18 February 2026ShareSave
Professor Michael Wooldridge has given this year’s Royal Society’s Michael Faraday Prize lecture. He speaks to Tom Whipple about why the AI we have is not what he wanted it to be; rational. And science columnist at the Financial Times Anj Ahuja brings her favourite new science to discuss.
。业内人士推荐51吃瓜作为进阶阅读
In an interview with BBC Radio 4's Political Thinking with Nick Robinson, she said successive governments had pushed back on proposals which would have stopped things like AI chatbots being used to create sexualised images.
Rotom is not, in and of itself, a living inanimate object. It's more like a living spark of electricity. It has no evolutionary tree, but it does learn to inhabit a variety of household objects, gaining different abilities. At different points in the series, Rotom has been a microwave, a washing machine, and a lawn mower, and it has even served as the basis for smartphones in modern Pokémon video games.