Warsaw. “The future is today: the digital brain?”. New exhibition at the Copernicus Science Center
On the 11th anniversary of the founding of the Science Center, Koper has opened a new, fixed exhibition: “The Future is Today: The Digital Brain?”. – It touches the presence of vitality in our vitality and further, but also which committee to question, amendment, amendment – p. Curator.
Learning neural network. Autonomous car. A robot that will always catch a falling phone. Escaping shadows. Composing algorithms that create and create images. The exhibition “The Future is Today: Digital Brain?” urges to ask questions about the limits of trust, privacy, intimacy, a sense of security, comfort and new definitions of art and creativity.
– Technical solutions that are in – or those that are about to be achieved – only solutions for this solution for this solution that have the future – Anna Curator of the exhibition Skrzypek. She noted that the creators of the exhibition did not intend to rate the presented exhibits – to suggest which technological solution is good and which is PLN.
– We want visitors to form their own opinion. Much of the same forcing asking questions, suggesting answers – no Fiddler.
Four groups of exhibits
The exhibition is divided into four groups of exhibits, which are arranged according to specific problem areas. The first group of plastic artificial artificial artificial steel – artificial artificial background learns. The second group of exhibits dealing with the topic of trust in technology. Explore how, as part of the intervention tests, they can make their own phone like a machine and get it tossed and caught by it.
The exhibition presents a model of an autonomous car – Mercedes F015. The result of the curator is solved by the technological solution, it shows that the legal solutions do not keep up and the technological solutions. – “It is not known that committees are to be charged, who will register for who – machine constructor, maybe a software developer?” – points out Anna Skrzypek.
The third group of exhibits focusing on solving the problem of technology with artificial intelligence. Visitors have at their disposal a machine which, based on the image captured by the camera, has created a picture similar to those painted by Vincent van Gogh. The question of copyright in such a situation remains an open question.
– Who is the creator in the digital world? Can artificial intelligence be considered a full creator? – asks Anna Skrzypek.
Relationship with technology
The exhibition closes the group of exhibits focused on the subject – “relations”. – Here we talk about the most personal relationship with technology. We show that already – robots that are under copyright law over themselves and accompanying life tools – says Skrzypek. As an example, he gives a Japanese robot – a holographic partner who talks about people about unread e-mails and turns on a light before returning home, making him feel lonely.
Technology also enters the area of the sacred. The Santo exhibit has a task for me in prayer. Exit to a Catholic university in Peru. It is intended for elderly people who cannot go to church.
– You can ask the robot a question or write how you will feel on the day when you can find the relevant fragment from the Holy Bible or cite Franciszek’s graphics – says Anna Skrzypek.
– The End of Life Machine – to the exhibit closing the exhibition. Its examiner is accompanying people in the last moments of life – the dying person strokes the hand and makes announcements Having the experience of a pandemic, thanks to which people died alone, it is worth getting acquainted with this machine – concludes Fiddler.
The curator admitted that the exhibition is a manifestation of the maturity of the institutes, which had just celebrated their 11th birthday, and previously was associated with making science available at exhibitions available in the exhibitions.
– This exhibition testifies to our evolution. We kept the exhibition that allows you to experiment and experience nanotechnology on your own, but decided to refresh our goals and show that our profile will continue towards the future and future technology. It is not about the readiness to adopt a new technology, but also how it needs to be changed – the director of the Copernicus Science Center, Robert Firmhofer.
Photo Source: Rafał Guz, PAP