Skip to main content

AI is now 70 years old!


The term that defines a generation of technology, "Artificial Intelligence," has its roots in a proposal written in 1955 for a 2-month 10-man study. It mentioned the following basis: "the conjecture that every aspect of learning or any other feature of intelligence can in principle be so precisely described that a machine can be made to simulate it."

It was made official in the 1956 summer workshop at Dartmouth College. Officially titled the "Dartmouth Summer Research Project on Artificial Intelligence," this event is widely considered the birth of AI as a formal field of study.

The project was the brainchild of John McCarthy, then a young mathematics professor at Dartmouth. He, along with a small group of fellow researchers, proposed the workshop based on a revolutionary premise: "every aspect of learning or any other feature of intelligence can in principle be so precisely described that a machine can be made to simulate it." This conjecture laid the groundwork for decades of research and development in the field.

The 1956 workshop brought together pioneers from various disciplines to explore the possibilities of creating intelligent machines. It was here that the very name "Artificial Intelligence" was coined, giving a name to a concept that would reshape our world. From these humble beginnings, AI has grown into a transformative force, impacting everything from medicine and transportation to communication and entertainment.



Source:


McCarthy, J., Minsky, M. L., Rochester, N., & Shannon, C. E. (1955). A proposal for the Dartmouth summer research project on artificial intelligence. http://jmc.stanford.edu/articles/dartmouth/dartmouth.pdf

Dartmouth College. (n.d.). Artificial Intelligence (AI) Coined at Dartmouth. Retrieved from https://home.dartmouth.edu/about/artificial-intelligence-ai-coined-dartmouth



Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Adding a Footer to the DataGridView component

I have been searching for sites and forums that would give me a any hint on having a footer on the .net DataGridView control. It was frustrating. I found some, but not what I was looking for. I use windows forms. It would have been easier if I was into web. I decided to create one for myself. It's not complete, but it works with me. It needs improvement and I hope that some programmers who might pass through this blog will help me with it :D. Limitations: Cannot set Footer values during design time. Can sometimes hide a row when scrolled to the last item in the grid. What I did was just create a user control that inherits the DataGridView control and add a StatusStrip to act as the footer. public partial class MyDataGridView : DataGridView { public StatusStrip Footer { get { return (StatusStrip)this.Controls["Footer"]; } } private bool _footerVisible; [Browsable(false)] /// /// Sets or Gets the va...

Using Crystal Reports 10 with C#.net and Firebird

C# express doesn't include a report designer or viewer. Reports however, is very much needed when creating a business software. Since C# express doesn't include a report designer, we need to find other means. One is to use a free report such as MyNeoReport. This however may not work under many circumstances. The other alternative would be to use a proven report engine and designer-Crystal Report. Crystal Report has been used by many developers (in our city). However, using a free programming language and IDE, and a free database is very limiting. Not much information can be gathered on the net either (with regards to reporting as of this writing). Here's a way to use Crystal Reports using Firebird database and C# Express as software development IDE: Pre-requisites: C# Express 2005 EMS SQL Manager 2005 for InterBase & Firebird Lite Crystal Reports 10 Create the following database: Name: TestDB1 Tables: TESTTABLE1 Columns:  ID - PK, INTEGER,AUTOINCREMENT DES...

Open a Lenovo 3000 G410 Battery

One of the common problems with laptops is the deteriorating performance of its battery. Laptop batteries are made up of Lithium Ion (Li-ion). I have a laptop that is more than a year old. Last week, its battery went totally dead. I'm still looking for a replacement. I'm very careful in finding one because most cheap alternatives are poor in performance (with only 45 mins up time compared to the original 3-4 hours). Some are overly priced. I now have a prospect seller and will be purchasing after this post. Well, to continue, out of my curiosity, I opened the battery. The laptop is a Lenovo 3000 G410. Before my exploration, I took the specifications of the battery. It turned out that it's manufactured by SANYO. Here are the specifications: Battery name: PABAS024 Unique ID: 3658QSANYO PABAS024 Chemistry: LION I really don't have any knowledge about the hardware. All I know is that it can be charged and discharged. Despite my limited knowledge, I still opened it up ...