In the decisive scrimmage, on day three, Falco, an A.I. agent created by Heron Systems, a boutique software company based in Virginia, competed against an A.I. agent developed by Lockheed Martin, the country’s largest defense contractor. The matchup drew the obvious David and Goliath comparisons—though this David had gone through about the same number of computer iterations as a pilot who trained all day, every day, for thirty-one years.
Mock seemed pleased with the outcome. “You could look at this and say, ‘O.K., the A.I. got five, our human got zero,’ ” he told viewers. “From the fighter-pilot world, we trust what works, and what we saw was that in this limited area, this specific scenario, we’ve got A.I. that works.” In 2004, Schnell persuaded his department chair at the University of Iowa to buy O.P.L.’s first aircraft, a single-engine Beechcraft Bonanza. Within a few years, he had acquired a jet, and commercial airlines and the Air Force hired him to conduct studies on their pilots. “We did a lot of work on spatial disorientation,” Schnell said. This involved things like having pilots close their eyes during aerial maneuvers and then try to fly straight once they’d opened them again.
An Air National Guard pilot, on loan to O.P.L. for the day, lowered himself into another simulator, a rectangular metal shell that Schnell called “the bathtub.” Schnell hooked him up to electrocardiogram leads, in order to gather some baseline data. Until that morning’s briefing, the pilot knew only that he would be participating in aresearch project. Even now, as he adjusted his V.R.
In the “bathtub” at O.P.L., a computer relayed what the pilot was seeing in his goggles. As he turned his head to the right, a wing came into view; when he looked down, he could see farmland. A radar screen at the front of the cockpit kept track of the adversary, which, in the first skirmish, quickly gained an advantage, coming at the pilot from behind and preparing to take a shot. “Paddle,” the pilot called out, ending the skirmish. The computer was reset.
It means that war planes can be turned back mid-flight to destroy whoever sent it up in the first place. It's sort of awkwardly intelligent if you're not in the armaments sector.
It is cheap if you compare our expenses with politicians here. (Brazil)
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And as the Eagle was headed disastrously toward a football shaped crater, Neil Armstrong shut off the computer and landed on the Moon, with Aldrin, by themselves.
U sure, AI needs pilots ( = persons ) ? I'd never believe that.
spoiler alert
Fuck the poor, the sick, the uneducated, and the vulnerable. Lets build more weapons to kill more people with, bonus points .... no need for lockdowns, vaccines or masks
Have you guys ever seen any of the Iron Man movies or Age of Ultron? Hmmm
I, for one, welcome our machine overlords.
pls no. it's the end, isn't it.
Stop it!
QuibellPaul Yes it is. :o) :o/ :o(
I hope AI will tell us that no one wins. 🙂
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