Here's What Steve Jobs' Biographer Thinks About The Apple Watch

Well said about innovation and where we r headed, kinda what I was wondering about the other day. How or why we are trying to make machines be like humans instead of augmenting human intelligence. Although we will get to a point where machines will think like humans but would be in a whole different level and not really like humans but like machines. There is always an emotional intelligence question which needs to be addressed when it comes to machines trying to act like humans.
Would a machine ever be generous enough to spare a few bucks for the guy on the street or would it think the person is danger and try to react accordingly? Or worse, would it react like looking at a stray dog and put him in a van!
Of course all that can be programmed, but how much and how far? Then there is the component of learning from human behaviors. If that's the case, good behaviors aside, aren't we making machines to do the same mistakes we do or react in the same way or even be as cunning and selfish as we would be? Then why wouldn't the machines be selfish and eliminate our existence when they see us as a threat to their existence? Heck they would even throw us into cages like how we do with other species.. Survival of the fittest right?

We r headed for some interesting times my friends, very interesting times...

I must admit, I for one can't wait!


Here's What Steve Jobs' Biographer Thinks About The Apple Watch (AAPL)
http://news360.com/article/260535498

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