Kinitari said:
Do people expect a gradual almost imperceptible change in AI/Robotic advancement, or do they think a singularity boom will come out of nowhere and within the year we'll be waving to robots as we pass them in the street?
I don't know if 30 years from now, without me realizing it, I'll have a computer that takes care of all my house chores (cooking, cleaning etc) - or if one day 50 years from now, EVERYTHING changes. I think the gradual change, the gradual implementation in introduction appeals to me more.
It won't be an imperceptible change. But we will psychologically adapt and acclimatize so fast to new technology that it'll seem like a natural progression.
And I'll tell you how it'll look.
You know those robots that are featuring in youtube? The dancing ones, and the creepy face ones, etc? The ones that are been shown off as research? And you know those small dancing novelty ones?
That technology is already here. Give it another decade, and you'll get bigger faster, more articulate dancing robots at lower costs. A few years from there, some company will decide that the technology required for a highly articulate robot is actually pretty cheap. And make the parts for it. It'll have some sort of wifi unit that allows its brain to be located off the machine. It'll do more than dance. It might double as a telepresence machine.
Significantly, at the same time, developments in Watson style AI continue. In 10-15 years, there'll be available for use in the google command line. We will be able to type natural language questions into Google Watson (or whatever google decides to call their variant of it) and have it answered. We'll even be able to speak those questions into our phone and have them answered.
By natural extension, someone will offer a way of google watson to interact with the robot mannequin. You get a robot that does stuff that is also 'intelligent'.
At the same time that this stuff is happening, we continue making advancements in object recognition and learning... you know how self driving cars are self driving now? well, that's the kind of technology they're using.
When you combine watson, asimo, and the google self driving car... you're going to get a pretty fierce package of technology that seems almost alien to us now; but won't be as the antecdent parts of its technology are revealed to us piecemeal a few years before the introduction and emergence of this advanced robot.
Of course, these 'advanced' robots, will nonetheless be around for decades before they actually become viable replacements for human beings in complex jobs and tasks. They'll of course handle some tasks better than others to begin with, been more suitable.
But human beings will also for a while cost substantially less than a freakin' robot to perform the same task (at least depending on which human being).
....
But at some point down the track, everything we recognize about our modern society will have been transformed and turned on its head. We won't even be using mobile phones at some point. At least certainly not in the form to which we're accustomed.