T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
153.1 | | NUHAVN::CANTOR | | Sat Nov 03 1984 20:12 | 7 |
| I liked it even though I don't like gratuitous violence. Some of the
plot complications caused by the time travel aspects of the story, were,
alas, predictable.
Over all, I'm glad I saw it.
Dave C.
|
153.2 | | EARTH::MJOHNSON | | Mon Nov 12 1984 13:44 | 8 |
| I saw it this weekend. I liked it. It was a little heavy on the violence
though. I was glad to see that the movie theater I went to strictly
enforced the R rating. The movie itself reminded me of Alien and Saturn 3.
The Terminator is one bad mother!!
MartyJ
|
153.3 | | AKOV68::BOYAJIAN | | Tue Nov 13 1984 01:10 | 12 |
| I saw it Friday night, and my reaction is that, for mindless trash, it's
pretty good. In fact, I'd have to say that it was good enough to be
unfortunate that it didn't have better talent and production behind it.
If it did, it could have been a superior action movie.
There were a few things about it that bothered me, but most were
pecadillos. I couldn't help but notice that, as regards special effects,
they must have shot their wad on the robot animation --- the future scenes
were *awful*, but the robot scenes were *wonderful*.
I can even see the plot hook for a TERMINATOR II...
--- jerry
|
153.4 | I WONDER.... | EDEN::KLAES | It obstructs my view of Venus! | Wed Jun 04 1986 18:10 | 7 |
| What are the chances for a computer system - such as the defense
network in the movie - becoming intelligent? And if so, would it
really decide to eliminate humanity in favor of its intelligence
ruling Earth?
Larry
|
153.5 | AI Strikes again! | NYSSA::DALEY | What! Me not allowed? | Wed Jun 04 1986 21:19 | 17 |
|
What you are descibing the Colossus trilogy by D.F. Jones.
Also there was a low budget movie entitled 'Colossus - The Forbin
Project'. War Games computer (in my opinion) didn't even really
know that humanity existed, it was just playing a game.
Colossus/Gardian did recognize humans, but realized that at first
it needed them, but never planned on eliminating them.
Another similiar story is 'The Adolesence of P1' which was slightly
different but a bit more likely. P1 was a program that got away
from its designer (where have we heard of this before?) and then
evolved.
Be seeing you,
Klaes
|
153.6 | no chance | JEREMY::REDFORD | John Redford | Thu Jun 05 1986 12:35 | 9 |
| re: .4
Pretty close to zero. If there's one computer system that's going to
be closely watched and monitored, it's the defense controller. As
soon as anything abnormal happens (eg a terminal prints "Where am I?
Who are all you?") you switch in the backups and do a core dump.
A malfunctioning computer is a lot more likely to
blow up New York than it is to achieve intelligence.
/jlr
|
153.7 | NO, VIRGINIA, THERE ISN'T A HAL???? | EDEN::KLAES | It obstructs my view of Venus! | Thu Jun 05 1986 13:02 | 17 |
| RE: 153.6-
WHY would a computer ask such questions as "Where am I?" and
"Who are you all?" Does the fact that a computer would even ASK
such questions denote intelligence.
This will probably even further show my obvious lack of knowledge
about AI, but remember how in the movie Kyle told Sarah Connor that
the defense computer determined what to do about humanity in a
microsecond. I know this is fiction, but since computers ARE so
much faster than humans, couldn't one act and react before any
humans could do anything about it? God knows I wouldn't want
anything like this to happen, but a little speculation doesn't hurt.
I would greatly appreciate an answer to both questions. Thanks.
Larry
|
153.8 | Open the pod bay door, Hal... | BOVES::WALL | Not The Dark Knight | Thu Jun 05 1986 16:26 | 29 |
| re: .7
If I had the answers to questions like these...
I did a project on this sort of question when I was in college.
.6's response assumes a mechanism for human intervention, although
that might not be the case, as in D. F. Jones's *Colossus*, the first in
a trilogy of novels about a computer like Skynet (the one in *The
Terminator*). The theory is if you allow some way for your side
to stop it, then there is a chance the enemy will figure it out
and stop it on you.
If you want some good suggestions on what other minds have come
up with about questions such as this, I refer to you the Appendix
in *Godel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid* by Douglas
Hofstadter. He gives his answers to some of the most asked questions
about artificial intelligence, and you don't need to have read the
rest of the book (a prodigious exercise) to understand them.
On the fiction end of things, my favorite novel in this genre is
David Gerrold's *When Harlie Was One*.
As for myuself, I have cocluded that the computers may get as good
as depicted in *The Terminator*, and if humanity is criminally stupid
enough toi put management of the planet in the hands of a machine,
then it deserves whatever it gets.
Dave W.
|
153.9 | | EDEN::KLAES | It obstructs my view of Venus! | Thu Jun 05 1986 18:07 | 11 |
| Thanks, 153.8. Since your response is different from .7's,
I'd still like to hear what he has to say.
By the way, did anyone ever hear of the short story about these
scientists who build this supercomputer, and when it was all set,
they asked it "Is there a God?", and the computer replied,
"There is now."
Just a little more food for thought.
Larry
|
153.10 | | AKOV68::BOYAJIAN | Mr. Gumby, my brain hurts | Thu Jun 05 1986 23:49 | 7 |
| re:.9
Yes, I was just thinking of mentioning this story myself. It's "The
Answer" by Fredric Brown, one of (if not *the*) best short-short
story writers in sf.
--- jerry
|
153.11 | well... | KALKIN::BUTENHOF | Approachable Systems | Fri Jun 06 1986 12:20 | 24 |
| .8:
> As for myuself, I have cocluded that the computers may get as good
> as depicted in *The Terminator*, and if humanity is criminally stupid
> enough toi put management of the planet in the hands of a machine,
> then it deserves whatever it gets.
Of course, look where we've gotten so far by being criminally
stupid enough to put the management of the planet in the
hands of *people*! How could a machine (especially an
intelligent machine) be any worse?
As for catching the newly intelligent machine and shutting
if off... well, that depends on how quickly it becomes
intelligent, and how quietly. If it's smart, it's not going
to let anyone *know* until it's thoroughly in control of
its environment.
And if anyone finds out, there could be interesting legal
complications if someone tries to do so a *second* time (if
the machine is really self-aware and intelligent, there's
good reason to consider such a shutdown as "murder").
/dave
|
153.12 | | JEREMY::REDFORD | John Redford | Wed Jun 11 1986 17:22 | 26 |
| re: surreptious sentience
Look, programs don't run right even when written by supposedly intelligent
people. How can you expect a program written by no one to achieve
the miraculous? Thousands of people have worked on AI for thirty
years now, and no one has anything like a self-aware program. For
such a thing to happen accidentally is like the monkeys on the
typewriters producing Shakespeare. It's a lot more likely that such
accidents would damage some useful function. We call such things
bugs, and do our best to quash them.
re: AI murders
Shutting down a computer is not like killing a human being, because
computers can be restarted from the same point. In fact, time-sharing
systems do this constantly. They stop one process, start up another,
and then restart the first from where it left off. Your machine is
doing this even as you read, and you can hardly tell. This was used
to nice effect in C. J. Cherryh's "Voyager in Night", where the
characters are stopped and started and even meet themselves at
different stages of execution. An AI program could not be considered
truly dead until its last backup copy was erased. If people had
backup copies, as they do in Varley's "The Ophiuchi Hotline", then
murder wouldn't be that serious a crime.
/jlr
|
153.13 | A Fate Worse than Death? | ERLANG::FEHSKENS | | Wed Jun 11 1986 17:32 | 5 |
| re .12 - see also Varley's "Overdrawn at the Memory Bank", a chilling
fantasy on possible "vandalism" in such a society.
len.
|
153.14 | warning (beep) nonproductive argument in progress! | KALKIN::BUTENHOF | Approachable Systems | Thu Jun 12 1986 12:08 | 9 |
| .12: it's all a matter of your definitions. Society's
definitions tend to be more emotional than logical, and I
doubt the issue of "backups" would ever be considered.
I'm not sure they *should* be. I wouldn't much want to be
killed even if I had a valid backup somewhere, even if it
was current and I knew it would be restored quickly. Would
you?
/dave
|
153.15 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Thu Jun 12 1986 13:52 | 27 |
| Re .12:
> Look, programs don't run right even when written by supposedly
> intelligent people. How can you expect a program written by no one to
> achieve the miraculous?
Who says artificially intelligent programs have to be bug-free? Do you
know of any "real" intelligent beings who are bug-free?
> For such a thing to happen accidentally is like the monkeys on the
> typewriters producing Shakespeare.
It happened once.
> Shutting down a computer is not like killing a human being, because
> computers can be restarted from the same point.
That is not true. Backups only exist to recover the state of a
few days or hours in the past. Even checkpointing systems don't
usually guarantee retention of the last few minutes or seconds.
If intelligence arises from an unplanned situation, the conditions
that led up to the event are not likely to be reproducible from
normal recordings. Terminating the intelligence at that point may
well be murder.
-- edp
|
153.16 | $backup redford/human user:me.neurons | JEREMY::REDFORD | Mr. Fusion Home Service Rep | Thu Jun 12 1986 16:30 | 20 |
| re: .15
Perhaps I should have been more careful with my terms. "Backup"
normally means saving the state of only the disks of a computer.
It's true that a sudden change in the system might not be reproducible
by restoring the disks from backup. However, the rest of the state
of the system (meaning main memory and the internal CPU state)
can also be saved if you want to. Computers are deliberately
designed to make all these bits accessible from the outside; it's the
only way they can be debugged.
People are not so designed. There's so much data in the brain and
it's so densely packed using so little energy for storage, that I
doubt we'll ever be able to read it all from the outside. It's
like trying to read a VAX's memory with a voltmeter. You'd have
to read more than just the brain, too, since some processing is
distributed through the rest of the body. Maybe the important stuff could
be dumped out through the spinal cord. It's not a near-term prospect anyhow.
/jlr
|
153.17 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Thu Jun 12 1986 18:08 | 29 |
| Re .16:
> However, the rest of the state of the system (meaning main memory and
> the internal CPU state) can also be saved if you want to.
As a system manager of a development system (and hence one which
crashes rather frequently), I can attest that it is not generally
possible to recover the entire state of the system. If it were, users
wouldn't complain so much about crashes, because they would only lose
work during the time the system was down. In fact, they lose work done
prior to the time the system went down.
Systems can be designed to minimize the loss, but it's not likely
that will be done since we are discussing an unexpected condition.
> There's so much data in the brain and it's so densely packed using so
> little energy for storage, that I doubt we'll ever be able to read it
> all from the outside.
Reading individual parts of the brain is not that difficult; stronger
and more uniform magnets will soon give us the capability to use
nuclear magnetic resonance tomography to read any part of the brain we
wish. The bigger part of the problem will be understanding the
connections and interpreting the information. But since that problem
is not limited in any physical manner, its solution is only a matter
of time.
-- edp
|
153.18 | cf. EON | ERLANG::FEHSKENS | | Fri Jun 13 1986 10:48 | 8 |
| Re previous discussion - the notion of partial copies of people
that can be sent into dangerous situations as proxies (i.e., they're
"disposable") shows up in Greg Bear's "Eon" (a fabulous novel I
strongly recommend and which seems to have attracted about zero
attention). They're even called "partials".
len.
|
153.19 | See Also "Rogue Moon" | 2730::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Fri Jun 13 1986 12:08 | 13 |
|
"...sent into dangerous situations as proxies..." reminds me of one of
my all-time favorites, "Rogue Moon," by Algis Budrys. There's this
alien artifact on the moon, you see. It allows entry and contains all
sorts of fascinating things but it *very* unfriendly. The hero, or
copies of the hero, gradually explore(s) the deadly maze inside -- each
new bit of info about the maze is gotten due to the death of a copy
(e.g., if you make this left turn, you get suddenly dead).
Saying more would be a spoiler, but this book is good stuff...
JP
|
153.20 | AHA! | EDEN::KLAES | It obstructs my view of Venus! | Fri Jun 13 1986 19:25 | 7 |
| So, would it be possible for our Defense computers to one day
become so sophisticated as to become intelligent, and would they
decide to become the new order of intelligence on Earth, as happened
in "The Terminator"?
Larry
|
153.21 | Psssst... HAL's here! | ASGNQH::ROGERS | Comfortably Numb... | Sat Jun 14 1986 11:41 | 20 |
|
re: -1
"There are far greater things in Heaven and Earth, Larry, than
are dreamt in your philosophy notes file."
Huh? Well...
The truth is, most of what's done in AI research is just guess
work. Much effort is expended simply to make machines mimic what
we define as `Intelligence'. We know only one order of intelligence,
and what we know about that intelligence, compared to what we don't
know, would fit in a thimble. I don't foresee machines getting smarter
as a result of human effort. At least not in the near future.
Accidental intelligence ,however, should not be ruled out as a
possibility.
...Mike...
|
153.22 | Plausible Improbables | ERLANG::FEHSKENS | | Mon Jun 16 1986 11:23 | 31 |
| Seems to me there are two approaches possible to develop intelligent
systems - one "inside out or bottom up" and one "outside in or top
down". The "inside out/bottom up" is neurological - we study the
human nervous system and figure out how the structures we find there
contribute to intelligent behaviour. Then we build systems that
duplicate (at least the functionality of, if not the mechanisms
of) those structures, and we have an intelligent system. The "outside
in/top down" approach corresponds to what we are currently doing
in AI - we study intelligent behaviour, and try to invent structures
that will exhibit intelligent behaviour. I think we have to use
both approaches (after all, Mother Nature has provided us with a
"fully worked out example" - the human nervous system - so why ignore
it; but, it's a very complicated example, and it may not be the
only way). What does this say about "accidentally" produced
intelligence?
Not a whole lot. But I for one believe that human intelligence
was an accident, but it was one of those evolved accidents that
took several billion years of pruning to select out. There's no
similar selection process operative (OK, I KNOW somebody's going
to say there really is - super!) that I can see with respect to
artificial intelligences, nor is there some randomizing element
to set up the experiments to select out the results of (e.g., no
"genetic accidents") so other than pure chance in the face of
astronomical odds, I don't hold out much chance for spontaneously
developed intelligence ("Short Circuit" notwithstanding) in artificial
systems. It's what the Disney folks used to call "the plausible
improbable".
len.
|
153.23 | A FLESH AND BLOOD HAL? | EDEN::KLAES | It obstructs my view of Venus! | Mon Jun 16 1986 20:07 | 8 |
| What about the BIOCHIP? Since human beings are organic computers,
and still far more advanced than any machine computer, could
introducing an organic "component" into a computer system create
intelligence with levels in both storage and comprehension equivalent
to ours?
Larry
|
153.24 | the leather computer | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Tue Jun 17 1986 09:30 | 5 |
| Unless the component is not just organic but alive, "biochips" don't
seem any likelier to generate intelligence than "petrochips." You
just have to keep the CPU refrigerated to keep it from going rancid.
Earl Wajenberg
|
153.25 | Where's my mushy CPU?? | OLIVER::OSBORNE | John D. Osborne | Tue Jun 17 1986 18:04 | 31 |
| Well, CPU and memory density are necessary, (otherwise the speed of
light gets in the way- messages take too long to get from node to
node...) and one way to increase density is by using biologically-
generated molecular pathways and nodes. Here we're right on the
life/non-life boundery: DNA can be viewed as molecular ROM or the
evolutionary basis of life, so the ability to create a DNA strand
might be considered either developing a super-dense CPU/ROM or as
"creating life".
I believe that the physical structure of the brain
is well understood, but is simply much too dense to reproduce in
the current technology. (These figures may be wrong, but close:
there are three trillion neurons, each of which is "connected" to
about 170 of its neighbors. The possible interconnections [each
interconnection representing a "gate" in the mushy CPU] excedes
the number of atoms in the universe.) That is what limits the "inside
out" approach- we make a "blank" brain and just turn it loose,
knowing that it will be full of redundancy and non-productive data
and algorithms (just as an infant exhibits redundant and non-productive
behaviors) but there is so much room that productive and useful
processing will occur, and can be re-inforced in some way to
become a "thinking", perhaps "alive", entity.
The "spontaneous" intelligence of the science-fiction computer
depends on the above scenario. But, right now, there just isn't
enough density, and large sections of the available density are
always "down", because someone wants to go home, or fix it, or just
vacuum out the cabinet. This sort of thing is not going on in
your head, so you can keep on thinking.
John O.
|
153.26 | It's behind your eyes | ERLANG::FEHSKENS | | Wed Jun 18 1986 10:50 | 17 |
| I'll bet there are a lot of neurophysiologists, neuropsychologists
and neurosurgeons out there that wish they could tap this understanding
of the structure of the brain. Sorry, the brain is still largely
a mystery. We still don't know how memory works. We still don't
know what emotion is. We hardly know anything. Yeah, at the pop
science level we know the brain's coarser structure, but that's
not what I meant.
Anyway, good point about the pasticity of the nervous system and
the importance of learning to the development of intelligence.
Numerous experiments (some bordering on cruel) have demonstrated
that the brain loses its ability to develop certain "skills" if
it is not exercised the right way at the right time in its development.
len.
|
153.27 | CONNECTIONS | EDEN::KLAES | It obstructs my view of Venus! | Wed Jun 18 1986 15:33 | 4 |
| How about "hooking up" a human brain to a computer?
Larry
|
153.28 | no wonder I can't see it... | OLIVER::OSBORNE | John D. Osborne | Wed Jun 18 1986 15:45 | 36 |
| > Sorry, the brain is still largely a mystery.
Well, I said the physical structure, not how it works, which is different.
(Someone unfamiliar with how a gas engine works could still, given a good
set of wrenches, disassemble one and determine the physical structure.) I
have to assume we know the brain's structure down to the cellular level,
and maybe the biochemical level. I was also under the impression that the
cellular functioning of "signal switching" using electrochemical means,
and the thresholding of synapses, was pretty well understood. Perhaps not.
Anyway, my poorly-informed opinion is that the functioning of the brain
differs signifigantly between individuals, following only some very vague
guidelines on the macro level- only on the cellular level is it completely
consistent. If we could duplicate the cellular-level functioning of the
brain, in an extremely dense package, we might not have to worry much
about the macro structure- the macro structure (virtual memory) would be
formed by the "learning". But it would have no physical representation
or location, and if two such packages were subject to the same "learning",
the micro process would be the same, but the macro process, and the
final representation, would be much different. In other words, the
packages would have "different points of view", something that the
mushy CPU's I'm familiar with seem to exhibit constantly.
Given the above premise, there's another problem with developing AI
using this method- all the units are different. Very hard to get warranty
service...
This speaks strongly of individuality- even when two individuals agree
on some "fact", their internal structures representing the "fact" are
much different, having different access routes, "different associations".
It may be that the only reason we can communicate at all is that we
live in a somewhat consistent environment, have a somewhat consistent
education, etc.
John O.
|
153.29 | I'll take 4 of those, and ... | ENGINE::BUEHLER | Don't mess with my planet. | Thu Jun 19 1986 14:08 | 14 |
| >Given the above premise, there's another problem with developing AI
>using this method- all the units are different. Very hard to get warranty
>service...
But they're not different. Suppose I have the guts of the individual in
software, not hardware (which I assume is easy enough to suppose). All I have
to do is copy that individual from hardware to hardware (body to body). From
that point onwards, *then* you actually have unique individuals, because
they are immediately accepting different environmental stimuli. But at the
point of copying, you would have completely identical AI individuals (except
within the confines of the exactness of the hardware they're stored in - one
more disclaimer and I'll be arguing against my own point.)
John
|
153.30 | I ASK AGAIN | EDEN::KLAES | It obstructs my view of Venus! | Thu Jun 19 1986 15:25 | 4 |
| Could it be possible to "hook up" a human brain with a computer?
Larry
|
153.31 | cyborgs | FRSBEE::FARRINGTON | a Nuclear wonderland ! | Thu Jun 19 1986 15:33 | 6 |
| sure; see for example, biofeedback monitors. Better yet, see the
computer/toy with the headband (vice joystick) for game control.
(yes,yes; I realize it was muscle movement doing the actual control,
but what the heck.)
Dwight
|
153.32 | THE BEST OF BOTH WORLDS! | EDEN::KLAES | It obstructs my view of Venus! | Thu Jun 19 1986 18:29 | 6 |
| Not only as cyborgs, but how about uniting the storage, memory,
and speed of a human and computer brain to produce the "ultimate"
computer.
Larry
|
153.33 | idea pops up briefly | CGHUB::CONNELLY | Eye Dr3 - Regnad Kcin | Thu Jun 19 1986 19:35 | 2 |
| re: .32
see Frank Herbert's "Destination Void"
|
153.34 | broadband or bored-band | OLIVER::OSBORNE | John D. Osborne | Fri Jun 20 1986 09:58 | 43 |
| > Could it be possible to "hook up" a human brain with a computer?
It certainly seems so. What the results would be isn't all that easy to guess
in the near term. There have been experiments, reportedly successful, of
computers being "hooked up" already: one that I remember is a direct-
stimulation of the cortex being used to provide a VERY rudimentary "vision"
to a blind person. This was a few years back, so I don't know if there
has been much progress since, or if the experiment was later invalidated,
or what. Getting data directly out of the brain may prove to be more
difficult. The current EEG is roughly equivalent to saying a VAX emits
certain radio frequencies, in terms of understanding what's going on. But
it's quite easy to detect a nerve firing outside the brain- that's what
an EKG is- but single nerves don't give you broadband data transfer.
Connecting current state-of-the-art to a brain has dubious value- Anything
portable wouldn't have enough LIPS/data storage to be worth direct hook-up.
Ordinary sensory channels are fine. An example of this is the failure of
electronic portable translators- a phrase-book has more capacity, is more
reliable, and cheaper. When very high storage densities and fast CPUs are
available, perhaps we will re-examine the possibility of implantable
microprocessors with direct-stimulation output, god-knows-what input.
There's a lot of side issues, such as infection, rejection, danger of
hemorrhage, power supply problems, heat dissipation, etc. It's one thing
to face this in order to stay alive (implantable mechanical heart), but
just to know fluent French?
On the other hand, if the "computer" is actually a direct life-support
system for the dis-embodied (literally!) brain/brainstem, then you have
(possible) life-preservation and indefinite life-prolongation. Certainly
there are people who can see the advantages there. It would be pointless,
and probably intensely cruel, to keep a brain alive without providing
an adequate input/output function. But what's an "adequate" I/O here?
In "Overdrawn at the Memory Bank", Varley suggests that just some human
contact (verbal) is enough.
Tom Rainbow, unfortunately killed in an accident recently, provided some
insights into both the difficulty and promise of some of these ideas
in a series of articles appearing in Analog. While my ramblings are based
on only rudimentary knowledge of the subject, his aren't: he was a
neurophysicist. His articles are also very witty and easy reading, the
kind I like.
John O.
|
153.35 | vaguely related news item | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Fri Jun 20 1986 10:06 | 11 |
| Along the lines of direct stimulation of the visual cortex, there
are now several deaf people going around with cochlear implants.
These are devices implanted in the cochlea that directly stimulate
the auditory nerve. They receive input from a microphone that looks
like a hearing aid and passes the data to the implant by magnetic
induction (so there are not wires passing though the skin). It
produces very crude sound signals, but it's a heck of a lot better
than unaided lip-reading. Or so the owners say. With enhanced
enunciation.
Earl Wajenberg
|
153.36 | FYI | INK::KALLIS | | Fri Jun 20 1986 11:16 | 8 |
| re .35:
The first of the experiments that led to these "artificial ears"
was done at the University of Utah using a PDP-8/E quite a few years
ago. So who's to say Digital hasn't been on the "leading edge"?
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
153.37 | RE 153.34 | EDEN::KLAES | It obstructs my view of Venus! | Fri Jun 20 1986 14:09 | 5 |
| Is there any chance you could print up some of Tom Rainbow's
articles in NOTES?
Larry
|
153.38 | John Buehler: IBM compatible | ENGINE::BUEHLER | Don't mess with my planet. | Sat Jun 21 1986 22:59 | 28 |
| RE: .30
> Could it be possible to "hook up" a human brain with a computer?
Sure, just jam an RS232 port in there, and you're all set. :-)
Seriously, it all depends on what you want to do. The preceding notes
have pointed out ways of using electronic devices to get information to
the brain, but they're only using the existing 'input ports' to the brain.
What you might call standard interfaces. I assume you want more, along
the lines of a concept Jerry Pournelle often talks about (don't know who
originated it) of being able to talk directly to a computer just by thinking
about the request, and instantly you have the memory and mental powers of
a computer. Yes?
Then I'd say forget it. Unless we figure out how to decipher all the myriad
ways in which *each person's* memories and experiences are interlinked. It's
akin to the problem of reading a John Q. Public format database. If you only
use one program to read it, and it assumes one format, you're going to get
garbage out. You'd have to customize each person's interface. The only way it
could be done is if there's a thingamawhatsitz that can take a download of your
brain's contents and figure out how things are linked. Then it would have to
create the brain-computer interface and dynamically adjust whenever your brain
internally reconnects its memories in some new and interesting way (e.g.
a traumatic moment in your life would definitely cause some reordering of
your brain's makeup).
John
|
153.39 | | TLE::MOREAU | Ken Moreau | Mon Jun 23 1986 12:51 | 17 |
| RE: .38
> I assume you want more, along
>the lines of a concept Jerry Pournelle often talks about (don't know who
>originated it) of being able to talk directly to a computer just by thinking
>about the request, and instantly you have the memory and mental powers of
>a computer. Yes?
The first story I read which concerned this topic directly was "No Truce With
Kings", by Poul Anderson. I don't remember where it was originally published,
but I read it in his "Seven Conquests" collection.
There was a fairly good description of how the person felt when he was hooked
up to the computer. Needless to say, he liked it. He began to drift away
from us mere mortals in his viewpoint.
-- Ken Moreau
|
153.40 | The A/D converter's 300 baud... | OLIVER::OSBORNE | John D. Osborne | Mon Jun 23 1986 14:34 | 13 |
| Re: 153.37
> Is there any chance you could print up some of Tom Rainbow's
> articles in NOTES?
Would like to oblige, but I'm a poor and slow typist (speaking of narrow-
band interfaces...), and I can't think of any other way to (ready for this?)
digitize my Analog. (Sorry!)
However, I'll be happy to office-mail them to you. If more people want
to see them, I'll reconsider putting in a note.
John O.
|
153.41 | "Holothete - Joelle Ky" | NHL::NEIL | Peter C. | Tue Jun 24 1986 23:18 | 7 |
|
re .38, .39
Poul Anderson did another story that involved human/computer hookups. It
is called _The Avatar_. Not a bad story.
P.
|
153.42 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Thu Jun 26 1986 14:48 | 12 |
| Re .38:
> Then I'd say forget it. Unless we figure out how to decipher all the
> myriad ways in which *each person's* memories and experiences are
> interlinked.
Who says we have to do all the work? The brain is pretty smart;
maybe we can find some interface we can put in and let the brain
work out on its own the proper way to use it.
-- edp
|
153.43 | BACK ON OURSELVES! | EDEN::KLAES | It obstructs my view of Venus! | Thu Jun 26 1986 19:02 | 7 |
| Wouldn't it be frightening if we produced a computer as intricate
and functional as the human brain, and then discovered that it could
not operate any faster than our human brains because it is so much
like ours?!
Larry
|
153.44 | speed limits | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Fri Jun 27 1986 09:54 | 17 |
| I don't see why it would frightening at all. Maybe disappointing
or puzzling, but not frightening.
Actually, it might not even be puzzling, depending on the computer's
architecture. The synapses of the human brain have a very slow
switching time by electronic standards, but we have a heck of a
lot of synapses. A computer might have pico-second switching time
but, if it had a much smaller number of switches, it might not have
any more operations per second than we do, hence a similar "speed
of thinking."
Now, if the AI computer had architecture as massively parallel as
our own, with a comparable number of switches, then I'd expect it
to have a much faster speed of thought. If it had a human psychology,
it might find us very boring unless it could adjust its clock rate.
Earl Wajenberg
|
153.45 | Speed reading made easy... | ENGINE::BUEHLER | Don't mess with my planet. | Fri Jun 27 1986 12:40 | 13 |
| An intelligent computer probably *would* have to drop it's clock down
in speed. It would probably be very slow when speaking to someone so that
the words came out at a reasonable rate, but when thinking or making decisions,
it would be blindingly fast. This introduces all sorts of psychological
effects. Suppose your mind worked at 100 times it's current rate. How
would you perceive society.
RE: Having the brain work the computer hookups
Sure, it could work that way, but that seems like it would be dangerous
as the hookups would probably evolve through trial and error. Not
understanding the brain and then stuffing information into it seems kinda
nasty. No thanks.
|
153.46 | Walk and Chew Gum... | GAYNES::WALL | Not The Dark Knight | Fri Jun 27 1986 12:54 | 9 |
| If my mind functioned at 100 times its current rate, I'd do what
computers do -- timeshare. :-)
In David Gerrold's When Harlie Was One, that's exactly what HARLIE
does. While he's spying on his enemies, writing letters to spinster
librarians, and discovering the unified field theory, he's also
talking to his psychologist(?).
Dave W.
|
153.47 | | JEREMY::REDFORD | Mr. Fusion Home Service Rep | Sun Jun 29 1986 14:55 | 17 |
| re: the mind is faster than the hand
Actually, I often find that my thoughts run ahead of what I can say
or type. The brain is already faster than its natural I/O channels.
One good use for a computer/brain hookup might be to provide a
channel with a higher output bandwidth than the main existing channels:
the vocal tract and the hands. The speeds of these might be limited
by mechanics (a finger muscle can only contract so fast with so much
precision) rather than the nervous system. If one tapped into the
nerves directly, substantial increases in speed might be possible.
There's a lot of mights there, and I don't know much about neurology.
Anyhow, it seems better to use the natural channels than to tap into
the brain directly. As was already pointed out, the organization of
the processing in the brain probably varies from individual to
individual, and maybe even from time to time.
/jlr
|
153.48 | | ENGINE::BUEHLER | Don't mess with my planet. | Tue Jul 01 1986 09:41 | 16 |
| Just some more thoughts on the brain's ability to 'output' faster than
the body can do something about the outputs... Remember that the brain
understands esoteric topics like love, non-3-dimensional concepts and such
like. Many times the inability to express that is just because the brain's
knowledge of 'love' have been activated, and 'there just aren't words to
express it'. This can be extended to, say, when thinking about any type
of design. When I'm designing a software system, I don't even try to write
anything down. My mind is my sketchpad, and I just juggle as many concepts
as I have to before trying to write anything down. How many times have
you ended up having a marvelous idea only to 'lose something in translation'
when writing it down?
John
P.S. I believe that the organization of the brain is, in fact, never constant,
but is constantly shifting (not dramatically, but still shifting).
|
153.49 | We can rebuild him... | CDR::YERAZUNIS | VAXstation Repo Man | Sat Jul 26 1986 00:46 | 25 |
| We're already using some transducers that nature didn't give us,
for instance, what is more UNnatural to do than touch-type? Heck,
word-making-commands are supposed to go to the mouth and larynx,
but all of you touch-typers out there actually have trained a second
set of neural pathways to the fingers which are almost as
natural-feeling as throat control pathways. Do you *think* about
what key you're about to press or do you just do it? ( I believe
there is scientific evidence that in fact your touch-typing ability
is mediated in the same fashion as your ability to speak).
Does your left foot push on the nonexistent clutch when you drive
an automatic? Clutches didn't exist in the jungle. Do you turn
the light on in a room even though there's a power failure?
...and of late, (since becoming adept at a VAXstation) I've started
to have this twitch in my mouse hand whenever I switch conversations
among two or three that happen to be going on.... :-)
By the way, there's a mostly-experimental surgical prosthesis that
allows persons with severed spinal cords to control their leg muscles
sufficiently well to ride an adult tricycle (like delivery boys
ride). I believe it uses a PDP-11 to do the signal processing...
|
153.50 | Round and round we go,where we stop??? | KAOA05::PURDIE | | Fri Jan 16 1987 11:42 | 32 |
| I hope this hasn't mentioned before but here goes.
The terminator was a good movie except for one fact. It is possible
to beleive that time travel is possible as depicted but the story
falls down when the man from the future becomes the father of the
the savior of the future. If that hadn't happened then the story
line would fit.
The facts are
1)The terminator was sent back to kill the mother of their enemy
in the future.
2)The man from the future went back to save sarrah because the
terminator was sent to kill her.
3)He becomes the father of the savior of the human race.
The impossible paradox is that in order for the savior of the humnan
race to have been born to cause the problem, the human from the
future would have had to come back to the past previous to the time
we see him. Since the only reason the future man returned was to
follow the terminator, if the terminaor hadn't gone back he wouldn't
have been in the past to father the savior.
Thus the terminaotors return is responsible for the saviors birth
but since the savior was around before the terminator was sent back,
how did he get there in the first place.
Thus the terminators return is responsible for the creation of the
problem that was the cause of its return in the first place.
If you follow this then theoretically, if the terminator hadn't
been sent back, the savior wouldn't have been born and there would
have been no reason to send the terminator back in the first place.
They could have solved the conflict in the story by not having the
man from the future become the father of the savior.
Of course it is possible that the man from the future isn't the
father but the impression you are left with is that he is.
|
153.51 | RE 153.50 | EDEN::KLAES | Alchemists get the lead out. | Fri Jan 16 1987 12:07 | 23 |
| The idea is that there must have been an "original" father (one
from the 1980's), and that the result of the battle between the
Termnator and Kyle - with Kyle now becoming the father - cancelled
out the original creation of the saviour, John Connor. Such things
in SF time-travel stories are like "infinite loops".
A similar event occured with the Terminator's presence in 1984
(this is from the novelization of the movie - it's very good); when
rescue/cleanup people were assessing the results of Sarah Connor's
final battle with the Terminator - where she crushed the android
in a huge press - two of the team discovered some of the Terminator's
microchips, which of course had a design several decades beyond
present technology (obviously, they did not know what to make of
the wreckage which was the Terminator's remains). Realizing they
had a windfall on their hands, they patented the chip design and
went into their own computer company - which later became the company
which the Department of Defense used to build their new Defense
computers with (Skynet), which later became intelligent and decided
to wipe out mankind in favor of themselves becoming the new order
of intelligence....
Larry
|
153.52 | strange loops... | YODA::BARANSKI | Laugh when you feel like Crying! | Fri Jan 16 1987 12:24 | 13 |
| I didn't follow what you said, but I don't agree with your conclusion... that if
the Terminator had not been sent back, that the savior would not have been
born...
It's kind of an infinite loop, but it does have a begining, but once it starts
looping, it's stuck in that loop. Sounds like some programs that I know...
You might try thinking of the time travel paradox loop from the standpoint of
everything except the present is fixed; both the past and the future are
invarient; the only way to change the past or the future is to change the
present. See what that gets you...
Jim.
|
153.53 | IT'S THE EFFECT THAT MATTERS, NOT THE CAUSE | EDEN::KLAES | Alchemists get the lead out. | Fri Jan 16 1987 13:13 | 8 |
| I would think it would be apparent that it didn't really matter
whether or not Kyle and the Terminator went back to 1984 - there
had to have been an "original" father to begin with, so Kyle's
going back in time only changed the destiny of who the father was,
NOT the destiny of whether the saviour was going to be born or not.
Larry
|
153.54 | Paradoctoring | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Fri Jan 16 1987 13:23 | 17 |
| I don't know that we need suppose an "original" father of John Connor,
supplanted by the time-traveler, or an "original" inventor of the
futuristic chips, supplanted by the Terminator's remains. It can
have always been the case that John Connor was descended from the
time-traveler and the chip designs descended from themselves.
Or if there is a reason against this situation, it isn't that the
situation is self-contradictory. A self-contradiction was what
the robots were trying for -- They wanted John Connor to have never
been. If they had succeeded in preventing his birth, they would
never have had knowledge of him or motive for wanting to prevent
him. So then they would NOT prevent him. They wind up both preventing
him and not preventing him, knowing of him and not knowing of him.
Are you sure you WANT to copy logic chips like those?
Earl Wajenberg
|
153.55 | RE 153.54 | EDEN::KLAES | Alchemists get the lead out. | Fri Jan 16 1987 13:30 | 6 |
| Now I know why that naval officer in THE FINAL COUNTDOWN said
"This stuff could drive you crazy just thinking about it" in regards
to their own time-travel experience. :^)
Larry
|
153.56 | My two fathers??? | KAOA05::PURDIE | | Fri Jan 16 1987 14:53 | 13 |
| The original father of john connors had to be the man from the future.
The link is the picture of sarrah connors that he is givin by john
connors. If he wasn't the father, what are the chances of the same
picture being taken if sarrah hadn't been involved with both the
terminator and the future man (sorry but I can't remember his name).
If the first john connors had a different father that the one conceived
by the man from the future than what happens to the original since
his conception isn't possible. He thus can't exist in the future
anymore and would be replaced by the son of the future man and sarrah
instead of the "original father. You are also pressuming that both
john connors you speak of would act the same way even though the
are totaly different people.
|
153.57 | whirlpool in time | CACHE::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Fri Jan 16 1987 15:17 | 13 |
| Well I for one think a tight loop like this is pretty neat.
Like a whirlpool in the time stream.
Postulating an "original father" to generate the loop is unnecessary.
Discussing time like this is like flatlanders discussing spheres.
We do not have the proper vocabulary.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
153.58 | RE 153.56 | EDEN::KLAES | Alchemists get the lead out. | Fri Jan 16 1987 16:05 | 13 |
| That's what I said before - who the father is/was doesn't matter;
it's the fact that humanity's future saviour (John Connor) WAS
born to do his destiny that does count.
The "second" saviour had to be from Kyle Reese (the soldier from
2029) because of the existence of the photograph, but it does NOT
eliminate the fact that there HAD to have been an original father from
the 1980's - whether his role and son were the final saviour or not is
not the main issue - the main point is that there WAS an original
father of the saviour.
Larry
|
153.59 | But it's all the same! | RT101::GRIER | This is of course impossible. | Sun Jan 18 1987 14:51 | 32 |
|
I suppose this topic really should move to a "time travel" topic,
but I personally see the whole time-travel "paradox" in the following
fashion:
Instead of looking at the space-time continuum at a series of
3-d snapshots, inevitably moving towards a "maximum time" (perhaps
accelerating??), view it as what the name suggests - a continuum.
The future cannot exist without the past, but simultaneously the
past cannot exist without the future.
The way I try to impress this idea is that instead of thinking
of an object's location as a function of time, perhaps you should
look at an object's location of time and two other co-ordinates
(x,y for instance) as a function of z perhaps. The point is that
causality DOES exist, but still, someone from the future cannot
change the past, nomatter what he does! Look what happened to the
terminator. He tried to change the past. However, for all the
stir he created, all he really did was foster the inner courage
of Sarah Connor, and cause her and Kyle Reese to get together in
the "first" place.
For a reasonable exploration of the subject, I'd recommend James
Hogan's "Proteus Operation" which uses this basic theme, with a
"multiverse splitting" allowance - Larry Niven also wrote a story
or two (I'm pretty sure it was L.N...) where every possible outcome
of the uncertainty principle was a seperate universe (Keith Laumer
wrote a book about this also, although my mind is foggy and I can't
remember names.)
-mjg
|
153.60 | A closed loop... | HPSCAD::WALL | I see the middle kingdom... | Mon Jan 19 1987 09:27 | 6 |
|
Reading the novelization, it seems obvious that John Connor thinks
Kyle Reese is his father. I don't see where this second father
business shows up at all.
DFW
|
153.61 | | CSSE32::PHILPOTT | CSSE/Lang. & Tools, ZK02-1/N71 | Mon Jan 19 1987 12:20 | 20 |
|
Re .50: In many cases it seems to me that time travel stories lead
to a loop or vortex image but in this particular case I believe we
simply do not have a paradox: the key to that being that the
terminator FAILED to kill the mother of the saviour of the race.
Hence the "sequence" of events is
1) saviour is born
2) terminator sent back to kill mother of saviour before child born
and father of saviour follows terminator into past to stop
terminator
3) terminator fails
4) saviour born as required by future history.
It may be a loop but I don't believe it contains a paradox...
/. Ian .\
|
153.62 | Possible explanation for time-loop? | LANDO::LUBART | | Mon Jan 19 1987 12:46 | 40 |
| The paradox is not in the loop itself. The loop is stable as a
dynamic entity. The paradox, I believe, lies in how the loop starts.
One way to look at time (from some book or other :^) ) is to view
it from outside the timestream. This means you can see all events
as they occured from the beginning of time (whatever that is) to
the end (see last interjection). Suppose our observer looks upon
this stream and sees the events in this order. Terminator appears
in 1984. Mr. X (savior's father, but not yet) shows up next.
Terminator tries to kill Sarah Conner. Sarah and Mr. X waste the
Terminator. Mr. X dies soon after. Then, Sarah has a baby boy,
who grows up and meets Mr. X as a younger man. Baby Conner fights
for the human race and Mr. X goes back in time to follow a terminator.
There is nothing inherently wrong or paradoxical about this. Its
only if you follow time from the beginning to end that you see a
paradox. There is no clear cause for the effect. What started
the loop?
A theory I like (for no logical reason, but it sounds neat) is that
we start out with a nice logical timestream that is uncluttered
by time travel. Then, somewhere, somewhen, a person decides to
travel back in time and do something that would seem to cause a
paradox. This causes stress on the timestream which must be relieved.
Events (history) shifts and changes so the paradox is relieved.
In the case of a man who kills his grandfather, perhaps grandma
marries someone else, has different babies, and the man isnt born.
The change propagates for a while, perhaps to the end, but the paradox
is relieved. Perhaps though, the disturbance to the timestream
is best corrected in such a way that time settles into a loop such
as the one mentioned above. There is no logical explanation for
how the loop started because the event that caused its existence
NEVER HAPPENED, BUT WAS ERASED FROM HISTORY DUE TO PARADOX. The
loop is dynamically stable, and closed-ended, therefore neat, but
there is no clue left as to what caused the loop to start in the
first place.
I know this must be a very confused stray thought as it was written
off the cuff, but for those who can decipher it, what do you think?
/Dan
|
153.63 | a timely recollection | LANDO::LUBART | | Mon Jan 19 1987 12:49 | 8 |
| I just recalled a book that has a similar problem. I hope I didnt
steal too much of the idea from the story but if I did, I stand
humbled. Anyway, who's read the Stainless Steel Rat adventure that
involved Time travel. I think that one discussed time-loops being
created, although I dont think the justification for their creation
was the same.
/Dan
|
153.64 | Timemapping - a new science | THEBAY::WOODRI | Gynotikolobomassophile | Mon Jan 19 1987 22:13 | 43 |
| I prefer the "multi-threaded" theory of time. In this case, the
Original Father and Sarrah are the parents of John Conner in one
time-line. In this time-line, the Terminator is sent back, and Kyle Reese
is also, but with a different picture than the one we saw.
The other time-line splits off at the point where the Terminator shows
up. Kyle Reese shows up too, and changes the primary time-line. He
ends up becoming John Conner's father. Since this is a different John
Conner, and the picture is different (as are many other less obvious
events/facts), the new Kyle Reese that is sent back spawns yet a third
time-line.
This leaves us with three line:
1) Sarrah and original husband have kid, no interference from future.
2) Sarrah meets Kyle, who becomes new father, but the John Conner he
remembered was the one from Timeline #1. (Someone else's son)
3) Sarrah again meets Kyle, but the John Conner Kyle knew before was his son.
Note that all three would have "futures" that are separate. The picture
would look something like:
|
|
| +-->+ +-->+
| ! | ! |
| ! | ! |
[1] ! [2] ! [3]
| ! | ! |
| ! | ! |
+-->+ +-->+ |
| | |
V V V
Obviously, the movie started at the beginning of Timeline#3.
Perhaps, as someone suggested earlier, time is single-threaded, but can
be changed, re-stabilizing whenever changes distrub it. In that case,
the "final" single timeline would be number three. Since John Conner's
life may have had the same effect regardless of his parentage [Anyone
want to argue "nature vs. nurture"?], then the differences between the
three futures might be trivial enough that they reconverge.
_______
Richard
|
153.65 | "I know who I am, but who are..." | DROID::DAUGHAN | I love it when you talk Hi-Tech. | Tue Jan 20 1987 13:26 | 4 |
| Re .50 et. al.: Looks like now would be a good time to stop & re-read
RAH's "...All You Zombies."
Don
|
153.66 | Sometimes, you just havta say... | RT101::GRIER | This is of course impossible. | Sun Jan 25 1987 20:02 | 23 |
|
Well, if you look at the continuum-splitting theory, then there's
all kinds of things which can explain what happened. However, I
would think that Sky-Net's processing-intelligence would have realized
that such a multiverse exists, and thus anything it does is pointless
- it doesn't change its own time-line, no matter how you look at
it.
The thing I don't like about the splitting approach to the subject
is that if you really grok it (in the true meaning of grok), then
it's a good basis for a story like L.N.'s where the people who realized
that no matter what they do, there's one of them that does something
different. Thus -- worse than the possible depression and feelings
of hopelessness which can result from really comprehending the concept
of "pre-destiny" -- people suddenly start looking around and saying
"What the ____!" and chaos can result. Pretty scary. Why not start
a nuclear war? Someone else won't. Why not kill that person, another
one of yourself doesn't. (A theological aside for those who believe
in hell or heaven -- they must be really crowded, and the same people
must be in each "destination," in roughly equivalent proportions!)
-mjg
|
153.67 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Sun Feb 15 1987 14:56 | 9 |
| Re .58:
> . . . there HAD to have been an original father from the 1980's . . .
Says who? We have no definitive theory of the nature of time. Perhaps
time was "created" with the loop already in place.
-- edp
|
153.68 | Seen somewhere ... | RDGE00::ALFORD | Garfield rules !! OK ? | Thu Apr 30 1987 09:28 | 12 |
|
This is just a snippet from someone who has neither seen nor read
anything to do with the Terminator .....
I seem to have seen somewhere and I am paraphrasing ...
'We all sow the seeds of our own destruction...'
From what I have read here, the Terminator seems to have done
this fairly effectively ...
CJA
|
153.69 | Power Sources? | MILVAX::SCOLARO | | Mon Mar 14 1988 12:28 | 20 |
| Well, I just saw "the Terminator" last night and I thought it was
very rivetting.
I also wondered about the timeline consequences with respect to
causality, but that has already been discussed.
One other question I had was power source. Uopn losing its "skin",
the terminator could be seen to be very compact in volume, especially
in comparison to Arnold. What did it use for power, only forty
years from now? By most accounts, fusion will take 20 or thirty
years for building sized reactors and batteries, while getting more
energy dense, are still bulky.
The terminator seemed like an expendable munition for a short term
terrorist-type operation, not something that could follow you for
days.
Any other thoughts?
Tony
|
153.70 | RE 153.69 | DICKNS::KLAES | Kind of a Zen thing, huh? | Mon Mar 14 1988 12:45 | 13 |
| The novelization of THE TERMINATOR is an excellent source for
questions like that.
The nuclear power source for the Terminator is located in its
chest area behind three wraparound layers of very tough armor.
The Terminator could run at 100 percent 24 hours a day nonstop for over
three years before shutting down, and it was only using 40 percent of
its power to hunt for Sarah. Once it had killed her, it would wander
programless until its computer creator/masters were built and had
begun to take over Earth, and then report to them for new programming.
Larry
|
153.71 | Right, But... | MILVAX::SCOLARO | | Mon Mar 14 1988 16:14 | 15 |
| OK, I accept that the novel stated the terminator could run at 100%
for three years, I was wondering about the logic of that.
What form of nuclear power could provide the energy required at
the energy density you state. Also, from the scene in the movie
where the terminator attacked the human hideout, it appeared that
the mterminators were designed as expendable munitions. Send one
to find and exterminate a human encapment, but once it does, it
attacks and is presumeably either damaged in the attack, which would
require repair and enable refueling or it is destroyed.
I see no logic in a three year power supply, I also see no technology
or extrapolation of technology that could enable it.
Tony
|
153.72 | RE 153.71 | DICKNS::KLAES | Kind of a Zen thing, huh? | Mon Mar 14 1988 16:55 | 5 |
| Why couldn't Terminators be designed to endure/handle search
and destroy missions of varying length and battle intensity?
Larry
|
153.73 | Cost, machines don't care about cost... | CSMSRE::WRIGHT | Underneath the Radar | Mon Mar 14 1988 17:14 | 31 |
|
There is also another problem with .71 -
The terminators were made by cyberdine systems right?? or to be
more accurate, they were made by machines in automated factories.
Do you really think that the control program for an automated factory
(read as the equivalant of human manager/owner) knows or care about
cost and economics??
And how many terminators can you build out of one Hunter/Killer
unit?? (remember in reeses first flash back, the big tracked thing
that him and his partner blew up with the "grenades"?? Terminators
looked to be tougher to spot and kill than those huge things...:-)
And while the machines had the HKs to patrol the surface, they still
needed something to root out the humans hidey holes.
And who is to say that the terminator in the flash back was fresh??
It could have been out there killing humans for many months or years
before the damage became so great that someone was able to kill
it.
this is with out reading the book - I have the feeling that if The
Terminator had been succesful in taking out Sarah Connors, it would
have just started killing humans until it ran out of juice or was
stopped...look how easy it was for it to take out the police station...
grins,
clark.
|
153.74 | D++ cells for Arnie | DEADLY::REDFORD | Your problems cheerfully ignored | Mon Mar 14 1988 18:37 | 17 |
| re: terminator power
It might not actually take all that much energy to run a
terminator. Human beings take about 100 W, and the terminator
didn't seem that much faster than a human. They were stronger,
but that just means their peak power output was higher. Their
quiescent state might not take much at all.
The latest issue of Spectrum has an article on batteries. The
best today are zinc-air batteries with an energy density of 310
watt-hours/kg or 1150 Watt-hours / liter. If you could fit a
ten-liter battery into Arnie's chest, and if he only burned 100W,
then he could run for about four days. That may not sound like long,
but that's longer than the required maintenance period for, say,
jet fighters.
/jlr
|
153.75 | Skynet was DESPERATE | MILVAX::SCOLARO | | Tue Mar 15 1988 00:07 | 39 |
| Actually I thought that the terminator's were a desperation move
by skynet. Obviously, skynet lost the war and I was under the
impression that terminators came after the HK units first appeared.
To hear Reese talk it seemed that they were relatively successful
against terminators.
The arguement that they were worried about cost and made them to
survive assumes that one side of the quality vs quantity is right.
It is possible that a desperate skynet would make large numbers
of relatively cheap terminators, in an attempt to recover victory.
The desperation of skynet is plainly pointed out by the fact they
worked out a means of time travel to try and steal victory by
eliminating its chief adversary.
The extent to which skynet tried to make terminators appear human
is, I think, clear evidence that, without intense camoflauge (sp),
Reese and his other fighters would simply waste terminators.
I think the combination of camoflauge, skynet desperation and late
appearance of terminators makes me believe that they are expendible
weapons
The use of batteries is an interesting possibility. Improvements
in both mechanics and batteries will make a battery powered terminator
possible. Does anyone know how much energy a robot (like one of
those used to make cars) uses? To a first approximation a terminator
should use 4X as much - four limbs.
The four day figure seems about what I would have guessed for the
action period of a terminator (1 week to one month) was my guess
during the movie. If Reese knew this, a simple strategy of flight,
travel to europe for example, would have been quite effective.
I believe that in any case a flight strategy would have been successful
as the terminator woould have to find out where she was.
Also, the terminator wasn't that smart. He appeared to be very
confused by the motion in the factory.
Tony
|
153.76 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Tue Mar 15 1988 01:57 | 21 |
| RE: .75
In the parking garage, after Sarah bit Reese on the hand, he
gave her a more graphic description of the Terminator's level
of commitment to his task (ending with, "It absolutely WILL
NOT STOP -- EVER!! -- until you are dead!")
If the Terminator was in danger of running out of juice in
the 1980's, Reese didn't appear to know about it.
Also, I agree that the humans most likely had no problem knocking
off the Terminators in their native time. (Reese told Sarah that
the first Terminators had rubber skin and were easy to spot.
As a result, later models were built with living tissue. Obvious-
ly, the humans were killing them, if Skynet had to redesign
them with better camouflage.)
When Sarah asked Reese if he could stop the Terminator, he
replied, "I don't know. With these weapons... I don't know."
(It appeared that the major difficulty with killing the Terminator
in the 1980's was the lack of sufficient weapons technology.)
|
153.77 | RE 153.75 | DICKNS::KLAES | Kind of a Zen thing, huh? | Tue Mar 15 1988 08:44 | 23 |
| NO, the time machine built by Skynet (nicely called the
chronoporter in the novelization) was NOT a "desperate attempt"
by Skynet to stop John Connor and his army. The device was something
the machines had developed in their *general* non-stop research
projects on all areas of science. It WAS used as a last attempt
to stop John Connor when all else was lost, but that was NOT its
original purpose.
And the Terminator which was sent back to 1984 was a *specially*
designed Terminator, with special programming to interact to a certain
extent in pre-World War III human society so that it could accomplish
its mission while attracting the least attention. That is why it
used a grubby hotel room as a base, and did not just come to 1984
and start hunting Sarah Connor without dressing as a human being
and picking up certain human characteristics. It was also designed
to be VERY tough, much moreso than normal Terminators.
If Reese could have brought back a plasma laser rifle like he
and his army used in 2029, he could have penetrated Terminator's
armor; but our "primitive" weapons were no match for that armor.
Larry
|
153.78 | War is a Desperate Act | MILVAX::SCOLARO | | Tue Mar 15 1988 10:16 | 16 |
| Re:77
When one is losing a war, no make that fighting a war, one does
not do "*gereral*" research. War is desperate, by its definition
and one clear lesson is that one plays to win or does not play at
all. A logical war fighting power would only perform research that
could help win the war, until the war was won.
Also, I think it was kinda hokey that skynet could transport a machine,
a terminator, and either side couldn't transport weapons, which
are also machines.
How was arnold designed meaner? The terminator in the tunnel looked
just as mean. And arnold acted dumb.
Tony
|
153.79 | RE 153.78 | DICKNS::KLAES | Kind of a Zen thing, huh? | Tue Mar 15 1988 10:45 | 39 |
| The Skynet machines WERE doing "general research", and the
chronoporter was one of those projects; it was stated in the book.
You can fight it out with the author of the novel if you want, but I
am just stating what I read. You could not just "whip up" such a
sophisticated instrument as a time machine as a last, desperate act.
Such a device requires time to build and develop, which the machines
did.
And let me add that it was Skynet which STARTED the war, in
order to exterminate humanity, thus making the machines the offensive
and the human race the defensive. The humans were much more desperate
to win this war than the machines, as they would be totally wiped
out if they did not. Ironically, even if (when/will be?) the humans
defeated Skynet, machines will not go out of existence entirely,
though they will probably never be made intelligent again; plus the
humans needed and used machines (guns, radios) even during the war.
Computers are capable of doing MANY tasks at once, much more than
a human could, and I would think an intelligent supercomputer like
Skynet would be extremely efficient at the task. Also keep in mind
that the machines could pour as many resources as they wish into as
many areas as possible, as they do not have to worry about economics
or human emotions/psychological factors in their decisions and plans.
It was clearly stated during Reese's interrogation by the
police that the Terminator went through the chronoporter due to
the fact it was covered with LIVING human tissue. Unless the
weapons were covered with similar tissue, such inorganic material
would not make it through. That is why neither party had any
clothes on, either.
And how was the Terminator played by Arnold S. "dumb"? He was
portraying a battle android which only had to know enough about
human society in 1984 to get around to kill Sarah, plus the usual
technological design limitations set by the time period (He was not
a C-3PO built in an age of hyperdrive starships and such).
Larry
|
153.80 | The few, The proud, The Machines... | CSMSRE::WRIGHT | Underneath the Radar | Tue Mar 15 1988 10:56 | 25 |
|
Tony -
skynet was able to send the terminator back because it was covered
in living tissue (how did it keep the tissue alive??) and therefore
could be sent through (kinda thin in the light of day, but at least
consistent.
In order for reese to bring back a weapon it too would have to have
been encased in living tissue. And since it would appear that they
could only send back one person, it would have been very
painful/anatomicaly impossible to encase the weapon in reese :-)
As far as the terminator being stupid - remember, It was nothing
more than a highly programmed robbot, there was no evidence that
the terminators themselves were AI's, just a very well/thouroughly
programmed robot with a large internal database (highly inclusive,
slightly shallow, Arnold only had *SEVEN* lines in the entire movie...)
and two directives - find and kill sarah connor, survive as long
as possible (assumed). Calling the terminator stupid for not being
able to think is like calling you calculator useless becuase it
isn't a dbms...
Grins,
clark.
|
153.81 | I'm sorry sir, that number is not listed. | CSMSRE::WRIGHT | Underneath the Radar | Tue Mar 15 1988 10:58 | 7 |
|
Another nasty thought - what if sarah had had an unlisted phone
number...
grins,
Clark.
|
153.82 | | ASIC::EDECK | Support Your Local Suggoth | Tue Mar 15 1988 11:53 | 4 |
|
Seeing as the Terminator was specially built for this time, it
could have been designed with a recharging circut--"And at the
end of the day, just plug him into the wall..."
|
153.83 | He'd sure get a charge out of that. | LDP::BUSCH | | Wed Mar 16 1988 13:20 | 7 |
| < Seeing as the Terminator was specially built for this time, it
< could have been designed with a recharging circut--"And at the
< end of the day, just plug him into the wall..."
You mean just like "The Electric Grandma".
Dave
|
153.84 | | BAKHOE::KENAH | My journey begins with my first step | Wed Mar 16 1988 14:11 | 8 |
| >< Note 153.80 by CSMSRE::WRIGHT "Underneath the Radar" >
> -< The few, The proud, The Machines... >-
That is one of the cleverest notes titles I've seen in a while.
My compliments.
andrew
|
153.85 | When you care enough to send the very best... | HPSCAD::WALL | I see the middle kingdom... | Thu Mar 17 1988 09:51 | 7 |
|
re: .84
Then you'd probably like my "Seasons Greetings from Cyberdyne Systems"
Christmas card, with a picture of an 800 series on it.
DFW
|
153.86 | Saturday, May 12, 1984, not Thursday | MTWAIN::KLAES | Know Future | Wed Jun 01 1988 14:59 | 10 |
| In the scene when Reese first arrived in 1984 and was being
chased by the Los Angeles police, when he caught one of the cops
and demanded at gunpoint what the date was, the cop rattled off
that it was "Twelfth - May - Thursday"; but May 12, 1984 was on
a *Saturday*, not Thursday. Someone should have checked the calendar.
I bet you can all sleep soundly now.
:^)
|
153.87 | It was right there in front of me. | WOOK::LEE | Wook... Like 'Book' with a 'W' | Fri Jun 03 1988 19:10 | 4 |
| I should have caught that, seeing as my birthday is May 12! Maybe
I did and just forgot to mention it? I forget.
Wook
|
153.88 | Revised pointer to AI conference | DEMING::HLQAR | | Fri Dec 30 1988 03:37 | 6 |
|
I know the talk about AI was 40 or 50 replies back, but (if you
didn't know already) there is an AI notesfile -- ISTG::AI. You
might want to check it out.
Speedo
|
153.89 | novelization of terminator? | DECWET::ERCOLANO | Tony's Front-end Shop | Mon Aug 14 1989 20:00 | 1 |
| Who wrote the novelization of the terminator?
|
153.90 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | He's baaaaccckkk!!!! | Tue Aug 15 1989 05:17 | 3 |
| Can't recall off-hand. I'll have to check.
--- jerry
|
153.91 | Well, one out of two is 50% | HPSCAD::WALL | You and me against the world: attack! | Tue Aug 15 1989 10:52 | 6 |
|
Bill Pronzini and someone else whose first name, I think, is Randall.
(isn't that helpful)
DFW
|
153.92 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | He's baaaaccckkk!!!! | Wed Aug 16 1989 04:46 | 9 |
| re:.91
Well, Dave, you got 50%, but not the 50% you thought (you got both
first names right :-)). The authors were Randal Frakes and Bill
Wilsher. Apparently, there was a different novelization by a
different author released in the UK, but I don't have any details
on that one.
--- jerry
|
153.93 | Terminator II | POCUS::LAM | | Sun Jun 30 1991 02:52 | 8 |
| I heard the review for the new "Terminator II" from Siskel and Ebert.
They both loved it and said it was a great movie, better than the first
one. They say its a must see. Excellent story, acting, special
effects and everything.
This time around Schwarzenegger plays the good guy. But they say the
bad guy is much better this time around. Someone else gets to play the
bad guy.
|
153.94 | can they halt the details in the ads though? | LENO::GRIER | mjg's holistic computing agency | Tue Jul 02 1991 19:30 | 11 |
|
I'm really tired of all the pre-movie details being released. I
thought they told too much months ago with the first advertisements.
The details shown in current ads and in "behind the scenes" looks on
the movie shows like Flix on VH1 and such are really pissing me off,
because at first I start watching because the movie looks great, but
then I realize that they're giving away some details that I'd much
rather see at the theatre...
-mjg
|
153.95 | Bravo! | LACV01::BUCHANAN | Capt.Fairchild | Wed Jul 03 1991 09:45 | 8 |
| I agree completely!
When we went to see the Rockteer, all the previews we'd been blasting
with almost spoiled the flick. We kept expecting things to happen one
way because of the previews, then they'd go the other.. or there was no
suspense because we'd seen the previews. I try to turn those things
off now, but you can't always be quick enough with the remote.
|
153.96 | Unqualified yes! | SNDPIT::SMITH | N1JBJ - the voice of Waldo | Tue Jul 09 1991 10:19 | 8 |
| Well, I hadn't seen any previews (don't watch much TV), but I liked
Terminator I, so I dragged the wife off to Terminator II last night,
and it was a _GREAT!_ movie. It's got SF, it's got action, it's got
Arnold, it's got humor, it's got an unresolved time-travel paradox,
it's got more ILM special effects than I've seen in one movie, we loved
it!
Willie
|
153.97 | Siskel & Ebert was right. | NYTP07::LAM | Q ��Ktl�� | Tue Jul 09 1991 11:06 | 9 |
| The only thing I saw about this on TV was the Siskel and Ebert review so it
wasnt spoiled for me. They gave it a good review so I decided to see this. I
have to admit I was impressed. I saw the original Terminator and wasnt really
all that impressed. I have to admit that it was the only Schwarzenegger film
that I really liked. He fits the Terminator part so well. I was a bit turned
off by the violence and gore but it was better than the average slash and kill
type movie. The Siskel and Ebert review was right. It was a welldone movie.
The special effects alone was worth the price of admission. I especially liked
the part where the kid tells the Terminator not to kill anyone.
|
153.98 | | DSSDEV::PIEKOS | Respect the Ravine. | Tue Jul 09 1991 16:11 | 6 |
| > I especially liked the part where...
Please cushion statements like these with spoiler warnings so as not to ruin
it for those of us who haven't seen the movie yet.
John Piekos
|
153.99 | good flick | LENO::GRIER | mjg's holistic computing agency | Tue Jul 09 1991 16:17 | 21 |
|
Good movie. I'm glad I finally saw it last night so I can stop
frantically looking for the remote to change channels when commercials
and reviews start to reveal too much.
I don't know how much they've been talking about, but if you've seen
the reviews and such, don't worry too much, most of the things that I
knew about were resolved in the first half hour of the movie perhaps.
(Although that first half hour would have been a lot better were it not
for the spoiler commercials.)
And I hope you didn't catch Linda Hamilton on Arsenio(sp?) last
night - she gave away a few things that suprised me quite a big to see
on the screen (but luckily I had already seen it...)
ILM really outdid themselves with the ray tracing... too bad we
didn't sell them DECstations rather than the SGI workstations they used
to do it...
-mjg
|
153.100 | | ADOVS9::MCGHIE | Thank Heaven for small Murphys ! | Wed Jul 10 1991 21:39 | 4 |
| There is an on-going discussion in the movies notesfile I've been reading over
the last week. The general consensus is that the new movie is great.
Mike
|
153.101 | technology keeps moving .... sometimes fast! | STAR::MONTAGUE | Lead, Follow, or get Out of the Way | Wed Feb 26 1992 23:14 | 10 |
| About batteries a few years and replys back...
In the April cycle world magazine is an article about one person in Calif.
who has built an a 1000 amp/240 volt dragbike in the mid-11-second range.
He has built it out of off the shelf parts, and only spent $10k to do it.
So a terminator (running on batteries) might just be possible if technology
keeps making the same level of improvements.
/jon
|