From: Steve Witham (sw@tiac.net)
Date: Mon Oct 06 1997 - 19:43:19 MDT
Hal Finney writes-
>
>Actually I find that the Singularity stays about 20-30 years in the
>future. I'd like to see some evidence that anyone in 1980 predicted it
>to be in 2035, 55 years in their future. I don't think anyone even knew
>about the Singularity back then.
I remember writing a letter to Creative Computing, so it must have been
in the late '70s, predicting enough computing power for real-time brain
simulations by 2025 or something--about 45-50 years out. Didn't get
published.
>It's our old friend, the S curve. Right now the growth in performance
>looks exponential, just as the increase in sewing machine speeds (or
>virtually any other industrial performance measure) looked exponential
>at one time. But they hit a limit back then, and we will probably hit
>a limit ourselves now.
Hans Moravec graphed computing power starting with mechanical calculators
and it's been a steady exponential since quite a few decades before the
transistor. But then (this was the early '80s, I think) he said we were
going to see a sudden Giant Leap around 1990, for some reason!
--Steve
-- sw@tiac.net Steve Witham www.tiac.net/users/sw under deconstruction "...when activated, it pops a message off the bag and recurs with the tail of the bag." --Vijay Saraswat and Patrick Lincoln
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