huge robot arms are commonplace in several industrial settings --
particularly automotive -- and primarily engage in long-run, repetitive
tasks such as welding and assembly. ... Then there are the intelligent
robots of science-fiction movies and books, such as C3PO and R2D2 from the
Star Wars movies, which seem almost human in their ability to reason and
feel and interact with human beings. In his latest book, 'Flesh and
Machines: How Robots Will Change Us' (2002, Pantheon Books), Rodney A.
Brooks, director of the Artificial Intelligence Laboratory at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge, suggests that
the 'science fiction fantasy,' as he calls it, is not so far off. ... But
what could increasingly intelligent robots mean to
manufacturing?"
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