Latest Breaking News On - கிளாட் ஶ்யாநந் - Page 6 : comparemela.com
튜링과 그 후계자들, 가보지 않은 길 걸어 AI 시대 선도
joins.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from joins.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The Birthplace of AI
cantorsparadise.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from cantorsparadise.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Deep learning networks prefer the human voice -- just like us
eurekalert.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from eurekalert.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
LESSWRONG
88
(
Originally posted in December 2015: A dialogue between Ashley, a computer scientist who s never heard of
i. Unbounded analysis
BLAINE: Good evening, Msr. Ashley.
ASHLEY: I ve heard there s this thing called Solomonoff s theory of inductive inference .
BLAINE: The rumors have spread, then.
ASHLEY: Yeah, so, what the heck is that about?
BLAINE: Invented in the 1960s by the mathematician Ray Solomonoff, the key idea in Solomonoff induction is to do sequence prediction by using Bayesian updating on a prior composed of a mixture of all computable probability distributions
ASHLEY: Wait. Back up a lot. Before you try to explain what Solomonoff induction
The Most-Used Mathematical Algorithm Idea in History
An octillion. A billion billion billion. That’s a fairly conservative estimate of the number of times a cellphone or other device somewhere in the world has generated a bit using a maximum-length linear-feedback shift register sequence. It’s probably the single most-used mathematical algorithm idea in history. And the main originator of this idea was Solomon Golomb, who died on May 1 and whom I knew for 35 years.
Solomon Golomb’s classic book
Shift Register Sequences, published in 1967 based on his work in the 1950s went out of print long ago. But its content lives on in pretty much every modern communications system. Read the specifications for 3G, LTE, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, or for that matter GPS, and you’ll find mentions of polynomials that determine the shift register sequences these systems use to encode the data they send. Solomon Golomb is the person who figured out how to construct all these polynomials.