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3 items tagged “ai-history”

2024

Apple’s Knowledge Navigator concept video (1987) (via) I learned about this video today while engaged in my irresistible bad habit of arguing about whether or not "agents" means anything useful.

It turns out CEO John Sculley's Apple in 1987 promoted a concept called Knowledge Navigator (incorporating input from Alan Kay) which imagined a future where computers hosted intelligent "agents" that could speak directly to their operators and perform tasks such as research and calendar management.

This video was produced for John Sculley's keynote at the 1987 Educom higher education conference imagining a tablet-style computer with an agent called "Phil".

It's fascinating how close we are getting to this nearly 40 year old concept with the most recent demos from AI labs like OpenAI. Their Introducing GPT-4o video feels very similar in all sorts of ways.

# 22nd October 2024, 4:40 am / apple, youtube, ai, openai, generative-ai, llms, ai-agents, ai-history

Carl Hewitt recently remarked that the question what is an agent? is embarrassing for the agent-based computing community in just the same way that the question what is intelligence? is embarrassing for the mainstream AI community. The problem is that although the term is widely used, by many people working in closely related areas, it defies attempts to produce a single universally accepted definition. This need not necessarily be a problem: after all, if many people are successfully developing interesting and useful applications, then it hardly matters that they do not agree on potentially trivial terminological details. However, there is also the danger that unless the issue is discussed, 'agent' might become a 'noise' term, subject to both abuse and misuse, to the potential confusion of the research community.

Michael Wooldridge, in 1994, Intelligent Agents: Theory and Practice

# 12th October 2024, 12:29 pm / ai, ai-agents, ai-history

There is superstition about creativity, and for that matter, about thinking in every sense, and it's part of the history of the field of artificial intelligence that every time somebody figured out how to make a computer do something - play good checkers, solve simple but relatively informal problems - there was a chorus of critics to say, but that's not thinking.

Pamela McCorduck, in 1979

# 13th September 2024, 7:49 am / ai, ai-history