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Genius Makers: The Mavericks Who Brought AI to Google, Facebook, and the World

door Cade Metz

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"New York Times Silicon Valley beat reporter Cade Metz has an insider's perspective on the greatest tech story of our time--a story that no one else has been in a position to tell. What does it mean to be smart? To be human? What do we really want from life and the intelligence we have, or might create? With deep and exclusive reporting, across hundreds of interviews, New York Times Silicon Valley journalist Cade Metz brings you into the rooms where these questions are being answered. Where an extraordinarily powerful new artificial intelligence has been built into our biggest companies, our social discourse, and our daily lives, with few of us even noticing. Long dismissed as a technology of the distant future, artificial intelligence was a project consigned to the fringes of the scientific community. Then two researchers changed everything. One was a sixty-four-year-old computer science professor who didn't drive and didn't fly because he could no longer sit down--but still made his way across North America for the moment that would define a new age of technology. The other was a thirty-six-year-old neuroscientist and chess prodigy who laid claim to being the greatest game player of all time before vowing to build a machine that could do anything the human brain could do. They took two very different paths to that lofty goal, and they disagreed on how quickly it would arrive. But both were soon drawn into the heart of the tech industry. Their ideas drove a new kind of arms race, spanning Google, Microsoft, Facebook, and OpenAI, a new lab founded by Silicon Valley kingpin Elon Musk. But some believed that China would beat them all to the finish line. Genius Makers dramatically presents the fierce conflict between national interests, shareholder value, the pursuit of scientific knowledge, and the very human concerns about privacy, security, bias, and prejudice. Like a great Victorian novel, this world of eccentric, brilliant, often unimaginably yet suddenly wealthy characters draws you into the most profound moral questions we can ask. And like a great mystery, it presents the story and facts that lead to a core, vital question: How far will we let it go?"--… (meer)
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AI is such a juggernaut today that it's hard to remember how little respect and attention it got in the 1980s and 1990s among computer scientists generally. I began my career in earnest then, and no one I knew in academia or industry was working in the field. After some signal failures to deliver in the 1970s, the entire field fell into disrepute.

Metz does an exceptional job of chronicling the research that changed all that, and especially the key people who stubbornly stayed focused on the work. He correctly highlights the key technical contributors as well -- advent of huge amounts of data, enormous distributed storage and compute capacity, the happy accident of GPUs designed for rendering video games working amazingly well on the math required by machine learning. It's all written in a really accessible way. He explains what convolutional neural networks are in a way that an ordinary person can understand.

The book discusses the tension between folks who believe in artificial general intelligence and those who think that accomplishment is in the distant future. The people debating that point, and doing the research, talked to Metz, and he uses their words directly to explain the different points of view.

This is an excellent history, taking the field right up to the present day. No doubt there will be plenty of fodder for a sequel, in ten or twenty years! ( )
  mikeolson2000 | Dec 27, 2023 |
Well documented, anecdotal history of the corporate and academic decisions made between 1960-2020 that led to current status of AI ( )
  emmsbookshelf | Jun 12, 2023 |
For me, this was a real page-turner of recent history of technology. You'll have to go elsewhere for details, but it was excellent as a survey of who, what, when, and where. ( )
  Embarquer | Sep 5, 2021 |
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"New York Times Silicon Valley beat reporter Cade Metz has an insider's perspective on the greatest tech story of our time--a story that no one else has been in a position to tell. What does it mean to be smart? To be human? What do we really want from life and the intelligence we have, or might create? With deep and exclusive reporting, across hundreds of interviews, New York Times Silicon Valley journalist Cade Metz brings you into the rooms where these questions are being answered. Where an extraordinarily powerful new artificial intelligence has been built into our biggest companies, our social discourse, and our daily lives, with few of us even noticing. Long dismissed as a technology of the distant future, artificial intelligence was a project consigned to the fringes of the scientific community. Then two researchers changed everything. One was a sixty-four-year-old computer science professor who didn't drive and didn't fly because he could no longer sit down--but still made his way across North America for the moment that would define a new age of technology. The other was a thirty-six-year-old neuroscientist and chess prodigy who laid claim to being the greatest game player of all time before vowing to build a machine that could do anything the human brain could do. They took two very different paths to that lofty goal, and they disagreed on how quickly it would arrive. But both were soon drawn into the heart of the tech industry. Their ideas drove a new kind of arms race, spanning Google, Microsoft, Facebook, and OpenAI, a new lab founded by Silicon Valley kingpin Elon Musk. But some believed that China would beat them all to the finish line. Genius Makers dramatically presents the fierce conflict between national interests, shareholder value, the pursuit of scientific knowledge, and the very human concerns about privacy, security, bias, and prejudice. Like a great Victorian novel, this world of eccentric, brilliant, often unimaginably yet suddenly wealthy characters draws you into the most profound moral questions we can ask. And like a great mystery, it presents the story and facts that lead to a core, vital question: How far will we let it go?"--

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