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HAL's Legacy: 2001's Computer as Dream and Reality
from: The MIT Press
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Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 791.4372
EAN: 9780262692113
ISBN: 0262692112
Label: The MIT Press
Manufacturer: The MIT Press
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 384
Publication Date: February 06, 1998
Publisher: The MIT Press
Studio: The MIT Press
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Editorial Review: If you loved "2001: A Space Odyssey," you'll be delighted by this book that asks "How realistic was HAL?" Contributions by various scientists include essays on supercomputer design with regard to speech synthesis, common sense reasoning, emotions, lip reading and even playing chess. As the authors explore what is science fantasy and what is technological fact, they also look at how HAL influenced technological development in the past 30 years. The final chapter, called "When HAL Kills, Who's to Blame?" deals with the ethical aspects of building intelligent machines.
I became operational... in Urbana, Illinois, on January 12, 1997. Inspired by HAL's self-proclaimed birth date, HAL's Legacy reflects upon science fiction's most famous computer and explores the relationship between science fantasy and technological fact. The informative, nontechnical chapters written especially for this book describe many of the areas of computer science critical to the design of intelligent machines, discuss whether scientists in the 1960s were accurate about the prospects for advancement in their fields, and look at how HAL has influenced scientific research. Contributions by leading scientists look at the technologies that would be critical if we were, as Arthur Clarke and Stanley Kubrick imagined thirty years ago, to try and build HAL in 1997: supercomputers, fault-tolerance and reliability, planning, artificial intelligence, lipreading, speech recognition and synthesis, commonsense reasoning, the ability to recognize and display emotion, and human-machine interaction. A separate chapter by philosopher Daniel Dennett considers the ethical implications of intelligent machines.
Customer Reviews
Average Rating: 
Rating: - High Noise To Signal Ration
I guess every geek would have watched the movie "2001: The Space Odyssey" when the year 2001 arrived and asked a question what's missing? Why we still don't have anything even close to HAL? This book tries to answer the question by giving you essays written by experts in specific areas of computing. I found some of the chapters getting really boring, especially those tiring to speculate how HAL would have worked instead of reporting current state of affair. The book is not the kind which will make ... Read More
Rating: - HAL is obnoxious, funny and very interesting.
I always enjoyed HAL's obnoxious selfconfidence. His insistence that - No 9000 computer has ever made a mistake or distorted information. That they are foolproof and incapable of error - is funny, absurd, very human, proud and down right crazy. But at the same time intriguing. The book look at the issues and technologies that would be critical if we were to build HAL. And the book let us in on some of HAL's secrets. In the process it just all becomes ... Read More
Rating: - Gradually, HAL is coming....
There are few films that have had the influence of Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey. It is difficult to say how many A.I. researchers were inspired to go into the field by the viewing of the film, but this book is good evidence that research in A.I. has undergone a sort of "public benchmarking" via a comparison with HAL, the arch computer-villan in the movie, and whose name is now ubiquitous in debates on robotics and artificial intelligence. This excellent book is a summary of just how far A.I. ... Read More
Rating: - Oh! This is AI...a must have book
This book is an ART and amazing. You can learn and know what really Artificial Intelligence means and you feel happy, relaxed and enjoyable in reading each chapter. If you don't want to waste time to read lots of technical words to understand AI, this book is the only and best choice. Every chapter will give you concise and clear information, and also is interesting. An excellent book for anyone who is interested in mind, thought, robot, cognition, AI or just ... Read More
Rating: - HAL is based on real research...
I have only one word for this book: COOL! For science-fiction aficionados everywhere, HAL's Legacy is a review, in 1997 when HAL was supposed to be created, the state of the technology (artificial intelligence, natural language processing, speech processing, etc.) from premier Sci-Fi writer Arthur C. Clarke and leading computer scientists in the area of AI (and other areas) like Marvin Minsky. Are we there yet? Is HAL really possible? It includes deep analysis of specific scenes in the movie and tying ... Read More
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