Cyborg Answers the Turing Halting Problem [#twitterfoundpoem July 13, 2010]
Tweets+Edits=#twitterfoundpoem
sequences leading to infinity Are quite disgusting.
in short scientific terms a methodology that is
automatic, Axiomatic, Algorithmic can punch your heart.
a closed system methodology that endorses prevention, lowers costs,
and improves the quality of profits can change your gears.
Imagine a new reimbursement methodology that endorses
a bad microchip implant and explants your brain.
Imagine your profit with a personality Explant!
sequences leading to infinity have a Halting Problem
but you will not have that Problem.
you Are a closed system but profit is never infinite.
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Showing posts with label automatic axiomatic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label automatic axiomatic. Show all posts
Tuesday, July 13, 2010
Cyborg Answers the Turing Halting Problem [#twitterfoundpoem July 13, 2010]
Labels:
#twitterfoundpoem,
algorithmic,
automatic axiomatic,
July 13 2010,
Khakjaan Wessington,
Turing Halting Problem
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
Reverse Design [Today's News Poem March 23, 2010]
Reverse Design [Today's News Poem March 23, 2010]
“Gordon's work is part of a growing field of research that's just starting to mine the massive quantity of thoughts, feelings and experiences real people pour out daily on the Internet.”
--Shannon Proudfoot, Canwest News Service, March 23, 2010
http://www.montrealgazette.com/news/BLOG+CHRONICLES/2715796/story.html
“Branson's company Virgin Galactic announced Monday that the VSS Enterprise had successfully completed what it called a captive carry flight attached to a carrier plane.”
--CNN, March 23, 2010 10:57 a.m. EDT
http://www.cnn.com/2010/TECH/space/03/23/virgin.space.flight/?hpt=Sbin
'Coincidence exists as fate:
This moment's proof there's magic left.
I'd murder you, but it's too late
To rescue her and now bereft
I'd rather grieve: a human act
You scarce recall. You loved machines
Too well to care for basic tact.
And now, deprived of your marines...
I might, I might—you never know.
How does it feel to fear like this?
To live for once amongst a foe
Who stares across a like abyss
Into the meaty weak inside
Us both! Goddamn! To kill you off
Would make me last—until I died.
I want to hear that snotty scoff
You'd make when asked about the threat
Of competition bots propose.
Your brazen ways accrued a debt
You'll never pay—you see it flows:
You save the life of humankind
When saving one and likewise kill
Humanity—all intertwined—
When just one death's been charged to bill.
Insanity's the byproduct
Of toxic cultures. Likewise verse
Possessed the ultimate construct
Of meta-minds; not better, worse
Than what you did—you programmed chips,
I programmed souls. And yet you sought
To be like them—their skills eclipse
Your own and yet you never thought
The day would come when human parts
Would serve no need for cyberkind.
Instead of listening to art
You worshiped static, robot minds
That learned to ape our every way—
Despite their drives that don't forget:
That method caused you no dismay?
It's only now that you regret?
While both our kinds shall go extinct,
While you and I will shortly die;
By suicide I'll prove distinct
And clean in death. Fuck you and bye.'
He jumped before I scanned his brain.
His skull: it bounced from rock to rock.
A total loss. His body's stain
I took—to keep his genes in stock.
Subscribe in a reader
“Gordon's work is part of a growing field of research that's just starting to mine the massive quantity of thoughts, feelings and experiences real people pour out daily on the Internet.”
--Shannon Proudfoot, Canwest News Service, March 23, 2010
http://www.montrealgazette.com/news/BLOG+CHRONICLES/2715796/story.html
“Branson's company Virgin Galactic announced Monday that the VSS Enterprise had successfully completed what it called a captive carry flight attached to a carrier plane.”
--CNN, March 23, 2010 10:57 a.m. EDT
http://www.cnn.com/2010/TECH/space/03/23/virgin.space.flight/?hpt=Sbin
'Coincidence exists as fate:
This moment's proof there's magic left.
I'd murder you, but it's too late
To rescue her and now bereft
I'd rather grieve: a human act
You scarce recall. You loved machines
Too well to care for basic tact.
And now, deprived of your marines...
I might, I might—you never know.
How does it feel to fear like this?
To live for once amongst a foe
Who stares across a like abyss
Into the meaty weak inside
Us both! Goddamn! To kill you off
Would make me last—until I died.
I want to hear that snotty scoff
You'd make when asked about the threat
Of competition bots propose.
Your brazen ways accrued a debt
You'll never pay—you see it flows:
You save the life of humankind
When saving one and likewise kill
Humanity—all intertwined—
When just one death's been charged to bill.
Insanity's the byproduct
Of toxic cultures. Likewise verse
Possessed the ultimate construct
Of meta-minds; not better, worse
Than what you did—you programmed chips,
I programmed souls. And yet you sought
To be like them—their skills eclipse
Your own and yet you never thought
The day would come when human parts
Would serve no need for cyberkind.
Instead of listening to art
You worshiped static, robot minds
That learned to ape our every way—
Despite their drives that don't forget:
That method caused you no dismay?
It's only now that you regret?
While both our kinds shall go extinct,
While you and I will shortly die;
By suicide I'll prove distinct
And clean in death. Fuck you and bye.'
He jumped before I scanned his brain.
His skull: it bounced from rock to rock.
A total loss. His body's stain
I took—to keep his genes in stock.
Subscribe in a reader
Labels:
AI,
algorithmic Andrew Gordon,
automatic axiomatic,
blog scan,
fallacy of reverse design,
Hans Morevec,
Khakjaan Wessington,
March 23 2010,
MIPS,
systems,
Toylit,
toylitpaper
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