Kurzweil: 'Exponential' change ahead for games, people

SAN FRANCISCO--Despite the title of the keynote speech at the Game Developers Conference here--"The Next 20 Years of Gaming"--games played only a very small part in the presentation.

Delivered by inventor and futurist Ray Kurzweil, the keynote address--the second at GDC--centered on Moore's Law, which describes the exponential growth of computing capabilities for cutting-edge hardware.

As chips are progressively able to perform more calculations for less money, and in a package that's continually shrinking, Kurzweil told the GDC audience to look for the price-to-performance ratio of computers to improve a billionfold in the next 25 years. The devices will eventually become small enough, Kurzweil said, that scientists can create fake blood cell-size computers to perform the same functions of natural blood cells.

"But I'm getting a little ahead of myself," the futurist joked.

Modern electronics are so powerful, Kurzweil said, that other fields that rely on them will be subject to advancements at the same pace as the chips that power them. With hardware that powerful, the limiting factor on what can be done with it becomes the software.

Ray Kurtzweil
Photo courtesy of the Game Developers Conference
Ray Kurzweil speaks at GDC.

"You can't ignore the exponential projections," Kurzweil said. "If you're programming a game or any type of information-based technology two or three years from now, the world's going to be completely different."

One of Kurzweil's biggest successes as an inventor was a 1979 print-to-speech reading device that was about the size of a washing machine and would "read" text on paper for the visually impaired. Given the advance of technology, Kurzweil knew that the technology would become smaller and more powerful, eventually allowing for a handheld print-to-speech reading machine that blind people could carry with them to read newspapers, menus, street signs, or anything else they pointed at.

In 2002, he estimated that the necessary hardware for the handheld unit would be ready in mid-2006. He also estimated that it would take four years to write the complex software that could identify various fonts and cursive writing from different angles and in all the conditions such a handheld would be used.

Kurzweil began working on the software for the device in 2002, even though he didn't think it would be feasible for another four years. He eventually met his projection in the summer of 2006 with a portable unit he admitted was cumbersome. Less than two years after that model was produced, Kurzweil now has the entire thing working on a standard-size, feature-packed cell phone. He pulled out a prototype and had it read a passage about advancing artificial intelligence that impressed the crowd, and drew a round of hollers and applause.

Touching on the topic of the convention, Kurzweil said programmers should be developing ahead of the curve in the same fashion, considering the constantly changing face of game technology.

Returning to the notion that exponential growth in the power of computer devices will affect everything else, Kurzweil explained how previously unrelated fields will essentially become information technology fields. For instance, in the field of medicine, an artificial red blood cell called a respirocyte could eventually duplicate the work of the real thing, but with 1,000 times the efficiency.

"Biology is very capable and intricate and clever," Kurzweil said, "but it's also very suboptimal, compared to what we ultimately can build with information technology and nanotechnology...If you were to replace a portion of your blood with these respirocytes, you could do an Olympic sprint for 15 minutes without taking a breath or sit at the bottom of your pool for four hours."

Kurzweil also believes that nanotechnology will solve the world's energy crisis within two decades. Solar panels are hard to manufacture, heavy, inefficient, and expensive, but Kurzweil said the advent of nanoengineered solar panels will change that.

Within five years, he believes that those high-tech solar panels will become less expensive per watt of energy produced than oil, taking away the financial incentive for people to burn through nonrenewable natural resources. Within 20 years, they will have largely replaced fossil fuels as the primary source of the world's energy.

In a more general view, Kurzweil noted that the average life expectancy was growing at the rate of roughly three months a year. Now that information technology is affecting medicine, Kurzweil projected that in 15 years, the life expectancy of people will start expanding at the rate of more than a year for every year that passes, essentially not only delaying death, but actually pushing it further away with each passing day.

"We didn't stay on the ground," Kurzweil said. "We didn't stay on the planet. And we have not stayed within the limitations of our biology."

Brendan Sinclair of GameSpot reported from San Francisco.

More from News.com on this story's topics

Nanotechnology

Create an email alert | RSS feed

Games

Create an email alert | RSS feed

Environment and Energy

Create an email alert | RSS feed

Innovation

Create an email alert | RSS feed

See more CNET content tagged:
Exponential Technology, field, handheld, information technology, games

6 comments (Page 1 of 1)
Dreamer
by ewelch February 22, 2008 6:43 AM PST
He's always been so full of it. Talking ahead of the curve. Funny how his book quite a few years ago didn't contain the same projections as these. And his assumption that Moore's law will continue apace forever is nonsense too. It's not a law to begin with. There are limits and they just haven't been reached yet. He's been predicting immortality for years and years. And now that people know he previous road to immortality (make a copy of yourselves and let that copy live forever) doesn't mean we live forever, he's simply outrunning biology. It would be cool, but sorry. There's no evidence that what he's saying is true. Shoot, how long have we been working on a cure for so many cancers? We can't find a vaccine for AIDS? Things don't always go according to plan.
Reply to this comment View all 2 replies
Technology will increase our life expectancy
by chaser7016 February 22, 2008 8:14 AM PST
Look to things like the digital toilet (sends your specimen data over the net to doc's system for analysis, anything wrong in it, u receive email 2 set up appointment) as one way the net will increase our life expectancy. Another would be the social alarm clock (reminds the aging of what medicine to take and gets you out of harms way from pending doom (tornado) ).
Reply to this comment
Stretch goals Break Limits
by azareus February 23, 2008 9:14 PM PST
Stretch goals help push the agenda. They can't always be achieved. Without trying, much less is usually achieved because of lack of impetus/drive... http://cognitivelabs.com/kurzweil.htm kurzweil 'game'
Reply to this comment
Why Ray Rules
by anthonykuhn February 28, 2008 10:55 AM PST
I think we need big idea-focused people who can see what we refuse to, like Ray. Anyone can be a naysayer and poo-poo ideas like the telephone, electricity, or flushing toilets, but it takes someone like him to see beyond what is easy to imagine and really project possibility into reality. I liked to this piece in my blog at the Innovators-Network so my readers can get some inspiration from Ray's big vision for the future and maybe put their business skills to work capitalizing on what might be instead of dragging through life caught in the what was or is.
Reply to this comment
Powered by Jive Software
advertisement
RSS Feeds
Add headlines from CNET News.com to your homepage or feedreader.
Google
Yahoo
MSN
More feeds available in our RSS feed index.
Today's Top Stories
Fisker plans second electric sedan, seeks funds
CSC settles with feds over kickback allegations
Windows Server 2008 goes down-market
Red Hat lives on the edge with Fedora 9
Photobucket to launch group albums
Most Popular Stories
RIM makes a Bold BlackBerry debut
Google brings Friend Connect to the masses
Welcome to the social mess?
Nintendo launches WiiWare with six games
XP update throws some for a loop
Markets

Market news, charts, SEC filings, and more

Related quotes

Dow Jones Industrials (-0.59%) -75.88 12,800.43
S&P 500 (-0.25%) -3.54 1,400.04
NASDAQ (-0.27%) -6.61 2,481.88
CNET TECH (-0.41%) -7.09 1,738.71
  Symbol Lookup



advertisement
On TV.com: MILEY CYRUS photographs
Advanced
search
Advanced
search
Visit other CNET Networks sites: