HAL's Legacy: 2001's Computer As Dream and Reality

Front Cover
David G. Stork
MIT Press, 1997 - Computers - 384 pages

How science fiction's most famous computer has influenced the research and design of 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.

 

Contents

An Interview with Marvin Minsky
15
Could We Build HAL? Supercomputer Design
33
Foolproof and incapable of error? Reliable Computing and Fault
53
How HAL Plays Chess
75
Text to Speech Synthesis
101
When Will HAL Understand What We Are Saying? Computer Speech
131
Common Sense and the Mind of HAL
193
How HAL Could See
211
Working with the Machines of the Future
263
Does HAL Cry Digital Tears? Emotions and Computers
279
An Interview with
333
When HAL Kills Whos to Blame? Computer Ethics
351
Contributors
367
Index
377
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