Solaris (Solyaris/Солярис), 1972, Andrei Tarkovsky
Ive been starting this movie when I go to bed each night for the past month and i still have no fucking clue whats going on. Great visuals though.
(via ikenbot)
| 142 notes | tags:Solaris (Solyaris/Солярис), 1972, Andrei Tarkovsky
Ive been starting this movie when I go to bed each night for the past month and i still have no fucking clue whats going on. Great visuals though.
(via ikenbot)
| 142 notes | tags:Excuse me, but I have some business to attend to….IN THE GODDAMN FUTURE.
(Source: tomorrowcalling, via ikenbot)
| 239 notes | tags:Projects as of 2012
(Source: recentlypossible)
| 1 note | tags:| 430 notes | tags:Artificial Intelligence Could Be on Brink of Passing Turing Test
One hundred years after Alan Turing was born, his eponymous test remains an elusive benchmark for artificial intelligence. Now, for the first time in decades, it’s possible to imagine a machine making the grade.
Turing was one of the 20th century’s great mathematicians, a conceptual architect of modern computing whose codebreaking played a decisive part in World War II. His test, described in a seminal dawn-of-the-computer-age paper, was deceptively simple: If a machine could pass for human in conversation, the machine could be considered intelligent.
Artificial intelligences are now ubiquitous, from GPS navigation systems and Google algorithms to automated customer service and Apple’s Siri, to say nothing of Deep Blue and Watson — but no machine has met Turing’s standard. The quest to do so, however, and the lines of research inspired by the general challenge of modeling human thought, have profoundly influenced both computer and cognitive science.
There is reason to believe that code kernels for the first Turing-intelligent machine have already been written.
“Two revolutionary advances in information technology may bring the Turing test out of retirement,” wrote Robert French, a cognitive scientist at the French National Center for Scientific Research, in an Apr. 12 Science essay. “The first is the ready availability of vast amounts of raw data — from video feeds to complete sound environments, and from casual conversations to technical documents on every conceivable subject. The second is the advent of sophisticated techniques for collecting, organizing, and processing this rich collection of data.”
| 15 notes | tags:Updated Fox Engine Produces Renderings Straight from the Uncanny Valley
Kojima Productions wants you to figure out which column is a picture and which is the rendering created with their beefed up Fox Engine. Yeah, take a moment to soak in the fact one of these columns is completely fake, then decide which passes as reality.
I’ll give you a hint: column B would be real, if it weren’t for the fact that it’s not.
Forgoing the standard utilization of light maps, the Fox Engine relies on realistic physics to help objects — even movable ones like the white collar horse seen here — blend in with their surroundings. I always held that the lighting problem had been cracked this generation, but Kojima and his team have proved me stupidly wrong.
| 5 notes | tags:Golan Levin talking about things that are fucking awesome.