The HAL 9000
Computer and the Vision of 2001:
A Space Odyssey
 |
|
David G. Stork
|
Tuesday,
February 6, 6:00 p.m.
Moffett Training and Conference Center
(Building 3),
Moffett Federal Airfield, Mountain View, CA, USA
Reception
to follow in
Museum's Visible Storage Exhibit Area (Building 126)
ABSTRACT OF TALK
2001: A Space Odyssey, Stanley
Kubrick and Arthur C. Clarke's 1968 epic film about space
exploration and the evolution of intelligence, was the most
carefully researched and scientifically precise feature film ever
made. Now, in its namesake year, we can compare the film's computer
science "visions" with current technological fact -- in particular
those related to its central character, the HAL 9000 computer, which
could speak, reason, see, play chess, plan and express
emotions.
In some
domains reality has surpassed the vision in the film: computer
chess, computer hardware, and graphics. In numerous others, reality
has fallen far short: computer speech, language, vision,
lip-reading, planning, and common sense. The film missed some trends
entirely: the film showed no laptops or PDAs and HAL as large as a
school bus but in reality computers instead got small. As such, the
film provides a remarkable perspective on the sweep of developments
in the modern era of computer technology.
This
non-technical talk is profusely illustrated with clips from 2001 and
current research and sheds new light on key moments of the film. You
will never see the film the same way again.
BACKGROUND OF SPEAKER
David G. Stork is Chief Scientist at Ricoh Silicon Valley's California Research Center and
Consulting Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering at Stanford
University. His most recent books include HAL's Legacy: 2001's
computer as dream and reality (MIT Press) and Pattern Classification
(2nd ed.) by R. O. Duda, P. E. Hart and D. G. Stork (Wiley). He is
the creator of "2001: HAL's Legacy," a forthcoming television
documentary for PBS television.