Archive for May, 2009

Book Recommend - Pinball Effect: James Burke

// May 29th, 2009 // No Comments » // Books, Four Stars, Science

Book Cover of Pinball Effect by James Burke

If you have not read any of his work, James Burke is a historian, who mostly writes about the history of science and innovation. He is known for his Connections 1 / 2 / 3 series on BBC. His work is always web-like and built off tangents.

In this book Pinball Effect, he writes about the interconnectedness of the world and how one chance incident triggers another. The style is non-fictional, but he is always telling a story along the way. Think of Umberto Eco coming to your highschool and teaching science class.

This is the fourth book I have read by him, and it is the best in my opinion. James Burke respects no real bounds to speak of, except one: the topic of the first sentence always comes back to finish the chapter. recommended.

World’s Most Advanced Straw

// May 26th, 2009 // No Comments » // BrainStorms, Meta

Not sure why I like this so much, but I do. The world’s most advanced straw. enjoy.

NiemansLand - from 2006-2009

// May 26th, 2009 // No Comments » // Flatulence, Music

Way Back Machine: Some Older Composition-Sketches from 2007, to be used in the film NiemansLand. Cello and computer arrangements mostly. 5′30 has a nice moment that is worth remembering.

Scarlatti at 3am

// May 25th, 2009 // No Comments » // Uncategorized

Ravi and Alwin play at the apt.

// May 19th, 2009 // No Comments » // Music, Random, Three Stars

Here Ravi and I are playing at the apartment. We debated messing around with post, to put in a floating translucent movie screen of Fritz Lang’s Metropolis in the middle, but decided against in the end. It should be edited to start 15 sec. in later and 15 sec, which you can do on youtube, but it appears not on vimeo. thanks.

Ravi and Alwin from Alwinian on Vimeo.

partial dimensionality in number sequences?

// May 16th, 2009 // No Comments » // BrainStorms, Flatulence, Three Stars

Are repeating numbers symptomatic of partial dimensionality?? Like in flatland, when something is at right angles to your dimension, are you unaware of it (or there is no apparent pattern to it?).

light-and-numbers

The path to AI. Comparing Pigs to Computers.

// May 16th, 2009 // No Comments » // BrainStorms, Flatulence, Random, Uncategorized

I’m reading about Mandelbrot right now, which is making me think about a lot about high frequency feedback loops right now. They abound in nature, and no one really wanted to look at them until Mandelbrot came along. He is this kind of anti-clean, anti-ascetic temperment personality which i really enjoy, the more i get to read about his personality, the more i enjoy him.

Reading about Mandelbrot’s ideas, combined with Google’s (and others - download.com for instance) predictive search ability made me think that a feedback loop will be possible, that may eventually lead to an important form of AI. If nothing else, it will generate and interesting conversation between only computers, with no human intervention involved whatsoever. With this algo, in theory can come with ideas. All that is required is the iteration between modules. (perhaps explaining seperation of modules in the human brain).

It seems one of the many properties, humans do have which computers do not, is this sort of non-algorithmic reasoning, that comes partially from a dialectic.

For myself I believe strongly that computers will achieve some form of AI eventually, though people will want to gauge this in a typically monocultural-monospecist way.. Can i talk to this computer at the water cooler??? … no probably not, but i do believe that at least a pig-level intelligence is coming very soon. (don’t laugh).

Both pigs and computers communicate in a very different language than humans, which i think creates a level of uniformity and objectivity.. We often view people who speak a different language in this same sort of light. We wrote in our history textbooks that Columbus discovered America.

In anycase, there is some sort of reasonable comparison between pigs and computers to be made, and pigs are considered one of the most intelligent animals, so that would be quite an impressive feat already.

How I believe it will happens is through the conversation of three modules.
search, predictive text and model building (the most difficult one).

1. picker module chooses a random word from a dictionary, performs a search.

2. a version of google brings up likely results based on vector matching (what google is today already), where car and auto still mean the same thing.

3. those results are fed from the search engine module into the picker module again. The picker module follows a power law distribution in its deviation from the main search results. usually picking the top one, but not always.

4. that result and the preceding (say 5) results are logged, and piped to the modelling module, which attempts to assemble a semantic relationship between these ‘random/monte carlo-ed’ results. A semantic model is stored away and built.

Whether we can do the modelling module (create a theory of mind framework), is debatable, but certainly the first two modules can already be built as an algorithm, and will always generate interesting new and novel semantic combinations. Those semantic combinations form the raw ingredients for creating theory of mind with abstractions of the relationships between identical phenomena.

Despite the book “the emperor’s new mind’, by Roger Penrose, (whom i hold in very high respect btw) who disregards true human thinking as fundamentally unapproachable by computers, by their very nature. I think this path of randomness matched against database-like answers posed by the randomess, in a high iteration feedback loop, will create dialogue that will appear to be human.

Watch out for flying pigs. peace.

Sonata Meriodinal - Ponce - new Canon HV30 test.

// May 13th, 2009 // No Comments » // Music

Manuel Ponce wrote this excellent piece, symphonic in scope. Thought to record it and uploaded last night. Enjoy.

Welcome to the new Alwinian site 2009 and beyond.

// May 3rd, 2009 // No Comments » // Random, Uncategorized

R.I.P. - Old site 2006 -2009.

Hello and welcome to the new Alwinian Site.

You can still access the old site, which I keep here at:
http://www.alwinian.net/alwinian-2006-2009/

alwinian-thumbnail-oldsite-2006-2009

Thanks for reading. - A