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Content-Disposition: inlineOn 23/02/2008, schoappied wrote:
Sorry for the late reply : I was having some time off the PC ....
Acknowledging the marvelous complexity of the human brain should not prevent
us from putting this wonderful resource to use, and think up new ways of
doing new things ... , should it ?
Incidentally, this is how mankind has thrived during the last few
millennia: by taking hints from nature, and designing tools and
machinery. In turn,
this machinery (instrumentation, etc ) has helped increase the amount of
knowledge available for our brains to consume.
Anyway, I am probably just preaching to the converted, as it is you who - in
the first place - asked whether such a computer program already existed ?
Thanks to David O. and others who shared their thoughts about how this
remote perspective could become real, despite the current state-of-the-art
in DSP forbidding to separate a mix of overlapping frequencies.
Kind regards.
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On 23/02/2008, schoappied <schoappied@gmail.com> wrote:
To say if a brain can do it, a machine can do it, is quit a degradation of the very complex organ of human that can let us experience this amazing world... Maybe you're sitting to much time behind your pc... ;)
Sorry for the late reply : I was having some time off the PC ....Acknowledging the marvelous complexity of the human brain should not prevent us from putting this wonderful resource to use, and think up new ways of doing new things ... , should it ?
Incidentally, this is how mankind has thrived during the last few millennia : by taking hints from nature, and designing tools and machinery. In turn, this machinery (instrumentation, etc ) has helped increase the amount of knowledge available for our brains to consume.
Anyway, I am probably just preaching to the converted, as it is you who - in the first place - asked whether such a computer program already existed ?Thanks to David O. and others who shared their thoughts about how this remote perspective could become real, despite the current state-of-the-art in DSP forbidding to separate a mix of overlapping frequencies.
Kind regards.
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