Pages

Apple guru predicts rise of machines

Steve Wozniak at Brisbane Apple launch

Steve Wozniak lines up with hundreds in Queensland for the release of the iPhone 5 at Chermside Apple store. Picture: Patria Jannides Source: The Courier-Mail

Australian Apple fans say the long wait to be the first in the world to buy the iPhone 5 was well worth it.

Terminator robot

Steve Wozniak says artificial intelligence (AI) is the next technological frontier. Source: Supplied

APPLE co-founder Steve Wozniak says artificial intelligence (AI) is the next technological frontier.

On the day the iPhone 5 was released in Australia, with some hiccups, Mr Wozniak told business leaders in Brisbane that AI was the next logical step.

"We're still not at the stage where we can sit down with computers and say, 'Here's a problem. Now go and solve it,''' Mr Wozniak told the QUT Business Leaders Forum.

But that day wasn't too far off, he said.

"In 40 years we will have computers that are conscious, that have feelings, that have a personality.

"My iPhone will know so much about me, I won't want you humans.

"A few of us might be replaced by machines, and we might have to restructure society.''

The man who designed the world's first personal computers spoke of how far technology had come since he first began inventing.

Mr Wozniak said he fell in love with computer programming language at first sight and decided he would be an engineer for life.

"I knew it was the love of my life, for the rest of my life I was going to love these little ones and zeros,'' he said.

He later found the perfect partnership to underpin that love, when he teamed up with Steve Jobs.
Jobs was always the marketing man.

But Mr Wozniak said his ambition was all about the technology - "to build great computers'' not to build a great company.

Steve Wozniak

YESTERYEAR: Steve Jobs, John Sculley and Steve Wozniak unveil the new Apple IIc computer in San Francisco in April 1984. Source: The Courier-Mail

He spoke of his shock at hearing Jobs had died last year.

A reporter had called him and asked: "Did you hear the news''.

"I remember crying on the phone during interviews.''

Mr Wozniak said his current focus was helping inspire young people to dream and build great new inventions, adding one way he did that was by donating technology, not money, to schools.

Source: http://news.com.au.feedsportal.com/c/34564/f/632593/s/23a8219a/l/0L0Snews0N0Bau0Ctechnology0Capple0Eguru0Esteve0Ewozniak0Epredicts0Erise0Eof0Emachines0Ewith0Eartificial0Eintelligence0Ethe0Enext0Estep0Cstory0Ee6frfro0A0E12264789749250Dfrom0Fpublic0Irss/story01.htm

moldova cate blanchett jimi hendrix danielle staub

0 comments:

Post a Comment