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Comment Father of the Smart Phone here, yeah it's time (Score 1) 14

Father of the Smart Phone - Jim Sager Know how poor Steve Jobs stole the Mac design from rich Xerox.
They never tell you that RICH STEVE JOBS stole the Smart Phone from a poor undergrad... but the story's coming out, and it's why Warren Buffet sold his stock, why everyone's backing away.
I could have sued for about 100 million dollars for the past 20 years, but I didn't want money... When I designed the Smart Phone in 2000, I saw it would lead to the rise of the surveillance state and waited til now for maximum impact.
https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwolfsheadonline.com%2Fbiggest-story-of-the-century-the-smart-phone-design-stolen-by-not-invented-by-apple-google%2F
If Apple could sue 1 billion for caveman tech (round corners), how much does Apple owe me for:
#1 Virtual keyboard
#2 3 button nav
#3 App store
#4 Palm+Cellular
#5 Cloud Computing
#6 Contact list
#7 Advanced Scheduler
#8 The Smart Watch Apple Watch
#9 APPLE VISION PRO IN GOGGLE DISPLAY!
#10 Global Positioning System
#11 QR business Cards
#12 Wireless communications in a handheld device
#13 Fuzzy search settings by typing
#14 Different Sounds for different alerts & Vibro/Visual/Sound Alert combo.
#15 Voice recorder
#16 Air tags
#17 Wire to computer to move files
#18 Wireless
#19 Contextual help system / Adaptive onboarding and custom icon set circle around ?
#20 Spell Check
#21 Copy/paste, undo/redo
#22 Customizable programmable calculators
#23 GUI Principles for Mobile — Hideable zones / Customizable Home screen
#24 Email
#25 Media Casting from Mobile to External Display
#26 Filesystem Navigation in PDA/Smartphone
#27 Smart Spell Checking for Touch Input
#28 Foldable Screen Hardware Design
#29 Different Device size parameters to different users
#30 Ergonomics of Device Dimensions and UI Layout
#31 PC data link cable
And more: Turns out: Around $200 billion dollars.
Rumble: Story of the Century
Wolfshead Article
www.Techaform.com
Most Scammed Inventor
X Thread
Set A: link
Set B: link
Be aware Tim Cook knows Steve Jobs robbed me and refuses to honor me, but plays the Tyrant card. Steve Robs for Tim Crook.
Warren Buffet sold his stock directly in response to me contacting his lawyers once and twice.
The papers are copyrights signed by Carnegie Mellon. They invalidate most of Apple and Google's Smart Phone patents.
When you rally behind Jim Sager (goodnewsjim) you're rallying for a free and open world that says no to Big Brother Apple who turned people into governments and fought vs American free speech.
A choice is to be made by the Shareholders & Tim Crook:
I'm the past genius behind Apple.
I could be the Future of Apple or the End of Apple.
Watch the Video
I'm the Father of the Smart Phone.
I'm the reason Apple was a success in the past.
THIS IS NOT A JOKE!!! YOU CAN VERIFY THE DESIGNS and they're signed by Carnegie Mellon.
I'm getting bigger and bigger press: YouTube
This is good for this forum as you have the brains behind Steve Jobs posting here.
This is good for the Apple Community because I designed all the major features of the original iPhone/SmartWatch/Vision Pro.
No more trash designs.
I'm the man Steve Jobs robbed of over 100+ designs.
I forged a 5 trillion Apple Smart Phone Empire and 3 trillion for Google, not counting 3rd party devs.
I could have sued Apple/Google for tens of millions for decades, but waited til the full on Big Brother state came in...
I'm here to sweep in and save them from going full Orwellian boot stomping.
I'm here to save Apple from lack of creativity in design.
I could be the Future of Apple or the End of Apple.
The choice is up to the Shareholders & Tim Crook who cost his company close to 1 trillion fighting me instead of honoring me.
Watch the video, be impressed, then go to: Techaform
Virtual Keyboard: Link
Smart Phone Birth: Link
App Store: Link
Task Switcher: Link
Apple Watch: Link
Vision Pro / Goggles: Link
Mobile Cloud: Link
Copy/Paste Feature: Link
Scheduler: Link
Voice Recorder: Link
Spell Checker: Link
Contact List: Link
Alert System: Link
Home Screen UI: Link
Email: Link
Casting Tech: Link
CMU Papers: Link
70,000 Hours Experience: Link

Comment Bill Gates Bioterrorist: owner of the FCC/COMCAST (Score -1, Troll) 34

MSNBC->MS stands for Microsoft
.MSNsC lying for the WEF is Bill Gates.
.Google: Wuhan Bill Gates. Gates brags he funded wuhan bioterror labs.
.Think Comcast sucks? Bill Gates owns it as a way of frickin with us as psychological experimentation to see what we'll take. Bonus it's a state sponsored monopoly that local ISPS cannot share the poles and compete with.
. Google: ....Meredith Atwell Baker nbc comcast merger bribes..., Gate Bribes the FCC.
. Bill Gates makes GMO mosquitos.
.Bill Gates makes fake meat which causes cancer.
.Watch Universal Flu Vaccine CSPAN, Bill Gates predicts covid a month before hand and has a vax to sell us ready.
.Bill Gates is doing weather control, Google: Scopex...
.
.
.
.We laughed... Bill Gates name adds up to 666, we ain't laughing now, dude's a fricker...
. Bonus Bill Gates is the big guy bribing officials to cover up Epstein, Buffet just gave him an extra 6 billion. Bill Gates openly lied about Epstein by answering a question with a premeditated answer unrelated to the question at hand and is very defensive... Melinda divorces him due to Epstein/covid-wuhan... Knowing is 1/2 the Battle.

Comment Windmills are worse (Score 0, Troll) 167

Windmills I hear from fellow researchers never break even. Made by Blackrock as a slushfund They take down trees, they spend lots of money building em, then dust destroys the rotational component before they make enough electricity to pay for em. The real winner is nuclear. Nuclear would save us 13,000,000 lives a year from the invisible killer air pollution.

Comment I have a c3po AI from 2002 (Score 1) 65

Yo, Father of the Smart Phone here: https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwolfsheadonline.com%2Fbi... Been a while since I was on Slashdot, invented Kinect, infinite player networking, and solved multicore problems. I think I invented some other major multimillion/billion things, and debunked Asimov's nonsense of chasing his red herrings. I invent so many major inventions, I forget them... Absent minded professorism. I have a C3PO brain just waiting to be sold to market: https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fweb.archive.org%2Fweb%2F20... If you check these links, you'll see I am not making this up... I'm the world's leading research scientist and you probably haven't heard of me.

Comment Re:This is why working for other people is fun/suc (Score 1) 120

I have a friend from Carnegie Mellion University working for a Chinese upstart solar company

Whatever you have to say against China, their low wages mean they might be able to crack the cost/efficiency ratio if they make it cost really cheap.

And all sorts of good things happen when you do this... Anyone with any visionary blood in them knows what this means. Solar panels everywhere, energy on the cheap. Transportation doesn't cost gas money... Water and food is cheaper... etc etc...

You don't got to agree with me here, but an environmentalist says to conserve energy, but maybe if you cause more demand we can move into an era where we have energy surplus sooner.

Comment Re:I say it all the time, Vision to 3d world = AI (Score 1) 78

Interesting. I never heard of SHRDLU before, but I have heard of Cyc wikipedia said came after. From what I've heard of CYC, CYC only takes words in relation to each other, but does not have a physics space in which to have "imagination space". Because of this, CYC doesn't sound like it should ever achieve AI.

However SHRDLU does sound promising. I would think if they enhanced the physics and vocabulary on SHRDLU, it could become "imagination space" for future AI. I knew this part could be created independently of "vision recognition" part, but I've felt that it'd be better if the vision recognition was done first. After all, if you're databasing objects on their real world dimensions, they'd work better in the physics imagination space because you have the exact dimensions and contours of the object. I mean, if you're gonna sit there and database in many different objects based on their geometry, might as well have it done automatically. Of course I wasn't thinking to start small with basic objects in a solid physics engine.

Interestingly enough: I think this is an area which advances could be made now. I wouldn't exactly start with SHRDLU because it is early 1970s technology. I'd shop around for good physics engines first. I have no money to buy physics engines, so I'd personally have to go with the best free one... So maybe I'm incapable of doing this research due to lack of funding. Anyway, someone else can do it: Find a good physics engine, then start databasing "Nouns" "Adjectives" "Verbs" and "Adverbs" maybe looking at initial SHRDLU code just for advice. The thing that makes me interested now is that I realize that many objects are not exactly the same objects: Trees are trees, but even the same variety of tree has different growth stages and limb orientations. So for generalization terms, it could be good to look at things like "Spheres" "Cubes" "Pyramids" and so on.

Thank you for putting me onto this. I think it is something that could be solved now with enough time and energy. The reason I put it off was because I made the assumption that the 3d digitizer could double as an "Object databaser" for inputting objects into the database. I originally didn't want to teach the AI about a world of objects that bare no relation to exact real world objects, but it is fine to have approximate objects and approximate physics to start with.

Comment Re:I say it all the time, Vision to 3d world = AI (Score 1) 78

Easier might be the wrong word, maybe more cerebral. To do natural language interpretation, I would envision you start with a "dictionary database" full of objects. These objects would be nouns, and then you could program in properties on them known as adjectives. Without a "dictionary database" of known objects, I could not figure out how to code natural language. So you're right that natural language is more difficult than digitizing things because digitized things are a component of natural language. I just think if I have a database of digitized objects that writing a natural language on these things might be easier than the digitization in itself, but not noticeably easier.

So you start with nouns "dictionary objects", then you add adjectives by changing nouns properties. This is hugely time consuming, and the exercise is mostly done to figure out a best practice while you're doing it. But say you add all adjectives to some nouns. You then create an imagination space, and describe the nouns in action verbs Then you describe the verbs more adverbs. It is a huuuuuge undertaking, but the cool part is that you can work on subsets of the language with a small environment. Just start with a small room with a ball in it, and keep adding more nouns, adjectives, verbs and adverbs. In the controlled environment, the Camera/Natural Language should understand everything that is there before you expose it out into the wide open real world.

Comment Re:The real reason (Score 1, Interesting) 78

If you want to check out my webpage on AI from 2002, you can do so here . There is a lot of information there that isn't as concise as I have here. AI is easy to understand conceptually when you think of it as simply a computer program taking in input from the outside world, and interacting with it. The AI I'm talking about has little to no machine learning involved. It is all hard coded AI for robots to take commands and follow them. It really isn't as hard as everyone thinks. I think the trap people fall into is,"I don't know how the brain works, so we can't figure out AI." or "AI is one of those things you need to write a program that programs itself", but if you just approach the problem of,"How do I make a robot go pick up a ball I threw?" you can see that is something that is codable with certain other understandable technologies.

We don't know how to digitize a world and put it into a 3d world yet. But you can see this is a problem that will be solved someday.
We don't know how to program a computer with Natural Language(English). But this is a problem that will be solved someday(especially if you have a database of 3d objects available through digitizing).

Artificial Intelligence isn't really as impossible as people think it is. I'd reason that it could be done with a company/government with money in just 7 years of the technology of digitizing things to a 3rd world. But due to inefficiencies in government/for profit companies, it probably won't happen for 20. And I have no idea how far off digitizing things in a 3rd world is off from now to add onto that.

I could go straight to working on Artificial Intelligence myself, and probably research a digitizer myself(no guarantees I could write it), but Artificial Intelligence research doesn't pay the bills.

Comment I say it all the time, Vision to 3d world = AI (Score 1, Insightful) 78

If you have a 3d world, and can identify the objects in the world, then software can navigate its way around the world and do tasks.
I'd reason that wiring up Natural Language when having a large database of objects(nouns) would still be rather difficult, but not as difficult as changing camera feeds into 3d world representation.
Finally you need to build a body for the robot, so it can do things in the world. By understanding Natural Language, anyone can tell a robot what to do in their native tongue. Also translation is more effective because the AI can think about sentences and know which word you mean when the word has two meanings.

Sorry, every time I see these technologies that turn camera images into 3d worlds, I can't help but think about Artificial Intelligence. I'm a pretty good programmer, but that is just one piece of software I didn't want to develop myself. I kinda put off actually making Artificial Intelligence in 2002 until someone makes a nice piece of software that you can walk around buildings and turn them into Quake levels.

And in the process of waiting for this software, I theorized the biggest use of AI might be to teach people. Eventually I realized, you don't actually need AI to teach people with computer, all you need is digitize books, make some videos and do some other tutorial software. So if I ever get enough money to buy rights to books, or enough money to live off of, I'm going to try and see this vision through. You gotta realize 200$ for a laptop is cheaper than thousands of dollars of books, and software can take the place of a teacher, so education is gonna be cheap enough that even people in poor countries will have access to it. The only limiting factor is getting the rights to books, and writing some tutorial software. It is a high cost to do this, but once it is done, the benefits for society are several orders of magnitude greater.

Comment Bravo for pulling this off (Score 2) 301

I remember in the early 2000s going,"If only someone could stream movies and television shows legally, they'd dominate." I told a couple people and a Comcast rep told me that they're rolling out,"On Demand" which as it turns out is moderately effective. I could never get the business model right to figure out how to legally stream movies without the movie makers going,"You can't stream out copies of our work at all." I even thought,"As long as I have one copy of their product per stream, that could be ok, right?" I never thought,"Open up a mail order delivery system, then transition into streaming later." That was the key to get to where they are now.

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