Sure, but I wasn't making any rigorous statements around human brain power vs Google ML I was suggesting more simply that the original comment talking about 10x developer wasn't referring to just AlphaGo. Apparently it…
I too get annoyed when people don't abide by history as I know it. Then realize it's a silly thing to waste focus on and move along.
IMO, you're comparing from the wrong things. AlphaGo is good at playing Go specifically, sure. But AlphaGo was built by machine learning infra that is capable of doing more than just playing Go. Google's ML capabilities…
In the case of building a nuclear reactor, the knowledge one relies on must be vetted by experts. In the case of building web apps and such, sure, why not put it out there ASAP?
If the complaint is "cross-platform apps would be ubiquitous if not for Player X" why stop at Apple? Can't we point to this trend more generally being driven by Microsoft for years? Or IBM before them? This is a symptom…
Along those lines: I've setup family members and closest friends with a Raspberry Pi or in a couple cases cheap Intel Atom machines, that I can configure with Ansible. I run a minimalist "Facebook clone" UI with photo…
Sure, but I wasn't making any rigorous statements around human brain power vs Google ML I was suggesting more simply that the original comment talking about 10x developer wasn't referring to just AlphaGo. Apparently it…
I too get annoyed when people don't abide by history as I know it. Then realize it's a silly thing to waste focus on and move along.
IMO, you're comparing from the wrong things. AlphaGo is good at playing Go specifically, sure. But AlphaGo was built by machine learning infra that is capable of doing more than just playing Go. Google's ML capabilities…
In the case of building a nuclear reactor, the knowledge one relies on must be vetted by experts. In the case of building web apps and such, sure, why not put it out there ASAP?
If the complaint is "cross-platform apps would be ubiquitous if not for Player X" why stop at Apple? Can't we point to this trend more generally being driven by Microsoft for years? Or IBM before them? This is a symptom…
Along those lines: I've setup family members and closest friends with a Raspberry Pi or in a couple cases cheap Intel Atom machines, that I can configure with Ansible. I run a minimalist "Facebook clone" UI with photo…