Article: AI for Everyone
Written by Mário Corrêa, AI expert and CTO of Autaza.
Career Summary: With a degree in Electrical Engineering for over 32 years, Mário holds a PhD in Artificial Intelligence and Military Systems, contributing to various projects such as radar and UAV development in defense and AI research. Additionally, he serves as a consultant and university professor, aiming to share his knowledge and inspire future generations.
Welcome to the article series by Autaza's CTO, where we explore Artificial Intelligence in an accessible and inspiring manner. Our goal is to demystify AI by offering insights into its impacts, evolution, and future. Join us on this journey to understand how Autaza is shaping the future with cutting-edge technology.
Read below:
"Hello everyone,
Those who know me are aware that I have been working with Artificial Intelligence for over two decades, and not a single day goes by without studying or testing something new. In addition to this, I am fascinated by the great names of science and their contributions to human evolution. From Euclid to Hawking, Galileo, Turing, Gödel, among many others, all have played an important role in disseminating and demystifying crucial topics of human knowledge.
Thus, considering the current moment and the profound revolution brought by AI into daily life, I gathered the courage to start producing these contents with the aim of demystifying and collaboratively promoting the understanding of its true capabilities. Always from my perspective, of course!
To begin, I would like to spark inspiration and reflection: I share my view that perhaps the most revolutionary development in recent years has been that of the computer, as we have discovered a machine that can, at least partially, replace human limitations. Before this advent, the focus was merely on saving human muscles, using machinery to perform tasks that humans couldn't do very well. Computers now come in all sizes, becoming smaller and more efficient, completely integrated into the daily lives of ordinary citizens (remember, a smartphone is nothing more than a computer capable of making phone calls).
With the revolution of microelectronics and its microchips, every industry, government, tax collection agencies, airplanes—all depend on computers. We have personal computers at home and in the palms of our hands, constantly improving, becoming cheaper, more versatile, capable of doing more things. We can envision a future where, for the first time, humanity in general will be liberated from all kinds of work that truly insult the complex human brain and do not require great thinking or creativity.
Let's leave all of that to computers and reserve for ourselves those things that computers cannot do—imagination, creativity, fantasy, intuition, problem-solving. These are tasks where we do not need exact conditions or precise knowledge of what is happening. We have an intuitive sense of what the solution should be. No computer can do this, and we can save our own brains for this purpose.
In the next installment, I will present my vision of where Artificial Intelligence fits into this context and how we can evolve with it as our ally."
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