20 years ago in 1996, I read a science fiction novel about artificial intelligence. The most popular news about artificial intelligence that year was that Kasparov killed the Deep Blue generation on behalf of mankind. Therefore, the author happily described in the book that after many years, Kasparov defeated the computer by a slight advantage again, and after the game, he declared tiredly that humans would eventually lose to machines. However, don't wait for years. In 1997, Kasparov was sacked by the second generation of Deep Blue.
Too far, something close. Go, known as the strongest fortress of mankind, has finally fallen. Li Shishi was still able to resist the dog generation for one or two times, and Ke Jie's challenge to the upgraded version was no longer able to fight back. What's more, AlphaGo lost 0:100 to the new AlphaGo Zero. Since then, the game of Go has been reduced to a game for machines. Humans can only entertain themselves at a lower level.
Going back to the movie, Storm's advantage over McQueen is equally overwhelming. You watched McQueen looking for a venue and trying to speed up. Did you see the shadows of Lee Sedol, Ke Jie, and Kasparov in McQueen?
Yes, a lot of people didn't like the ending. Yeah, I don't like it either. The ending I hope should be that McQueen, who represents human metaphysics, is completely unaware of his own sunset, and is finally ruthlessly crushed by a new generation of racing cars. In the scene, the once-great McQueen is buried here, and there is a lightning bolt sign in front of the tomb—does it look like the forked branch tombstone on the head of Uncle Wolf's grave?
This kind of ending, at least a little sad, is more interesting than the last illusory victory of human beings.
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