A ‘few clues’ sounds like a gross underestimation. It is the only working example, so it certainly contains all the clues, not just a few. The question of course is how much of a shortcut is possible. The answer to date seems to be: none to slim.
I agree engineers reverse engineering will succeed way ahead of full emulation, that wasn’t my point.
If information is not extracted and used, it doesn’t qualify as being a “clue”.
The question of course is how much of a shortcut is possible.
The answer to date seems to be: none to slim.
The search oracles and stockmarketbot makers have paid precious little attention to the brain. They are based on engineering principles instead.
I agree engineers reverse engineering will succeed way ahead of full emulation,
Most engineers spend very little time on reverse-engineering nature. There is a little “bioinspiration”—but inspiration is a bit different from wholescale copying.
There may be a few clues in there—but engineers are likely to get to the goal looong before the emulators arrive—and engineers are math-friendly.
A ‘few clues’ sounds like a gross underestimation. It is the only working example, so it certainly contains all the clues, not just a few. The question of course is how much of a shortcut is possible. The answer to date seems to be: none to slim.
I agree engineers reverse engineering will succeed way ahead of full emulation, that wasn’t my point.
If information is not extracted and used, it doesn’t qualify as being a “clue”.
The search oracles and stockmarketbot makers have paid precious little attention to the brain. They are based on engineering principles instead.
Most engineers spend very little time on reverse-engineering nature. There is a little “bioinspiration”—but inspiration is a bit different from wholescale copying.