On Wed, Jul 10, 2024, 6:23 PM Quan Tesla <quantes...@gmail.com> wrote:
> In 1996, I contracted to IBM network management outsourcing to help > automate back-office jobs. We automated 2 customer-facing business > processes to IBM world and ISO stabdards, with complete organizational > transformation to BPM level 3, within 8 months. > > Point being, it takes less than you think to capture process-related > knowledge, to replace technical, people workers. > How many bits were encoded in your project? (The compressed size of your source code). How much did it cost? Normal software productivity is 10 lines = 160 bits per day. IBM has 300K employees at $200K revenue each, which comes to $100 per line or $6 per bit. > > > Last, when enabled by quantum processors, this tacit-knowledge-enginering > process becomes possible in near-real time. The bastions of traditional > knowledge-based control is fast nearing an event horizon, to be replaced by > near-total control infrastructure. > Quantum isn't magic. It does not speed up neural networks because they perform time irreversible operations like writing to memory. The brain is not quantum. It's intelligent because it has 600T parameters and 10 petaflops throughput, running on 300M lines of code equivalent in our DNA, which was programmed by an algorithm performing 10^50 transcription operations on 10^37 DNA bases consuming 500 TW of solar power for 3 billion years. ------------------------------------------ Artificial General Intelligence List: AGI Permalink: https://agi.topicbox.com/groups/agi/T59fe5c237460bf34-Mf6d62e01990dbef2b10d7817 Delivery options: https://agi.topicbox.com/groups/agi/subscription