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4 Reviews
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22 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Light as a Paradigm Shift in Artificial Intelligence
I am a layman- no physical science degree or job, but I have an interest in new technology applications, particularly light. Nolte's book is great for both the layman as well as the expert- the difference being how fast you will be able to read and absorb the building blocks of knowledge he stacks up (e.g; the physics of how humans see). His focus is a new paradigm of...
Published on January 14, 2002 by lisa dickinson

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29 of 56 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Totally Overhyped, Zero Information on the Core Topic
David Nolte may be an optics expert, but he certainly is neither a computer expert, an algorithm expert, a software development expoert nor a vision expert or AI expert. The quality of the latter topics is about 0.1%, 0%, 0%, 5%, 0.1% respectively of introductory texts for these fields.

This book gives zero information on the key topic of how his optical computers (or...

Published on January 12, 2002 by Bryan Hayes


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22 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Light as a Paradigm Shift in Artificial Intelligence, January 14, 2002
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I am a layman- no physical science degree or job, but I have an interest in new technology applications, particularly light. Nolte's book is great for both the layman as well as the expert- the difference being how fast you will be able to read and absorb the building blocks of knowledge he stacks up (e.g; the physics of how humans see). His focus is a new paradigm of computer intelligence based on photons, not electrons- with implications of quantum leaps in computing power/intelligence and speed. If you have an interest in the power of "light" versus electricity (the 20ieth century paradigm), you will enjoy this thought provoking book. 'Mind at the Speed of Light' compliments recent best sellers like 'Telecosm'(opto-electronics), 'The City of Light' (history of fiber optics). It avoids hype but gets the reader intrigued about the future which is within reach. My only criticism is that the book and its lay readers would benefit greatly from more pictures or diagrams.
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7 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars From the review in Nature magazine, April 4, 2002
By A Customer
"Nolte makes a convincing case that light can act as both Mercury and Apollo - messenger and diviner - through the development of new nonlinear optical materials... He provides a fairly complete picture for the student and interested amateur of why the technology works the way it does, describes the roadblocks to improving system performance, and discusses the effects on telecommunications and data processing..."
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29 of 56 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Totally Overhyped, Zero Information on the Core Topic, January 12, 2002
David Nolte may be an optics expert, but he certainly is neither a computer expert, an algorithm expert, a software development expoert nor a vision expert or AI expert. The quality of the latter topics is about 0.1%, 0%, 0%, 5%, 0.1% respectively of introductory texts for these fields.

This book gives zero information on the key topic of how his optical computers (or any other) are going to handle the topics AIs, Intelligence and Vision. (Of course this is due to the fact that nobody knows how to do it today, but at least they do not claim so).

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3 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars give me a break, December 4, 2002
If the reader above is such a layman and doesnt even have
a job, then how can she write such an outstanding reveiw
for the 2 star book. how bogus.
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Mind at Light Speed: A New Kind of Intelligence
Mind at Light Speed: A New Kind of Intelligence by D. D. Nolte (Hardcover - October 31, 2001)
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