Category: Television
Swine Flu Public Service Announcements from mid-1970s
TUESDAY TECH: Looking Deeper at the IBM Supercomputer versus Jeopardy Contestants

Yesterday, IBM announced the next phase in their ongoing Open Advancement of Question Answering initiative in the form of…
Jeopardy Contestants versus IBM Supercomputer
You may have already read these headlines or heard about it on your local news broadcast, but if you’re like me, you likely didn’t dive any deeper into this story -- and there’s a lot of diving to be done.
Here’s Jeopardy host Alex Trebek and a few IBM employees to explain the basics:
The last time a human versus machine match was as widely popularized was when chess champion Gary Kasparov battled IBM’s “Deep Blue” 12 years ago:
So what makes “Watson” different than “Deep Blue”? IBM has a page dedicated to answering that very question:
Deep Blue was an amazing achievement in the application of compute power to an extraordinarily challenging but computationally well-defined and well-bounded game. By searching and evaluating a huge space of possible chess board configurations, Deep Blue has the compute power to beat a grand master.
[...]
Watson faces a challenge that is entirely open-ended and defies the sort of well-bounded mathematical formulation that fits a game like Chess. Watson has to operate in the near limitless, ambiguous and highly contextual domain of human language and knowledge. Ultimately Watson’s scientific goal is to demonstrate how computers can get at the meaning behind a natural language question and infer precise answers from huge volumes of content with justifications that ultimately make sense to humans.
Rather than challenging the human to search a vast mathematical space, Watson challenges the computer to operate in human terms. To understand and answer human questions and to know when it does and doesn’t know the answer — to assess its own knowledge and ability — something humans find relatively easy.
Like Deep Blue, Watson may not mimic human thought processes to get the job done, but unlike Deep Blue there is ultimately no guarantee for Watson that an answer exists or that it can even be inferred from its sources, no matter how long it may search.
In other words, winning at Chess uses an entirely different skill set than understanding everyday human language. Sentence formation, especially as used in Jeopardy, is more of an art form than a science and Watson cannot simply rely on a database of possible word combinations in order to understand English.
Moreover, much in the same way that Deep Blue “sat down” in front of Kasparov to play chess with no help from computer operators or programmers other than to simply start it up, Watson will be pitted against Jeopardy players using only its own “senses” to buzz in and answer questions. It will not be networked or controlled, but rather fed each question electronically at the same time that the human players receive them. It is then up to Watson to interpret what the question is asking for, buzz in, and answer appropriately before other players do.
So it it like Googling the answers while watching Jeopardy? Not quite. Have you ever actually tried to look up Jeopardy answers online while watching? Google responds with so many results to every query that it’s nearly impossible to find the right answer in the few seconds that it takes a person who already knows the answer to ring in and respond. So even if Watson were connected to Google, it wouldn’t be able to sift through the hundreds, if not thousands, of search results it found for each question.
Making Watson understand language is part of a project called the Open Advancement of Question Answering initiative, founded by IBM and Carnegie Mellon University. Accurately understanding human language is one of the keys to naturally interacting with any machine. While voice recognition technolgoy exists today, it is often inaccurate and requires the user to recite specific pre-determined commands in order to get a computer to perform a task.
But imagine if you could simply talk to your computer as if it were another person and it would, in response, do whatever you asked. Rather than opening a Web browser, typing “Google.com” into the address bar, and searching for “lasagna recipe”, and hunting through hundreds of Web pages for the best one, a computer could just be told, “Get me a good recipe for lasagna,” and it could bring you a high-rated recipe without showing you all of the steps in-between. This is one of the boundaries between the mouse/keyboard paradigm of human-computer interaction we know today and the “space age” interaction we so often see in science-fiction films.
Unfortunately, it is not known if the battle between humans and machines on the Jeopardy set will be aired, or even taped. My guess is that if the computer performs poorly, we won’t see much more on the subject until it is improved. But if Watson rises to the challenge and looks like it could beat Ken Jennings’ records, I sense a whole new series of “Are You Smarter than a Supercomputer?” reality shows to come.
`Golden Girls’ star Bea Arthur dies at 86
From news.yahoo.com:
Beatrice Arthur, the tall, deep-voiced actress whose razor-sharp delivery of comedy lines made her a TV star in the hit shows “Maude” and “The Golden Girls” and who won a Tony Award for the musical “Mame,” died Saturday. She was 86.
Arthur died peacefully at her Los Angeles home with her family at her side, family spokesman Dan Watt said. She had cancer, Watt said, declining to give further details.
“She was a brilliant and witty woman,” said Watt, who was Arthur’s personal assistant for six years. “Bea will always have a special place in my heart.”
Thank you for being a friend.
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Ninja Turtles Turn 25 and Announce a New Live Action Film Coming in 2011

As part of the 25th anniversary celebration of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, a fourth live action Ninja Turtles movie was announced to be in the works, scheduled for release in 2011.
From variety.com:
The Mirage Group, which owns the property, is moving forward with a live-action film focusing on the origins of the iconic crime fighters. Project, targeted for release in 2011, would mark the fifth bigscreen outing for the sewer-dwelling heroes Leonardo, Michelangelo, Donatello and Raphael as well as their master Splinter.
News coincides with the Turtles’ 25th anniversary celebration, which kicks off Thursday in New York as the first “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles” film unspools at the Tribeca Film Festival.
Legendary Pictures former chief marketing officer Scott Mednick is producing the new pic alongside Galen Walker, who produced the 2007 computer-animated “TMNT” pic, the most recent installment in the franchise. Peter Laird, Gary Richardson, Frederick Fierst, Eric Crown and Napoleon Smith III are exec producing the film, which is based on the characters created by Laird and Kevin Eastman.
The characters first appeared in a May 1984 comicbook before spawning a lucrative line of toys, cartoons and three films released in the early 1990s. In 2003, the Turtles were reintroduced to a new generation via a TV series, the “TMNT” film and a revamped merchandising program.
The latest project is being financed by Lightbox Prods.
“The original dozen comics created by Peter Laird and Kevin Eastman are some of the best source material one could hope for,” said Mednick, whose exec producing credits include the upcoming “Where the Wild Things Are.” Laird, who bought out Eastman’s share of the property several years ago, said the film will remain true to the spirit of the original comicbooks. He added that the pic may employ face replacement technology, which would allow the turtles to be much more expressive.
The picture above is from the Turtles and April O’Neil showing up at the Empire State Building to light it green in honor of their 25th anniversary last night (yes, they also lit it green for Earth Day the day before). Roaming the New York streets was the Turtle van/bus:

Here’s a video montage of some of yesterday’s celebratory festivities:
Turtle Power.
TweetFRIDAY FLASHBACK: Celebrate Arbor Day with Charlie Brown and Carly the Cardinal

Yes, I know I’ve already posted this on a previous Friday Flashback (my very first, in fact), but today is Arbor Day and I simply can’t resist posting it again:
For those of you wondering, yes I temporary tattooed myself again today.
And so this isn’t a total repost, here is It’s Arbor Day, Charlie Brown in three parts:


