Author Topic: Terabyte?! Holy stuff!  (Read 6698 times)

Or you know, you could skip to the punchline and recreate the human brain artificially...

Exactly. It's possible because we learn. Our brains are computers.

I think part of the paragraph I read the AI bit in mentioned that a learning AI would be possible simply because of the way QCs work.
QC's read and write to atoms. This means 1 bit can do thousands of operations in nanoseconds. Multiply that by 1 million and you have virtually limitless processing power. That easily supersedes the brain, then on-top of that have virtually limitless memory for everything it learns. Or so it can store everything it ever does.
Now give it a program to start off learning, give it the ability to detect mistakes it's made in similar situations it's encountered before and then try again until it's successful. You could teach it basic things this way, until it builds up a history of tasks and ways to accomplish said tasks.
Though I'm just speaking off the top of my head, that's the basic way a learning chess computer works, only this could do things much faster, and remember every single thing it does.

I'm sure given enough time, an efficient program that learns would be developed. One that can adapt to various tasks. And potentially read, write and delete it's own programming, further developing it's capabilities.


Hard drives aren't even that expensive (at least not compared to other PC parts :x)
You can find a 1TB for like $60-80 some places.

Everyone has atleast 1tb now :P
By "everyone," I'm pretty sure you mean all your rich friends who are actually surviving the economy's fall to stuff right now.

By "everyone," I'm pretty sure you mean all your rich friends who are actually surviving the economy's fall to stuff right now.
Haha, you must be living in a box with a stuffty laptop and wifi. If you cant afford a measly 60 dollar HD from Newegg, I pity you.

How does anyone even fill up a Terabyte?

Exactly. It's possible because we learn. Our brains are computers.

Our brains are computers that adapted to our needs though. The best example I can give of this is Face Recognition. It can take an electronic computer a good 30 minutes to match a face to another face it might have stored in it's database. For us however, it takes a fraction of a second to recognize a face.

In contrast, mathematical processes like solving complex algebraic problems can take a long time for us, while they could take a few seconds for computers.

So basically a QC wouldn't be all that better then a regular computer in terms of data processing. But the QC would make up for electronic computing's shortcomings by being ridiculously fast in storing/processing information and being able to store allot of information as well. Ultimately we'd need to program a computer to learn like us for it to, well, learn like us. It's difficult when we ourselves aren't exactly sure how our brain works.

Haha, you must be living in a box with a stuffty laptop and wifi. If you cant afford a measly 60 dollar HD from Newegg, I pity you.
I don't know about you, but I'd rather buy something from a more reliable source no matter how expensive it is.

Haha, you must be living in a box with a stuffty laptop and wifi. If you cant afford a measly 60 dollar HD from Newegg, I pity you.
I live in a house thats falling apart with an old computer and parents who both had to take pay cuts.

How does anyone even fill up a Terabyte?


its not hard
filled up my 250g in about a week (movies music etc)

Clean out your computer :<

Tom

Now give it a program to start off learning, give it the ability to detect mistakes it's made in similar situations it's encountered before and then try again until it's successful.
How does a computer make a mistake? How does it know what to try next with it being told?

I've never heard of a terabyte before this :o

Tom

If you think a Tb is a lot, google's database is like 850 Tb.