That reporter seems biased, assuming he is racist murderer. Is he?Burroughs said:
You can skip the expensive cars, the fancy clothes, and the endless gym selfies. Completely unnecessary.
I used to freeze the second a beautiful woman looked my way. Frustrated. Awkward. Watching other guys walk away with the girl while I stood there tongue-tied.
Then I discovered 22 simple rules that rewired my entire dating life. The anxiety vanished. Conversations flowed effortlessly. Women started chasing me for a change.
These rules trigger a woman's subconscious attraction switches. And you can start using them tonight.
That reporter seems biased, assuming he is racist murderer. Is he?Burroughs said:
Man, if technical skills are way to go majority of women are screwed. They suck even as normal users.Danger said:What people choose to study, and what jobs are available are two vastly different things. The market has a supply and demand for labor of differing technical skills. No amount of people attending college for one particular degree will increase demand for that particular skillset.
As a second note, be very careful about appyling what is going on today out into infinity.
For those that may not remember,
All of the above are mistaken forecasts based on people extrapolating today out into infinity. My point here is that the bad economy today does not negate th general trend of increasing technical skill requirements from people for an increasingly technical world. This is called "creative destruction". The latest best example being the internet. It is destroying old media as we know it, yet creating new media that we browse everyday on web.
Huge numbers of jobs have been simultaneously destroyed and created by the internet. And we are all the richer because of it.
On the that youtube video posted, that woman jumped to conclusions pretty quickly I believe. Not a very professional person at all.
ArcBound said:http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2390277,00.asp#fbid=kPW7fzW78XR
This robot is not a perfectionist machine in fact it was a robot made to learn by error and to perform new actions and tasks the robot was never made to do.
And it showed that robots can learn and adapt to new tasks and environments without human guidance.
Right now we are at the point where robots can't surpass our creativity but in the future it is very possible that yes they can.
Also neurons in our body form an intricate circuit that basically controls everything about us. Scientists are also trying to model that same circuit (or parts of it right now) onto robots.
Hypothetically speaking, artificial neuron networks can be developed. But frankly what would be the point in making a brain, when you have plenty of them.AAAgent said:Robots do not have emotions nor a brain the two things that will always differentiate us from a machine.
Emotions are what the human race draws its creativity for and that is why it can never be mimicked.
Our brain allows us to think freely without any restriction and strike up new and instantaneous thoughts. Now they might be able to create a brain for a robot but they never be able to create emotions.
If we humans can't even understand emotions how do you expect us to design them in robots or how do you even expect a machine to understand that? This isn't to say that our creativity will be enough to stop an eventual matrix happening though. Robots are pretty damn efficient.