| Connected Entity | Relationship Type |
Strength
(mentions)
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Documents | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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person
Andy Grove
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Professional co founders |
5
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1 |
| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| N/A | N/A | Dinner party where Gordon Moore questioned the demand for personal computers. | Unknown | View |
This document is page 119 of a larger text, marked as a House Oversight exhibit. It contains a scientific or philosophical essay discussing the convergence of computation and physical fabrication, referencing Von Neumann, Turing, and Gordon Moore. The text explores the implications of self-reproducing automata, digital fabrication, and the future of AI, suggesting a merging of artificial and natural intelligence.
This document is page 18 of a book or essay titled 'Are the Androids Dreaming Yet?', bearing a House Oversight Committee Bates stamp. The text, written in 2014, discusses the evolution of AI, comparing the human brain to computers, referencing Moore's Law, and predicting when artificial intelligence might match human processing power (projected here between 2053 and 2080). It mentions historical figures like Alexander Graham Bell and Alan Turing, as well as Intel founders Gordon Moore and Andy Grove.
This document is page 413 of an index from a book, produced as part of a House Oversight Committee investigation (stamped HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016103). It lists various terms starting with M and N, including scientific concepts, historical figures, and individuals. Notably, it references the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and Nicolas Negroponte, both of which are significant entities in the context of Jeffrey Epstein's financial and social connections.
This document appears to be page 142 of a manuscript, book draft, or essay discussing the sociology and economics of speed, technology, and connectivity ('statefulness'). It references historical examples of transportation and computing growth to illustrate 'induced demand.' While stamped as House Oversight evidence, the text itself is philosophical in nature and quotes figures like Marx, Gordon Moore, and Marina Keegan.
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