Sorry I made a big mistake - I am human after all, and not a very bright one at that. I meant ANI . I always mistake ASI as Artificial Specialised Intelligence, but actually it means Artificial Superior Intelligence. What I meant was ANI ( Artificial Narrow Intelligence) will long replace most human jobs before AGI even comes to reality.
What I mean is various human functions such as motor coordination and vision will long be surpassed by ANI well before AGI is even developed. When AGI is finally developed it will be ASI once it taps into the collective data and abilities of ANI capabilities.
So please reread my post! It's the wrong way around! : D
Also one biggie about why AlphaGo was huge was that playing Go requires abstract intelligence, the kind of thing which makes you think oh that's a nice piece of art, chess is very logicial, thats why nobody predicted an AI could beat a human in Go that quickly.
^ The issue is humans are vastly over estimating their own intelligence and competency in things, whilst we do exhibit superior intelligence, most of our functions can be broken down and performed with a computer/robot.
Deep learning allow computers with neural networks to learn vastly faster than humans at almost any task, whether that's throwing a basket ball or landing a jet plane. The missing piece is computer vision as as we have seen from Microsoft and Stanford, that's already becoming possible using deep learning. It isn't hard to imagine a computer that would become better at identifying objects and things rather than people.
Ironically the largest limitation of ANI is the inability to perform generalised tasks such as assembling a product like an ikea together without many specialised machines, but this is also where the manufacturing process is the cheapest which is why it gets outsourced to other countries, and who knows with 3D printing maybe manufacturing isn't even such a big challenge for the society of the future.
Modern pilots are nothing but backup systems, and most plane crashes are caused by a pilot negligence rather than a computer problem. There is just no competition, computers don't even need sleep, their abilities don't decrease when they are tired. Whilst it's great for businesses to stay "moral" by employing people it isn't practical under global hyper-competition, as we have seen companies are forced to either use cheap labour or just automate the whole thing entirely.
edit: Whoops I deleted my own post. I thought Stop! might mean being able to edit my old post, now the post is gone can a moderator help me restore the old post with ASI being corrected to ANI.
Edited by Major Legend, 18 April 2016 - 01:14 PM.