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Pastimes : Where the GIT's are going -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Augustus Gloop who wrote (124107)11/3/2006 10:13:22 PM
From: sandintoes  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 225578
 
LOL Then you find out your mother is calling you..

What do you do...what do you do???



To: Augustus Gloop who wrote (124107)11/3/2006 10:25:31 PM
From: sandintoes  Respond to of 225578
 
Look at this, a real live "Hal" the super computer from 2001: A Space Odyssey

A Growing Intelligence Around Earth
10.26.2006

Oct. 26, 2006: The Indonesian volcano Talang on the island of Sumatra had been dormant for centuries when, in April 2005, it suddenly rumbled to life. A plume of smoke rose 1000 meters high and nearby villages were covered in ash. Fearing a major eruption, local authorities began evacuating 40,000 people. UN officials, meanwhile, issued a call for help: Volcanologists should begin monitoring Talang at once.

Little did they know, high above Earth, a small satellite was already watching the volcano. No one told it to. EO-1 (short for "Earth Observing 1") noticed the warning signs and started monitoring Talang on its own.

Indeed, by the time many volcanologists were reading their emails from the UN, "EO-1 already had data," says Steve Chien, leader of JPL's Artificial Intelligence Group.

EO-1 is a new breed of satellite that can think for itself. "We programmed it to notice things that change (like the plume of a volcano) and take appropriate action," Chien explains. EO-1 can re-organize its own priorities to study volcanic eruptions, flash-floods, forest fires, disintegrating sea-ice—in short, anything unexpected.

Is this real intelligence? "Absolutely," he says. EO-1 passes the basic test: "If you put the system in a box and look at it from the outside, without knowing how the decisions are made, would you say the system is intelligent?" Chien thinks so.

And now the intelligence is growing. "We're teaching EO-1 to use sensors on other satellites." Examples: Terra and Aqua, two NASA satellites which fly over every part of Earth twice a day. Each has a sensor onboard named MODIS. It's an infrared spectrometer able to sense heat from forest fires and volcanoes—just the sort of thing EO-1 likes to study. "We make MODIS data available to EO-1," says Chien, "so when Terra or Aqua see something interesting, EO-1 can respond."

EO-1 also taps into sensors on Earth's surface, such as "the USGS volcano observatories in Hawaii, Washington and Antarctica." Together, the ground stations and satellites form a web of sensors, or a "sensorweb," with EO-1 at the center, gathering data and taking action. It's a powerful new way to study Earth.

Chien predicts that sensorwebs are going to come in handy on other planets, too. Take Mars, for example: "We have four satellites orbiting Mars and two rovers on the ground. They could work together." Suppose one satellite notices a dust storm brewing. It could direct others to monitor the storm when they fly over the area and alert rovers or astronauts—"hunker down, a storm is coming!"

Right: Artist's concept of a moon rover. [Larger image]

On the Moon, Chien envisions swarms of rovers prospecting the lunar surface—"another good application," he says. What if one rover finds a promising deposit of ore? Others could be called to assist, bringing drills and other specialized tools to the area. With the autonomy of artificial intelligence, these rovers would need little oversight from their human masters.

Yet another example: the Sun. There are more than a half-a-dozen spacecraft 'out there' capable of monitoring solar activity—SOHO, ACE, GOES-12 and 13, Solar-B, TRACE, STEREO and others. Future missions will inflate the numbers even more. "If these spacecraft could be organized as a sensorweb, they could coordinate their actions to study solar storms and provide better warnings to astronauts on the Moon and Mars," he points out.

For now, the intelligence is confined to Earth. The rest of the Solar System awaits.

science.nasa.gov



To: Augustus Gloop who wrote (124107)11/3/2006 10:35:44 PM
From: Honor First  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 225578
 
Just answer like it's a business.
Say:
We have recently changed our menu:

Please listen carefully...
For Sales press 1
For Donations press 2
For Recycling press 3
and so forth

Get to
For all others please stay on the line... and leave them there.
If it's family they will call back with your agreed upon signal..

or

answer the phone as though you are a political survey concern and begin your political questions

We would like to survey you.
For Yes... Press 1
For No... Press 2



To: Augustus Gloop who wrote (124107)11/3/2006 11:15:11 PM
From: Peter Dierks  Respond to of 225578
 
I like this greeting on my machine:

"

hello

HELLO?

thanks for calling..."

People get mad at me when they start talking to the machine as if it were me. It also makes it harder for telemarketers.