"Well, if you had asked me that a few years ago I might have said "No," because I think that whatever the power of computing was at the time it was fully able to handle any of the ideas that we had at the time. I mean, we were idea short, we weren't hardware short mainly. Now, I'm not so sure because the new idea that's come up, the use of lots and lots of data, well, lots and lots of data requires lots and lots of computing. And so, the more computing, the faster it can go the better. I don't know that that's the bottleneck at the moment. After all if you talk to the Watson people which I haven't, but if you did talk to them and you asked them, "Gee, how could Watson have been better? If you had a computer, this IBM 7000 series or whatever it was, if it were 10 times as fast, 100 times as fast, 100 times as much memory would you have done better?" I think they'd still answer "Well, not necessarily. We would need more ideas about how to program all that.""
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Engineers from the United StatesComputer scientists from the United StatesStanford University faculty
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And do you think the increased power of computing is going to really advance artificial intelligence and robotics at a much faster rate?
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Nils John Nilsson
Nils John Nilsson (February 6, 1933 – April 23, 2019) was an American computer scientist. He was one of the founding researchers in the discipline of artificial intelligence. He was the first Kumagai Professor of Engineering in computer science at Stanford University from 1991 until his retirement. He is particularly known for his contributions to search, planning, knowledge representation, and robotics
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