As machines outplay humans in pursuits that used to seem quintessentially human, Harry de Quetteville looks at where all this technology is leading us It was in 1996 when IBM’s Deep Blue beat then ...
RGA Investment Advisors discusses AI integration and new stakes in Celsius Holdings and Lattice Semiconductor. Read the full ...
Thirty years ago from February 10-17, 1996, in Philadelphia, USA, world chess champion Garry Kasparov defeated the ...
In his latest book, The Singularity Is Nearer, he maintains that by 2045, human intelligence will expand a millionfold. He envisions a future where machine intelligence merges with human cognition, ...
A key goal is to shift finance’s focus from “retrospective performance analysis to forward-looking enterprise intelligence.” ...
If AI is tuned to find and trust expertise rather than dilute it, it can become humanity’s next great technology.
Humans have long feared being displaced by machines but history proved them wrong. Even as AI grows more capable, our deepest interests remain human. Let’s not get carried away by tech supremacy in a ...
In graduate school, my experimental archaeology professor told a student to create a door socket - the hole in a door frame ...
An anthropologist’s new book lays out the formula for human innovation, from stone tools to supercomputers. Depending on ...
Twenty-nine years ago, IBM's computer Deep Blue beat the reigning world chess champion Garry Kasparov. It has since become clear that computers are superior to humans at the Game of Kings. Yet despite ...
In this episode of the Cross Examining History podcast, Talmage Boston interviews Garry Kasparov, chess champion and founder of the cross-partisan Renew Democracy Initiative. This is an independent ...
In 1996, IBM's Deep Blue computer defeated chess world champion Garry Kasparov in 37 moves. The victory marked a turning point for humans and machines.