It is interesting how his great-great-grandfather George Boole was ahead of his time when his work about Boolean Algebra was build on a basis of a model of how the mind works, which for him was logic. After around 150 years his direct descendant Geoffrey Hinton pursues the goal to understand how the mind works and then goes ahead of his time by revolutionizing Artificial Intelligence. The world did indeed catch up once, but he is still ahead as he keeps pushing the field with new work like Capsule Neural Networks.
@Kevvy Kim Thank you for the explanation ❤☺ But at its core, deep learning is just chained regression. Of course, errors aggregates in different layers. So, a recent paper (neural ordinary differential equations) tried to improve the "fitting" process using infinite layers, a.k.a, using equations instead of discrete layers (like in calculus, from a series of discrete regressions to a continuous measurement). It's pretty just applied math. But personally, I don't think that's how the brain works, although they call it "neural" network. Quantum biology is going on in our brains (or at least in migratory bird's brains, and in plants' photosynthesis process), and even physicist cannot fully explain anything Quantum yet. Until then, I believe we won't be able to build AGI, not without mimicking the quantum process in nature.
Well, he quit Google and warning from AI, the thing he spent his life building. If this was a sci-fi film I wouldn't have believed it, but it is happening in real life
I went for a visit to Carnegie-Mellon University in 1986 and saw him work in his office. I didn't want to disturb him because he was intensely concentrated. He had a name for himself then.
Because now AI is popular topic. Its fashionable word these days. You dont know how much is the innovators in the world. Just dont get attention financial support and maybe dont want to.
Wow, this video about the Canadian genius who created modern AI has aged incredibly well! Even four years later, the impact and significance of Geoffrey Hinton's work in machine learning and neural networks are still being felt and expanded upon by researchers and developers around the world. It's amazing to think how much progress has been made in AI and deep learning since this video was published, and Hinton's contributions continue to be at the forefront of these advancements. Thank you for sharing this insightful and informative video! - ChatGPT
A true scientist! Seeing the empirical evidence in his surroundings thus realizing it's possible. These are the people we don't have enough of and truly inspire me.
lol, yes, but now we are only interested on AI. AI in the words of another genius is only better stats. For me standing is more important - i can sit only 2-5h a week.
I'm only putting my comment here because your name is Lucas. I am a non academic but I attended a special interest group's talk at Melbourne University in the mid 80's where neural nets and parallel programing was discussed. I immediately understood the merits of this approach and thoroughly believed in it thereafter. However, as mentioned in the video, they couldn't make it work. Nevertheless from a philosophical perspective I could see clearly how it 'must' be able to work. Nowadays it is being touted as 'AI' or the means to AI. Whilst I understand what might be accomplished in the field of 'machine learning' I nevertheless seem to be in a very small minority of people who insist that 'artificial intelligence' is fundamentally impossible. Consciousness precedes intelligence. In order to build an 'intelligent' machine you must first build a 'conscious' machine. Neural nets might accomplish 'anything' but they cannot become conscious. Others think they know why machines 'can' achieve consciousness - I think I know why they absolutely can't.
@@MarkLucasProductions it is thoroughly amazing to me that anyone in 80s, let alone 60s, thought they could make "real AI".. the problem could be studied of course but the hardware simply wasn't there yet. and they knew roughly how many neurons were in a human brain. I mean there was never even a chance. did you know IBM built a 512 node supercomputer in 2001 that cost $110M that calculated at around 12 teraflops, the new xbox you can get from local supermarket this year has roughly the same calculation power. and it is still not enough for even a rat brain. the hubris of thinking they had any chance half a century ago.
@messiah yea, there's lots of issues with semantics of the words we use. people argue that intelligence requires intentionality, and that implies will or desire, i.e. feelings. although artificial neural networks can simulate emergent behavior it still boils down to programming and while we keep pushing the boundary of machine learning it never becomes AI, basically if you can explain it it's not AI. 🤷♂️
Sorry but he's British - born, raised and educated in Britain and that's where his career started. You can be proud of the fact that Canada helped him further his research - but you can't entirely claim him! Sorry!
Geoff is the great-great-grandson of George Boole (where "boolean" logic comes from, whose mathematical work is credited with laying the foundation of computers), quite fitting that Hinton is influential & pushing forward a field whose ancestor is fundamental to.
I used to attend lectures in the Carnegie Mellon Computer Science department in 1983-1985. OMG. Jeff shook up the original (symbolic) AI gurus so bad......the fear and hate was palatable. Jeff never seemed to enjoy being hated, but he behaved like he was fearless because he was convinced he was right about neural nets and statistics/math. Always with an amazingly deadpan (British?) sense of humor. The thing that impressed me the most about Jeff at that time was even the very best "traditional AI" students, post grads and facility quietly, and sometimes not so quietly, took his side and helped to fight off the fierce but unconvincing criticism leveled at him at that time. While I could understand why Jeff would flee to Toronto because of the DARPA money thing, I often wondered if he simply tired of the abuse at CMU.
With respect. Citing Dr. Hinton as a Canadian pioneer in AI is likely a fair statement but, such a statement ignores those who came before him. Donald Olding Hebb was born on July 22, 1904 in Chester, Nova Scotia where he lived until his family moved to Dartmouth when he was 16. The term AI was not in use when Dr Hebb became interested in Neural Nets but it is undeniable, his work is foundational to Dr Hinton’s. The source for where Dr. Hebb's foundational thinking was, is difficult to know unless he wrote it down somewhere. Personally my reading suggests statistics. As a human mind scans and evaluates any particular body of data and finds some truth, they have mimicked Hebb's net. Personally I feel the term AI is a misnomer. If something is intelligent, it is intelligent, not artificial! Again, with respect to Dr. Hinton real talent, Canada can be proud of; Ken Bowd Layperson Canada. PS: my logic here is the product of a 1970’s era tv show called “Connections” by James Burke. (Google “connections PBS”).
Too many people confuse AI with sentience. AI will NEVER be sentient. AI is basically a gigantic library of choices and programmed to respond based on specific observations, in a pre-programmed order.
AI is accelerating and growing at such a remarkable pace. Who would’ve thought that two Canadian cities: Edmonton, AB and Toronto, ON, would end up being the epicentres and hubs for all things related to A.I & Machine Learning.
Not to mention Charles Thomas Bolton of U of T was the first scientist to actually found and identify a blackhole...and U of T aerospace engineers helped Apollo 13 landed back on earth safely.
Yoshua Bengio is also a Canadian Pioneer of AI. He was the supervisor for Ian Goodfellow, one of the top AI researchers in the world working at Google right now.
According to Jared who works at Porter Hospital in Littleton, CO they can hardwire into any ones brain to upload and download data 24/7. Jared works at Porter as a sleep specialist. These sleep studies are conducted on hotel rooms to make the experience comfortable and conducive to extracting data from patients who have sleep apnea and other sleeping disorders. If you want to take classes and graduate from a University with a PHD or doctorate you can. While you sleep your brain can be uploaded with all kinds of data and you can broaden your knowledge while you sleep. I have already designed alnd have several inventions and ideas that have been copyrighted. Look for news about these new technologies in the not to distant future.
@5:33 So, why did Geoff Hinton build a self-driving military vehicle? _FACEPALM!_ Oh wait, that's Dean Pomerleau's ALVINN project at Carnegie Mellon University in 1989. I guess that had nothing to do with whether Hinton took military money or not, after all.
His uncle was an renowned economist, his father was entomologist, Mt Everest is named after one of his relative in 1800s, his grandfather was Mathematician who laid foundation for comp sci. .... Guess apple doesn’t fall far from the tree after all.
@Snow 123 i see that you got the reference. UNESCO World Heritage Site where Books were burned for close to 3 months along with the Monks. Considered a Great Loss of Knowledge.
character recognition was in the late 60's approximately, when postal services purchased from japan the zipcode recognizer thats already recognised the handwritten digits..
British-Canadian, born in the UK, educated in the UK and speaks with a British accent yet moved to Canada to work and live. It's wrong to say that he is Canadian when he clearly isn't.
Hinton went from perceptron, to deep convolutional networks, to capsule networks, but he will end up with a network based on Graph Theory. W.T. Tutte is the little known genius - (another British transplant who found a home for research in Canada). Math grads from Waterloo know W.T. Tutte. He broke the Lorenz cipher to help win WWII. Alan Turing is a shadow compared to the towering intellect of W.T. Tutte.
It was Yann LeCunn developed convolutional neural networks but Hinton's work on deep multi-layer perceptron help laid the foundation for ConvNets to work.
He didn't invent A.I. he was part of its advancements. Hinton research began in 1972. Look up Shakey robot 🤖 it was the first A.I. mobile robot and it retired in 1972 when Hinton began. Check your facts people 💯
The worst part is people like him are ridiculed first, when they need the most support. That's the price they end up paying for being smarter than others
Very cool, but I’d love to hear the guy’s views on how we’re going to cope with having advanced AI among us. He clearly must have given it a lot of thought!
He has a new interview with CBS released just a few weeks ago. It’s the best interview I’ve heard him give, and he discusses many of the things you’d like to hear; worth checking out!
I’m waiting until they ask AI the ultimate question. How should humans live life that is truly fulfilling and the answer AI gives will be completely against our ego. Back to reality blending harmoniously with nature. I can’t wait.
Many years ago, I watched a TV programme where Geoff Hinton 'energetically ' debated John (Chinese Room) Searle over Artificial Intelligence. Very entertaining.
You get yourself an exoskeleton, they are developed for people who work standing so they can stay standing but put the weight onto the exoskeleton instead of their own bones. ✌️ 💙
Hey that was University of Toronto downtown St George campus Convocation Hall he was walking by. Recently i learned Hinton been teaching AI there. No wonder my friend who was a CSC PhD student told me back in the late 1980 they were teaching neural network at University of Toronto. Hinton probably helps U ot T to be ranked 16 on Newsweek's top international universities ranking in recent decade.
He didn't perfect anything. He started the recent deep learning boom. Current models are not perfect but it is being perfected by many researchers around the world.
@@purefatdude2 I know. What I'm saying is that there are people before him who conceptualized the foundations of artificial intelligence. Your comment is irrelevant in this context.
@@anaycontractor5216 'modern' AI. Nobody says he is the father of AI. Foundations of AI is not the same as modern AI. So what you said is true but it is irrelevant in our discussion.
Ashlee: Hi! This is Ashlee from Bloomberg. I was wondering if we could sit and talk for a few minutes for an interview. Geoff: No. *long pause* We cannot sit.
1:36 He mastered Python from quite an early age.
Vens8 lmao nice pun
what a real pyhton!. lol
haahaha funny
okaay mate
ahahahaha
Me: "my leg hurts, I've been standing for 2 hours"
G. Hinton: "Excuse me?"
Everyday is leg day. I'm surprised he doesn't have an upright seat of some kind.
Why not use a swing,
It is interesting how his great-great-grandfather George Boole was ahead of his time when his work about Boolean Algebra was build on a basis of a model of how the mind works, which for him was logic. After around 150 years his direct descendant Geoffrey Hinton pursues the goal to understand how the mind works and then goes ahead of his time by revolutionizing Artificial Intelligence. The world did indeed catch up once, but he is still ahead as he keeps pushing the field with new work like Capsule Neural Networks.
ya learn something new everyday
@Kevvy Kim Could you elaborate? Any news/paper on the first school of thought (a.k.a the math/medical side)? Is it perhaps Neuro Processing Chip?
@Kevvy Kim Thank you for the explanation ❤☺ But at its core, deep learning is just chained regression. Of course, errors aggregates in different layers. So, a recent paper (neural ordinary differential equations) tried to improve the "fitting" process using infinite layers, a.k.a, using equations instead of discrete layers (like in calculus, from a series of discrete regressions to a continuous measurement).
It's pretty just applied math. But personally, I don't think that's how the brain works, although they call it "neural" network. Quantum biology is going on in our brains (or at least in migratory bird's brains, and in plants' photosynthesis process), and even physicist cannot fully explain anything Quantum yet. Until then, I believe we won't be able to build AGI, not without mimicking the quantum process in nature.
@@aifan6148 I agree. We're not close to building AGI yet. Thank you for mentioning that paper. Sounds like an interesting read. I'll take a look.
Yeah, Mr Bool was a big Itchio ahead of its time
I’m happy he’s alive to know he was right all along and computers caught up to his vision.
Me too
Love it
Well, he quit Google and warning from AI, the thing he spent his life building. If this was a sci-fi film I wouldn't have believed it, but it is happening in real life
Y que este vivo para alertarnos sobre lo que viene......
@@honestcommenter8424 isn't that sad?
wow he worked for 20 years before the mainstream media recognized the value of his work
Because mainstream people are idiots.
I went for a visit to Carnegie-Mellon University in 1986 and saw him work in his office. I didn't want to disturb him because he was intensely concentrated. He had a name for himself then.
Yeah, now everybody's like "oh I've been using a standing desk for months" whereas they forget about the true visionnaire here
@@edism *educated idiots, the worst kind of idiots
Because now AI is popular topic. Its fashionable word these days. You dont know how much is the innovators in the world. Just dont get attention financial support and maybe dont want to.
"Limited by technology of my time "
- Howard Stark
He is from future
« Limited by the collective consciousness of my time » - Anonymous
He should have proceeded to work on technology
Wow, this video about the Canadian genius who created modern AI has aged incredibly well! Even four years later, the impact and significance of Geoffrey Hinton's work in machine learning and neural networks are still being felt and expanded upon by researchers and developers around the world. It's amazing to think how much progress has been made in AI and deep learning since this video was published, and Hinton's contributions continue to be at the forefront of these advancements. Thank you for sharing this insightful and informative video!
- ChatGPT
I love you, AI 😻😻😻
He has regretted making it now
British * not Canadian
That is the benefit of being a historian. It only changes slowly, you are always working with hindsight and you always get the last say.
ChatGPT sucks
He definitely deserved the Turing Award for his invaluable contribution to the field of Artificial Intelligence and Computer Science..
He has one
@@pranjaltiwari1663 I know but thanks for the reply...
A true scientist! Seeing the empirical evidence in his surroundings thus realizing it's possible. These are the people we don't have enough of and truly inspire me.
not only he invented AI, he was the pioneer of standing desks.
Lol
That is how it done on board ship, it has been done like that for a long time.
Victor Hugo always wrote standing up at a desk he made specially for it.
He even invented standing... amazing
lol, yes, but now we are only interested on AI. AI in the words of another genius is only better stats.
For me standing is more important - i can sit only 2-5h a week.
gold
Lol
What an amazing person. Not just before his time, but still being alive when the Dream is Realized.
Then figuring out he did the wrong thing
"Sometimes it takes years to become an overnight success"
I'm only putting my comment here because your name is Lucas. I am a non academic but I attended a special interest group's talk at Melbourne University in the mid 80's where neural nets and parallel programing was discussed. I immediately understood the merits of this approach and thoroughly believed in it thereafter. However, as mentioned in the video, they couldn't make it work. Nevertheless from a philosophical perspective I could see clearly how it 'must' be able to work. Nowadays it is being touted as 'AI' or the means to AI. Whilst I understand what might be accomplished in the field of 'machine learning' I nevertheless seem to be in a very small minority of people who insist that 'artificial intelligence' is fundamentally impossible. Consciousness precedes intelligence. In order to build an 'intelligent' machine you must first build a 'conscious' machine. Neural nets might accomplish 'anything' but they cannot become conscious. Others think they know why machines 'can' achieve consciousness - I think I know why they absolutely can't.
@@MarkLucasProductions it is thoroughly amazing to me that anyone in 80s, let alone 60s, thought they could make "real AI".. the problem could be studied of course but the hardware simply wasn't there yet. and they knew roughly how many neurons were in a human brain. I mean there was never even a chance. did you know IBM built a 512 node supercomputer in 2001 that cost $110M that calculated at around 12 teraflops, the new xbox you can get from local supermarket this year has roughly the same calculation power. and it is still not enough for even a rat brain. the hubris of thinking they had any chance half a century ago.
@messiah yea, there's lots of issues with semantics of the words we use. people argue that intelligence requires intentionality, and that implies will or desire, i.e. feelings.
although artificial neural networks can simulate emergent behavior it still boils down to programming and while we keep pushing the boundary of machine learning it never becomes AI, basically if you can explain it it's not AI. 🤷♂️
oc right here
Laugh's tiktok.
I am serious.
I had an honour to hear his talk once. Absolutely genius
Deserves a standing ovation.
I'm From Canada toronto, everyone from canada 🍁 thumbs up , feeling proud
@08680868 Yeah but then there's Beiber.
I'm from Quebec but I also feel a lot Canadian not just a New France colonist.. :)
Sorry but he's British - born, raised and educated in Britain and that's where his career started. You can be proud of the fact that Canada helped him further his research - but you can't entirely claim him! Sorry!
Now Canada has a lot of Muslims and SJWs
I chuckled when he said he went to a civilized town. Makes me proud to be Canadian. :-)
Geoff is the great-great-grandson of George Boole (where "boolean" logic comes from, whose mathematical work is credited with laying the foundation of computers), quite fitting that Hinton is influential & pushing forward a field whose ancestor is fundamental to.
I used to attend lectures in the Carnegie Mellon Computer Science department in 1983-1985. OMG. Jeff shook up the original (symbolic) AI gurus so bad......the fear and hate was palatable. Jeff never seemed to enjoy being hated, but he behaved like he was fearless because he was convinced he was right about neural nets and statistics/math. Always with an amazingly deadpan (British?) sense of humor. The thing that impressed me the most about Jeff at that time was even the very best "traditional AI" students, post grads and facility quietly, and sometimes not so quietly, took his side and helped to fight off the fierce but unconvincing criticism leveled at him at that time. While I could understand why Jeff would flee to Toronto because of the DARPA money thing, I often wondered if he simply tired of the abuse at CMU.
It's Geoff not Jeff. :-)
@@jwingit Well, they are pronounced the same, so the spelling is up to the individual I would think.
"if you want to really understand something like the brain you have to build it first" EXACTLY how I look at it!
Feynman said it best." Science is the belief in the ignorance of experts"
One man sticks to his beliefs.
So amazing!!! He seems so humble and down to earth..
With respect.
Citing Dr. Hinton as a Canadian pioneer in AI is likely a fair statement but, such a statement ignores those who came before him.
Donald Olding Hebb was born on July 22, 1904 in Chester, Nova Scotia where he lived until his family moved to Dartmouth when he was 16. The term AI was not in use when Dr Hebb became interested in Neural Nets but it is undeniable, his work is foundational to Dr Hinton’s.
The source for where Dr. Hebb's foundational thinking was, is difficult to know unless he wrote it down somewhere. Personally my reading suggests statistics. As a human mind scans and evaluates any particular body of data and finds some truth, they have mimicked Hebb's net.
Personally I feel the term AI is a misnomer. If something is intelligent, it is intelligent, not artificial!
Again, with respect to Dr. Hinton real talent, Canada can be proud of;
Ken Bowd Layperson Canada.
PS: my logic here is the product of a 1970’s era tv show called “Connections” by James Burke. (Google “connections PBS”).
Geniuses are solving our problems for us. we appreciate them for their great job
Think challenge & solution, delete problem and all negative thoughts and words.
Actually, Geoffrey Hinton was born in the UK and studied for his first degree in the UK. His family are famous British engineers and mathematicians...
Studied at Cambridge born in London. 👍
Everybody else was wrong .. Respect !!
Too many people confuse AI with sentience. AI will NEVER be sentient. AI is basically a gigantic library of choices and programmed to respond based on specific observations, in a pre-programmed order.
Glad to see someone standing up for what they believe in.
Literally and figuratively🙂
"You just overfit and then regularize the hell out of it" (or whatever the precise phrase is) - absolutely one of those pearls
😂 😂 😂 😂
So cool. I have gotten into programming neural nets and i'm Canadian. I didn't even know that this happened in my country!
Amazing! Highly motivational! But you can stand in a bus too!
It's probably more like the stress on his joints is unbearable for him so the movement of the bus would be too much.
legend
Respect him, He did not want to work for the Mafia.
AI is accelerating and growing at such a remarkable pace. Who would’ve thought that two Canadian cities: Edmonton, AB and Toronto, ON, would end up being the epicentres and hubs for all things related to A.I & Machine Learning.
I wanted to leave the city but not anymore after learning this haha.
not me
Not to mention Charles Thomas Bolton of U of T was the first scientist to actually found and identify a blackhole...and U of T aerospace engineers helped Apollo 13 landed back on earth safely.
Yoshua Bengio is also a Canadian Pioneer of AI. He was the supervisor for Ian Goodfellow, one of the top AI researchers in the world working at Google right now.
According to Jared who works at Porter Hospital in Littleton, CO they can hardwire into any ones brain to upload and download data 24/7. Jared works at Porter as a sleep specialist. These sleep studies are conducted on hotel rooms to make the experience comfortable and conducive to extracting data from patients who have sleep apnea and other sleeping disorders. If you want to take classes and graduate from a University with a PHD or doctorate you can. While you sleep your brain can be uploaded with all kinds of data and you can broaden your knowledge while you sleep. I have already designed alnd have several inventions and ideas that have been copyrighted. Look for news about these new technologies in the not to distant future.
"I didnt want to take military money" - next moment a military car is self-driving
It's probably footage from the wrong vehicle.
I was about to make the same comment.
@5:33 So, why did Geoff Hinton build a self-driving military vehicle? _FACEPALM!_ Oh wait, that's Dean Pomerleau's ALVINN project at Carnegie Mellon University in 1989. I guess that had nothing to do with whether Hinton took military money or not, after all.
@@theodorewinston3891 exactly bro
His research paved the way for the driverless car, it doesnt say he built the car.
His uncle was an renowned economist, his father was entomologist, Mt Everest is named after one of his relative in 1800s, his grandfather was Mathematician who laid foundation for comp sci. .... Guess apple doesn’t fall far from the tree after all.
you forgot that he is British and not Canadian
I remember learning the computer programming language, Turing, at the University of Toronto, sweet memories!
Me too.
I love it when the music gets louder, fast-paced and drowns out the people being interviewed. It's how I learn
Excelent, more of this kind of videos please!
Imagine the monks who kept alive the tiny flame of knowledge through the dark centuries by storing and copying books
Imagine the monks that burned along the Libraries.......??????
@Snow 123 i see that you got the reference. UNESCO World Heritage Site where Books were burned for close to 3 months along with the Monks. Considered a Great Loss of Knowledge.
Watching this after he resigned from Google
character recognition was in the late 60's approximately, when postal services purchased from japan the zipcode recognizer
thats already recognised the handwritten digits..
Wow never thought I'd say this ,but SOMEONE PLEASE GET THIS MAN A HOVERBOARD!
Who need be FAT?
How satisfying is it for this interviewer to look back at this piece now in 2023?
There is no mention of H. Christopher Longuet-Higgins, under whom Jeff did his PhD, first at Edinborough and then Sussex University. Why not?
Sir wasn't wrong he was just early ♥️
This man lot of sense of humour
I Love that
British-Canadian, born in the UK, educated in the UK and speaks with a British accent yet moved to Canada to work and live. It's wrong to say that he is Canadian when he clearly isn't.
Thank you so much RUclips for recommending me this ❤️
Also thank you for making this video 💕
what a guy! self-belief and never doubting the convictions he had to keep going! amazing
Interesting. Great to see UofT and Toronto in video. You located Buffalo at wrong spot on map, however. It's on Lake Erie, not Lake Ontario.
David L shoutout to the six
This documentary is awesome. As a cognitive psychology and computer science student this man is an inspiration
Hinton went from perceptron, to deep convolutional networks, to capsule networks, but he will end up with a network based on Graph Theory. W.T. Tutte is the little known genius - (another British transplant who found a home for research in Canada). Math grads from Waterloo know W.T. Tutte. He broke the Lorenz cipher to help win WWII. Alan Turing is a shadow compared to the towering intellect of W.T. Tutte.
really I feel so dumb and a lot of appreciation for those genius at the same time
It was Yann LeCunn developed convolutional neural networks but Hinton's work on deep multi-layer perceptron help laid the foundation for ConvNets to work.
"There was just one problem. It didn't work very well."
He didn't invent A.I. he was part of its advancements. Hinton research began in 1972. Look up Shakey robot 🤖 it was the first A.I. mobile robot and it retired in 1972 when Hinton began.
Check your facts people 💯
Andrew Ng was born in and spent his early years in Britain as well.
Every signal has a different heat, that's the key to self learning over time it learns these temperatures and remembers them
The worst part is people like him are ridiculed first, when they need the most support. That's the price they end up paying for being smarter than others
That's why he's called godfather of AI🤟
Perhaps he could become a comedian, everyone likes them. The trick is not to make them aware the jokes are about them.
We sacrificed children for technology and we ended up with more children than ever before.
Very cool, but I’d love to hear the guy’s views on how we’re going to cope with having advanced AI among us. He clearly must have given it a lot of thought!
He has a new interview with CBS released just a few weeks ago. It’s the best interview I’ve heard him give, and he discusses many of the things you’d like to hear; worth checking out!
AI may be complex in the Anglo linear world, in the Non Anglo linear world it is not.
I’m waiting until they ask AI the ultimate question. How should humans live life that is truly fulfilling and the answer AI gives will be completely against our ego. Back to reality blending harmoniously with nature. I can’t wait.
Yep, and then wait for the stunning hubris of some Dunning-Kruger geek to write some 'corrective' code for that 'mistake'..... :o/
"Something no One, and no Computer could ever have predicted."- Last Line of this video
Many years ago, I watched a TV programme where Geoff Hinton 'energetically ' debated John (Chinese Room) Searle over Artificial Intelligence. Very entertaining.
This guy is awesome!
Excellent approach to interview this great Man.
Thank you and best regards.
Wow in very 1980s there were self driving vehicles!!
It's not surprising, he just experienced life that many top genius lived.
Yep, to be misunderstood for their entire lives, like Galileo and Tesla, except the world advanced so fast that he saw his predictions come true
You get yourself an exoskeleton, they are developed for people who work standing so they can stay standing but put the weight onto the exoskeleton instead of their own bones. ✌️ 💙
They did not have them back in the day and just kept walking and standing. He also so could have used a hoverboard for walking?
University of Toronto deserves more recognition, no one outside of Canada knows about their contributions
I live in usa and i know...U T was ranked top 16 in Newsweek world university ranking several years ago....not sure what it its ranking is this year
I think His motivation is to get in a self driving car while having a sleep so he didn't have to sit and drive the car
:D best comment!
Have a bath in a self driving car, or self flying.
Because of the internet and the abundance of data.....interesting how someone is able to gather everyones data and use it for their own interests.....
I'm taking a neural network class from this OG through Coursera.
Data is also key. Learning comes from accumulation of useful data.
Who build the brain? I am amazed at the design of the brain.
So that's why sir Geoffrey Hinton along with yann lacun and Yoshua Benigo get Turing Award 2019
Since this man is alive we know that sending someone from the future to stop him didn’t work out. The machines have won the war.
There is a possibility that humanity will end due to this man in the future. I wonder what he would answer to that
Standing ovation
Fed up of USA and went to Toronto 'the civilzed town '👍😂
Alexey Ivakhnenko is the true father of deep learning
great video from Bloomberg :D !!
where is part 2 ? :P
What an incredible and modest man.
"sort of relief that people finally came to their senses" , I wish kids playing fortnite saw this and get inspired
Hey that was University of Toronto downtown St George campus Convocation Hall he was walking by. Recently i learned Hinton been teaching AI there. No wonder my friend who was a CSC PhD student told me back in the late 1980 they were teaching neural network at University of Toronto. Hinton probably helps U ot T to be ranked 16 on Newsweek's top international universities ranking in recent decade.
This aged well
He is indeed inspiring and he has impacted the world
A genius bu, though, he did not create Modern AI, he perfected it.
He didn't perfect anything. He started the recent deep learning boom. Current models are not perfect but it is being perfected by many researchers around the world.
Herbert Simon actually created the frameworks for modern AI by integrating decision-making into his 'thinking machine' using Fortran
there is nothing modern about Fortran
@@purefatdude2 I know. What I'm saying is that there are people before him who conceptualized the foundations of artificial intelligence. Your comment is irrelevant in this context.
@@anaycontractor5216 'modern' AI. Nobody says he is the father of AI. Foundations of AI is not the same as modern AI. So what you said is true but it is irrelevant in our discussion.
Awesome!
Thanks for changing my life Geoff.
Ashlee: Hi! This is Ashlee from Bloomberg. I was wondering if we could sit and talk for a few minutes for an interview.
Geoff: No.
*long pause*
We cannot sit.
Give this man a medal.
So this guy created neural network niiiiice love yout invention use it a lot
Time for an update
The godfather, the magician.
Went into this video thinking I'd learn something I didn't already know. Then I discovered that geoff Hinton was the genius in discussion.
The OG
Mean over Genius?
Operation Grandpa?
-*Old Gangster*_
He is so admirable in character.
Truly inspirational!
Creation under creations, incredible
The Billion dollar question here is: What kind of shoes does he wear?!
Probably Allbirds