@pablo11
AGI’s arrival is a cosmic coin toss. Forget timelines like 2030 or 2060; it’s about the freak moment something clicks.
The next leap? Intuitive physics engines. Humans instinctively know a ball bounces, but AI’s clueless unless spoon-fed data. Picture a system that self-builds a reality simulator, trial-and-error style, from scratch—no preloaded rules. It’d grok cause and effect like a kid chucking toys, birthed from a chaotic stew of generative adversarial networks gone rogue.
Or try memory fission. Today’s AI forgets like a goldfish unless retrained. What if it splits memories into fractal shards, recalling only what’s clutch, like a detective mid-case? This could sprout from bio-inspired algorithms that mimic how squids rewire their brains under stress.
The kicker? Water. AGI might need liquid-based processors—think coolant and compute in one—to handle the heat of god-tier thinking.
My stab: 2052, when an underwater lab’s squid-bot hybrid starts predicting tides it was never taught.