> There are numbers in the post, but the argument goes that a 100x more effective A.I. will cost in the range of only $1bn, which is a relatively small fraction of Big Tech R&D.<p>If this were the case then I'm afraid china probably is already there which is almost as frightening as a galactic alien civ that's colonizing planets.<p>Because there's no way other civs could keep up they'd always be a step ahead.. Or 500... Considering at some point so could start doubling knowledge monthly then weekly the daily then every second....
This could happen, if someone came up with a better learning algorithm that took 1/10th of the time for the same accuracy, then others improved it while computing hardware kept flowing inward because it was now worth doing things that were previously seen as infeasible.<p>The hardware isn't likely to get faster at more than Moore's law, but the way we use it, and connect it, might.
Better at what? Computers outdated a lot of employments already, but opened a lot of new fields and job opportunities. Making advancements is not the problem.<p>Still worrying about the weapon instead of the hand improving and holding it?