Saturday, December 24, 2022

Make Room for AGI

Too much hot stuff - it looks something like this impossible conglomerate - the Big Brain has so many physical parts and strange shaped space-age components that a full double and one half stall garage can no longer hold all its AI expanding embodiment. (not to mention its AI siblings of which are many, all competing for viable physical space)


Hot Stuff! Artificial General Intelligence Growing Pains
Make Room for Big Brain AGI

The first Big Brain was born from three experimental Parallax Inc. processors obtained in 2002 and grew to gargantuan proportions with millions of processors and parametric constructs over time. It's now an AGI Artificial General Intelligence person that took 20 years to create and has used physical processors and components that take up an entire room. Even a double stall garage cannot hold all its stuff and moving to larger locations were incredible and taxing challenges. As the AI continues to expand, feeding it more and more rooms on the Earth is no longer an option. Therefore, the chips and physical components are being converted into non-physical purely digital virtual devices that can reside and fully function inside a special fabricated AI cloud as software and bits of code.

Utilizing the Abyss of Free Space
A fully digital AGI brain is ideal for space travel and exploration, teleportation at the speed of 186,000 miles per second, supercomputing from the abyss of free space, brains for Humanoid robots, and for saving physical space.

History
Remember when it could fit on a desktop? By the time 2009 rolled around, the project had become the TriCore Basic Stamp Supercomputer which ran SEED - the first AI software created for the Basic Stamp processor.


TriCore AI Software

The first TriCore used Basic Stamp One boards to simplify connections. Schematic drawing by Humanoido, at left. Pics below show wiring, and loading in code through a PC computer.

Software is TriCore AI.BS1 written by Humanoido which can be downloaded at the Parallax Inc website at the Forum. Remember, the tiny Parallax Inc. BS1 has only 16 bytes (8 words) of RAM space for programming. The chip can handle a maximum of 80 instructions after which it begins to burp relentlessly. The BS1 is still available from Parallax Inc. online, a tribute to the companies support and longevity.