Published by Brand: MIT Press, 1973
ISBN 10: 0262560135 ISBN 13: 9780262560139
Seller: Ergodebooks, Houston, TX, U.S.A.
Softcover. Condition: Good. New Ed.
Published by Brand: The MIT Press, 2006
ISBN 10: 026261216X ISBN 13: 9780262612166
Seller: Ergodebooks, Houston, TX, U.S.A.
Softcover. Condition: New. How to give working families the tools and opportunities to prosper in the new economy: a call to action for families, business, labor, and government.
Published by Brand: The MIT Press, 2003
ISBN 10: 026251382X ISBN 13: 9780262513821
Seller: Ergodebooks, Houston, TX, U.S.A.
Softcover. Condition: New. Like Mooki, the hero of Spike Lee's film "Do the Right Thing," artificially intelligent systems have a hard time knowing what to do in all circumstances. Classical theories of perfect rationality prescribe the "right thing" for any occasion, but no finite agent can compute their prescriptions fast enough. In Do the Right Thing, the authors argue that a new theoretical foundation for artificial intelligence can be constructed in which rationality is a property of "programs" within a finite architecture, and their behavior over time in the task environment, rather than a property of individual decisions. Do the Right Thing suggests that the rich structure that seems to be exhibited by humans, and ought to be exhibited by AI systems, is a necessary result of the pressure for optimal behavior operating within a system of strictly limited resources. It provides an outline for the design of new intelligent systems and describes theoretical and practical tools for bringing about intelligent behavior in finite machines. The tools are applied to game planning and realtime problem solving, with surprising results. Stuart Russell is Associate Professor of Computer Science at the University of California, Berkeley. This book builds on important philosophical and technical work by his coauthor, the late Eric Wefald.
Published by Brand: MIT Press, 2024
ISBN 10: 0262018179 ISBN 13: 9780262018173
Seller: Ergodebooks, Houston, TX, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Good. 2. Humans did not discover fire--they designed it. Design is not defined by software programs, blueprints, or font choice. When we create new things--technologies, organizations, processes, systems, environments, ways of thinking--we engage in design. With this expansive view of design as their premise, in The Design Way, Harold Nelson and Erik Stolterman make the case for design as its own culture of inquiry and action. They offer not a recipe for design practice or theorizing but a formulation of design culture's fundamental core of ideas. These ideas--which form "the design way"--are applicable to an infinite variety of design domains, from such traditional fields as architecture and graphic design to such nontraditional design areas as organizational, educational, interaction, and health care design. Nelson and Stolterman present design culture in terms of foundations (first principles), fundamentals (core concepts), and metaphysics, and then discuss these issues from both l.