lunes, 23 de septiembre de 2013

Lovelace lecture 2013 Grady Booch

ORIGINAL: BCS

Lovelace lecture
This is an annual public lecture delivered by the winner of Lovelace medal.

2013 lecture - Grady Booch
The 2013 Lovelace lecture was delivered by Grady Booch, Chief Scientist of Software Engineering at IBM Research.
Grady Booch 2011. Wikipedia

Main lecture 



Q&A session

In producing this video for educational and research purposes, BCS acknowledges the following copyright holders:
  • Star Trek: The Next Generation -- Paramount Television. 
  • I, Robot -- Twentieth Century Fox Film Corp. 
  • Asimo -- Honda. 
  • Aiko -- Aiko Innovation Inc. 
  • Dr Ed Feigenbaum's Search for A.I -- Computer History Museum. 
  • Shakey -- SRI International. 
  • Watson -- IBM. 
  • Closer to Truth -- The Kuhn Foundation. 
  • Starlings on Otmoor -- Dylan Winter (You Tube). 
  • Kismet -- MIT AI Lab. 
  • Sir Roger Penrose -- BBC. 
  • President Obama -- www.whitehouse.gov.
  • Live Free or Die Hard - Twentieth Century Fox Film Corp. 
  • Harry Potter & the Order of the Phoenix -- Warner Bros. 
  • King Kong -- Universal Pictures. 
  • The Chronicles of Narnia: 
  • The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe -- Walt Disney Pictures. 
  • Night at the Museum - Twentieth Century Fox Film Corp. 
  • 10,000 BC -- Warner Bros. 
  • Flags of our Fathers -- Dreamworks SKG. 
  • Charlotte's Web -- Paramount Pictures. 
  • Film montage: El Ranchito. 
  • Mr X Inc. BlackGinger. DNA Productions. 
  • MPC. Weta Digital. 
  • The Mill. Digital Domain. 
  • The Filter FX. 
  • Method. Post Modern. 
  • Framestore CFC. 
  • Baxter Robot -- Rethink Robotics. 
  • Google car -- Google.
Synopsis

'I think, therefore I am: Is the mind computable?'

The human race may be singular, unique across all of time and space. It may be just one of multitudes. Most likely, however, it is an extremely rare thing, an exquisitely precious consequence of the unfolding of the laws of the universe. Still, one truth that we can assert with confidence is that we are. We are self-aware; we know that we know we exist.

And yet, we don't want to be alone in our existence; there seems to be within humanity a drive to create machines in our own image. From the Golem of Jewish mythology, to Leonardo’s robot, to the contemporary Kenshiro robot, we project our hopes and our fears into cunning mechanism that mirror us. While these anthropomorphic robots are interesting, there is a less visible revolution taking place in cognitive computing, whose advances are not only helping us better understand the operation of the human brain, they are leading us to create the illusion of sentience.

Grady explores the development of intelligent computers as projections of what we both dream and what we fear. We examine what it means to be intelligent, and take a journey through past and future approaches to building sentient software-intensive systems. Some such as Minsky believe the mind to be computable; others such as Penrose do not. In the end, we are compelled to consider the question of what it means to be human.

About the speaker

Grady is recognised internationally for his innovative work in improving the art and the science of software development. He is currently developing a major transmedia project for broadcast, titled Computing: The Human Experience.



Now in the role of Chief Scientist of Software Engineering at IBM Research, Grady has served as architect and architectural mentor for numerous complex software-intensive systems around the world in just about every domain imaginable.? The author of six best-selling books, Grady has published several hundred articles on computing and has lectured around the world on topics as diverse as software methodology and the morality of computing. He is an IBM Fellow, an ACM Fellow, an IEEE Fellow, a World Technology Network Fellow, and a Software Development Forum Visionary. Grady serves on the board of the Computer History Museum. Grady received his bachelor of science from the United States Air Force Academy in 1977 and his masters of science in electrical engineering from the University of California at Santa Barbara in 1979.

Past lectures

2012 Dr Hermann Hauser 'Computer Architectures'

2011 Professor John Reynolds 'Making Program Logics Intelligible'

2010 Professor Yorick Wilks 'What will a companionable computational agent be like?'

2009 Maurice Perks (presented on behalf of Dr Tony Storey) 'The Sins of IT Projects and why they can fail'

2008 Dr Ann Copestake (dedicated to the memory of Karen Spärck Jones) 'What do we mean? Computational approaches to natural semantics'

2007 Sir Tim Berners-Lee 'Looking Back, Looking Forward'

2006 Professor Nick McKeown 'Internet Routers: Past, Present and Future'

2005 Professor Christopher M Bishop 'Machines that learn'

2004 Dr John E Warnock 'The Invention of PostScript and Acrobat'

Previous winners of the Lovelace medal have also included:

2002 Dr Ian Foster and Dr Carl Kesselman for their pioneering work in Grid technology

2001 Dr Douglas C Engelbart

2000 Linus Torvalds for his creation of LINUX

1998 Professor Michael Jackson and Mr Chris Burton

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