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>3/18 24: Similarities between Electronic Computers and the Human Brain: Thank you Jensen Huang for best week of Learning since John Von Neumann shared with The Economist 1956 notes Computer & The Brain
HAPPY 2024: in this 74th year since The Economist started mediating futures of brainworking machines clued by the 3 maths greats NET (Neumann, Einstein, Turing) people seem to be chatting about 5 wholly different sorts of AI. 1BAD: The worst tech system designers don't deserve inclusion in human intel at all, and as Hoover's Condoleezza Rice . 2 reports their work is result of 10 compound techs of which Ai is but one. Those worst for world system designs may use media to lie or multiply hate or hack, and to perpetuate tribal wars and increase trade in arms. Sadly bad versions of tv media began in USA early 1960s when it turned out what had been the nation's first major export crop, tobacco, was a killer. Please note for a long time farmers did not know bac was bad: western HIStory is full of ignorances which lawyer-dominated societies then cover up once inconvenient system truths are seen. A second AI ecommerce type (now 25 years exponential development strong) ; this involves ever more powerful algorithms applied to a company's data platform that can be app'd to hollow out community making relatively few people richer and richer, or the reverse. You can test a nation's use of this ai by seeing if efinance has invested in the poorest or historically most disconnected - see eg bangladesh's bklash, one of the most populous digital cash systems . Digital money is far cheaper to distribute let alone to manually account for so power AI offers lots of lessons but whether its good or not depends in part on whether there are enough engineers in gov & public service to see ahead of what needs regulating. There are 2 very good ai's which have only scaled in recent years that certainly dont need regulating by non engineers and one curious ai which was presented to congress in 2018 but which was left to multiply at least 100 variants today the so-called chats or LLMs. Lets look at the 2 very good ai's first because frankly if your community is concerned about any extinction risks these AI may most likely save you, One I call science AI and frankly in the west one team is so far ahead that we should count ourselves lucky that its originator Hassabis has mixed wealth and societal growth. His deep mind merged with google to make wealth but open sourced the 200 million protein databank equivalent to a billion hours of doctorate time- so now's the time for biotech to save humanity if it ever does. Alongside this the second very good AI graviates around Fei-Fei Li) in developing 20 million imagenet database so that annual competitions training computers to see 20000 of the most everyday sights we humans view around the world including things and life-forms such as nature's plants and animals. Today, students no longer need to go back to 0.1 programming to ask computer about any of these objects; nor do robots or and autonomous vehicles - see fei-fei li's book worlds i see which is published in melinda gates Entrepreneurial Revolution of girl empowerment
EW::ED , VN Hypothesis: in 21st C brainworking worlds how people's times & data are spent is foundational to place's community health, energy and so natural capacity to grow/destroy wealth -thus species will depend on whether 1000 mother tongue language model mediates intelligence/maths so all communities cooperatively celebrate lifetimes and diversity's deep data ) . Check out "Moore exponential patterns" at year 73 of celebrating Game : Architect Intelligence (Ai) - players welcome .. some jargon

Friday, May 5, 2023

Epoch Changing Q: can Human AIntel share maps with Chicago's top 10 market shaping compasses -climate, covid ...

 ED: 5/4/23 Chicago Economics & IMF DC 

Full Youtube replay

6:00 pm - 6:05 pm Paolo Mauro, Deputy Director, Fiscal Affairs Department, International Monetary Fund; 6.05 to 8pm                                          
Rachel Glennerstervid1  U Chicago; former Chief Eco UK FCDO/DFID  CEO Abdul Latif J-PAL    Michael Kremer,  vid 1 U Chicago Director Dev Innovation Lab 2019 Nobel Laureate    patent crisis              

Susan Athey, EconTech Professor Stanford GSB; Stanford HAI, CEC Antitrust US DOJ             

Jean Tirole,   vid   Chair Foundation JJ Laffont-Toulouse Economics (TSE) & IAST 2014 Nobel   

Christopher Snyder, Joel Z. & Susan Hyatt Prof Economics, Dartmouth College (Moderator)


Catherine Bremner, Former Director of Intl Climate & Energy in the Department BEI UK //  Jane Flegal, Climate at Stripe; Former Director Industrial Emissions, White House Office  Domestic Climate Policy // Justina Gallegos, Climate Finance & Industrial Strategy, White House National Economic Council // Matthew Hepburn, Senior Advisor at the Office of Science & Technology Policy, lead implementation  American Pandemic Preparedness Plan // Rachel Glennerster, University of Chicago (Moderator)

Event Youtube - Becker Friedman - web -1 - Market accelerator BF Twitter

1 comment:


  1. 6:05 pm - 6:15 pm
    Presenting UChicago’s Market Shaping Accelerator & Innovation Challenge 2023
    Rachel Glennerster, Associate Professor of Economics, University of Chicago; former Chief Economist at the Foreign Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO) and the Department for International Development in the UK; former Executive Director of the Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL)

    Michael Kremer, University Professor in Economics, University of Chicago and Director of the Development Innovation Lab and 2019 Nobel Laureate

    6:15 pm - 6:45 pm
    Panel I: The Economics of Accelerating Innovation
    Susan Athey, Economics of Technology Professor, Stanford Graduate School of Business; Senior Fellow at the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research; Chief Economist of the Antitrust Division at the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) (Panelist)

    Michael Kremer, University of Chicago (Panelist)

    Jean Tirole, Honorary Chairman of the Foundation JJ Laffont-Toulouse School of Economics (TSE) and of the Institute for Advanced Study in Toulouse (IAST); Scientific Director of TSE-Partnership; 2014 Nobel Laureate (Panelist)

    Christopher Snyder, Joel Z. and Susan Hyatt Professor in Economics, Dartmouth College (Moderator)

    6:45 pm - 7:00 pm
    Panel I Q&A
    7:00 pm - 7:30 pm
    Panel II: Market Shaping to Solve Global Crises (Pandemics + Climate Change)
    Catherine Bremner, Former Director of International Climate and Energy in the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy in the UK (Panelist)

    Jane Flegal, Climate at Stripe; Former Senior Director for Industrial Emissions, White House Office of Domestic Climate Policy (Panelist)

    Justina Gallegos, Climate Finance and Industrial Strategy, White House National Economic Council (Panelist)

    Matthew Hepburn, Senior Advisor at the Office of Science and Technology Policy, leading the effort on implementing the American Pandemic Preparedness Plan (Panelist)

    Rachel Glennerster, University of Chicago (Moderator)

    7:30 pm - 7:40 pm
    Panel II Q&A
    7:40 pm - 8:00 pm
    Closing Remarks
    Rachel Glennerster, University of Chicago

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