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فسيلة - transplant
هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات
It is a digital library containing thousands of Arabic videos in all fields.
قوائم تشغيل فسيلة
https://www.dailymotion.com/fasela/playlists
هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات
It is a digital library containing thousands of Arabic videos in all fields.
قوائم تشغيل فسيلة
https://www.dailymotion.com/fasela/playlists
Category
📚
LearningTranscript
00:03Hello, hello, hello! Yes, welcome! Yes, honestly, I'm considering applying for the engineering job I mentioned earlier.
00:08Okay, can you tell me your code and years of employment?
00:11No code, what is it? I was just joking around. You'll find all my information in this file.
00:15I found it effective in accounting, effective in marketing, effective in ICQs, effective
00:20What's up, teacher?
00:20One second, are you even human?
00:23Oh, by the way, I'm a person like that. I want to tell you that once there was a lot of teasing, and I wanted to equalize the street.
00:28I wish and I give up
00:29Unfortunately, we don't employ anyone; we only employ artificial intelligence.
00:32Of course, I can get two years of equivalent credit and become a Rob
00:34But there's no such thing as that sweet, natural, local intelligence.
00:37You're burdened with work, you complain about it, you ask for breaks, and you're constantly complaining to the managers.
00:41So what am I supposed to do with this right?
00:42Should I go down to the street before Ramadan?
00:44I don't understand, I meant to equalize, but now we're like this.
00:46Ha ha
00:47Rejected
00:48Robots don't say jokes
00:49Sir, please consider me a generous benefactor.
00:51I'll make you some tea and coffee, God willing.
00:53Honestly, you can't work on this one in particular.
00:56for him?
00:57Because me too
00:58robot
01:00Is it okay to charge me?
01:01What's up, turn me around?
01:03Are you a Type C?
01:04That's why I'm stuck in the street.
01:06Not even coffee
01:07Nor the dream
01:08And they do not forget
01:09Okay, okay, I don't want to work anymore.
01:10Hey guys, your manager is Hani
01:12Nor the two
01:13Nor Mecca
01:14And no difficulty, Braula
01:15And no difficult mango
01:23Dear viewers, peace, mercy and blessings of God be upon you.
01:27Welcome to a new episode of the Dabke program
01:29In 1948, after the end of World War II
01:33Computer scientist Allen Turing is pictured inside his lab at the University of Manchester.
01:37The one who invented it was his team's computer.
01:39Franti Mark One
01:40The first commercially available, versatile computer
01:43And there, my dear, he found something very strange
01:45He found love letters everywhere
01:47Yan Harab hand?
01:48Hey guys, are we here just to invent computers?
01:51Don't let me leave you with a buzzer board
01:53The problem, my dear, is that all these letters had a three-letter signature on them.
01:56Isn't Manchester United a dog club, Abu Ahmed?
01:59No, my dear, wait, I will get to know you.
02:01Sir Alex didn't pull those stunts.
02:02The important thing is that day after day, the remnants of these letters appear in the lab.
02:05Until they discovered that the person behind these letters
02:07Christopher Stracchi
02:09One of Turing's friends from his time in Britain
02:11But my dear, in reality, Christopher wasn't the one writing the letters himself.
02:14Christopher wrote a program for the Turing computer.
02:17He makes him write these letters, that's why.
02:19The signature was abbreviated as MUC
02:22Manchester University Computer
02:23Someone asked him, "Abu Ahmed, how can a computer write love letters?"
02:26Is this a book with a program that makes it love-filled, or what?
02:28In need, my dear, is everything Christopher did
02:30Andy's computer template for love letters
02:32For example, he could say something like, "The thing I love most about you is your beauty."
02:36He tells him to remove the word "beauty".
02:37And he randomly inserted other words
02:39From a group of words, he is from Dahala
02:41He once said, "The thing I love most about you is your ears."
02:43Sometimes he says "your rarity" and sometimes he says "your nose".
02:45Well, my dear computer, if it had seen this, it would have jumped.
02:47And that's how he keeps using the same template.
02:49With random words and he likes about himself
02:51Despite what Christopher did, was that cool?
02:53But it was just a program that followed specific instructions.
02:56And random words come out
02:57There's no art to it.
02:58But let me tell you, my dear, that this was in 1848.
03:01Let's leave it for now, in 2022 we'll ask.
03:03Is there a computer that can produce a work of art on its own?
03:05Zay, I'll listen to her
03:06High challenge, high challenge, and I'll get readers of Zala.
03:09Is there a computer?
03:11Can he write an episode for Al-Daheeh? And Hadi says to him, "Oh Abu Ahmed!"
03:13Is "Al-Daheeh" a work of art?
03:15Is work considered worship, or is it not artistic?
03:16Of course, this is a work of art. Respect yourself.
03:18Although what Christopher did was simple
03:21However, now it was Badik and Yask
03:23Bring me along with the increasing computing power of computers.
03:26There are no programs more complex than Christopher's.
03:28You can actually write works of art
03:29Today there is an annual event called
03:31Nano Gene Mo
03:34He is trying in this event
03:35Programmers from all over the world
03:37They fabricate stories from more than
03:39Fifty thousand kilometers during the month of November
03:41They steal these novels using a code, but
03:43From the beginning of this event in 2012
03:44It contains strange stories that reveal a group
03:46These programmers decided to take over the writing work.
03:49The ones that already exist and are being played in
03:50For example, is there a limit to what a mother is doing, or is she going and bringing back a novel?
03:53And change the words in it to the new trending words.
03:57The one on Twitter, someone else went and got it
03:59Moby-Dick's novel and the attempt at all words
04:01Those who were able to try it, Lamoujis
04:02My dear friend, a programmer from Egypt, please come and take
04:04Our neighborhood kids, and it remains instead
04:07Forget our neighborhood
04:08Our neighborhood is full of harassers with long legs.
04:11Or he changes the words of Mr. Sayed
04:13Between the two captives, with words of paradise
04:15Because they were dangerous, I heard so much.
04:16What's important to me, programmers?
04:18They took the road to Aroush and said, "We will write."
04:20A code that makes the computer write automatically.
04:23From scratch, I started taking over other people's work.
04:24And we don't want to change the type.
04:26Creation at zero, O believer
04:28The novel written in this way was a novel
04:30The programmer who wrote the program
04:33His goal was to try to make the computer
04:35He writes about himself, not just imitates people.
04:37So the programmer decided to let the computer explore
04:39The world itself through reading
04:41Articles from the WikiHow website
04:42This is a website that explains how to do anything in the world.
04:45What the program does is try
04:47He infers relationships from some of his words.
04:49Whenever he encounters a word he doesn't know, he starts writing sentences.
04:51This word is very common in it, as if he's imagining.
04:53How do you use it? Of course, my dear, the novel that came out
04:55It's not really a novel; it's more like a memoir.
04:57A computer lost in the sea of the internet
04:59But be aware that this is a big shift from that
05:01He takes existing novels and plays with them.
05:03But in reality, my dear, all the examples you mentioned
05:05Hulk's work lacked any real creativity.
05:07From the computer programmer's perspective, he is the owner
05:09The idea from beginning to end and the computer, Yadam
05:11He implements it and that's it, no one can be creative
05:13More than what he created, there's a way that
05:15A computer learns to type on its own, even if
05:17The programmer himself doesn't know that this is the group
05:19They tried to make it a potion.
05:21They are a group of writers who are trying to use
05:23Technology in writing from their beginnings
05:25The year 2016 and the path they took was that
05:27The computer provides many examples of the need
05:29Those who want to be like her so they can learn
05:31It is written in the same way as "nafsah" and "yaktub samha".
05:33We are changing any interference from them on this point.
05:34What is he learning? Or on what basis is he writing?
05:36This is what's called machine learning.
05:38The program creates a model or template.
05:40This is something he tries to emulate.
05:42The model is used to produce more of them.
05:44For example, one time they gave him scripts
05:46All episodes of the Sinville series
05:48And his exaggeration is writing episodes himself
05:50And again, give him the seven Harry Potter books.
05:52And let him write another part of the series.
05:54Harry Potter and the Portrait heard
05:55of what looked like a large pile of ash
05:58Oh my God, computer!
06:00Okay, now, my dear, the part of what he wrote
06:02Ron was standing there, dancing his head wildly.
06:04Harry's brother-in-law suddenly went to Ron
06:05Eat a sample of Hermione Hermione Hermione
06:08He means all her samples, I don't want to say it.
06:09Ron's t-shirt was worse than Ron himself.
06:12God bless you, artist! That's exactly what he wrote, my dear.
06:14We obviously don't understand anything that's happening.
06:15But this is the world from a computer's point of view.
06:19The thing to do, my dear, is to pay attention to the program's purpose.
06:21He can learn anyone's writing style
06:22And he writes like this
06:23Because it teaches the relationships between words
06:25Oh Muhammad, there are relationships between the words and each other.
06:27Oh my dear, and the view in this place is not something one would encounter.
06:29His assembly has a connection to God.
06:30For example, Harry Potter learns that the words Ron and Hermione
06:33They appear together a lot; he learns that Harry does many things suddenly.
06:36Of course, there are significant levels of complexity that can be increased.
06:39And the computer keeps processing and displaying the words.
06:41He might start connecting their meanings together
06:43He might also learn how to write a service.
06:45How to write the ending of the story
06:47How to increase the action in a specific area
06:49All of this depends on the shape and complexity.
06:51The model that teaches
06:52And on the data that calls him
06:53If you gave him books by Naguib Mahfouz, he would learn and write like them.
06:56If you gave him episodes of Al-Daheeh, he would learn and write like them.
06:59But please note, my dear, that the episodes are not just written.
07:02Al-Dahih, first and foremost, is visual content.
07:04And what about you? Is your eyesight not good?
07:06And my dear, if you don't have sight, meet me in the sight of Ahmed, that's more than enough.
07:10It's a little easy this time. Can a computer learn to write and create a video on its own?
07:14Can he create drawings?
07:15In 2006, Dr. Simon Culton
07:18This guy definitely stepped on a star and went down when Jassar was around.
07:21No, seriously, my dear, he was a respectable doctor.
07:22He participated in an art exhibition
07:24With a program he had been working on for five years called
07:27The Painting Fool
07:28This program used to take pictures of people visiting the exhibition and draw them.
07:31But there was a Tostaya like that
07:32Because Culton mimics the artistic process in which the artist puts his feelings and thoughts into the drawing he creates.
07:38He decided to use his program to create fake feelings.
07:40This is a way to make him read today's news headlines.
07:43If the titles were sad, the person in front of him would appear sad.
07:46If the news is good, he will happily draw it on the same road.
07:50Microsoft, with the help of a team from the Delphi Collector in the Netherlands
07:53In May 2016, they announced that they had managed to get a computer to draw a new picture.
07:57A well-known 17th-century Dutch artist named
08:00This is the drawing, my dear.
08:02But before you start pointing, let me tell you that in order to reach this result
08:04It took them about a year and a half of continuous work.
08:07They took every Rembrandt painting from it
08:09And they sat studying her features
08:10The shape of the face's dimensions
08:12Lighting and colors, the way light falls from one side
08:14So that it works as a series from another perspective
08:16It remains a style, meaning its colors
08:18And all of this was done by humans.
08:20And they also decided that the drawing would be of Zakir Abian
08:22In his thirties
08:23There's a large human element behind the drawing.
08:25How do we get rid of this element, Buhamil?
08:26German company for premium insects
08:28If they wanted to paint a picture of another artist
08:30They will have to put in the same effort for another year and a half.
08:34And this is where the Egyptian doctor comes in.
08:36Ahmed Al-Jamal, who decided that he was talking
08:38The creative process that takes place in the brain
08:39What Dr. Ahmed did was find that
08:41The machine for running models that already exists
08:43She can accurately determine what she sees.
08:46For example, she can learn so that she knows
08:48Does this picture contain a cat or a word?
08:49Does this picture show someone who is sad or happy?
08:51So, should we create a model like this, but one that can recognize
08:54Is this a painting by a certain artist or not?
08:55So we can train him on a lot of boards, for example, for Fanjoka.
08:58So that he can see with great accuracy
09:00The painting determines its style, whether it's a diptych or not.
09:02It will be like art criticism
09:03The cool part is that we'll make another model.
09:06This second model outputs random images.
09:08Random, meaning it's every time
09:10It might give a color to a pixel
09:12It looks different in the picture, it looks like
09:14A child trying to learn by drawing, but only at first.
09:16What we're going to do is take pictures.
09:18The one who draws this is the model, this is the child model.
09:20We give it to the first model we made
09:22The art critic, according to the degree
09:24The one who will give art criticism to the child
09:25He will keep changing the pictures he draws
09:27Up to the point of art criticism, the model we initially developed
09:30He remains happy, for example, at first
09:31He'll just make a picture of a symbol using random colors, that's all.
09:34The critic will say to him, "What is this, Habib?"
09:35This is barely 2% similar to a Van Gogh painting
09:37Try again, and the child model who draws will disappear.
09:40He changed a few things and it turned out to be a different picture.
09:42Criticism either tells him no, that's not his image
09:44You're only 30% like a Van Gogh painting.
09:46And so on and so forth until he reaches
09:49At a point where a painting appears
09:5195% for example is similar to Van Gogh
09:53At that time, the model of art criticism
09:54He will be pleased with what we did at the beginning.
09:56He tells him, "That's all, please keep bringing me lots of dates."
09:58And so we are left with a model
10:00He knows how to paint a picture like Van Gogh
10:02My dear, let me tell you that there are two things that are controlled here.
10:04Attention, attention, just focus, Muhammad
10:06Interest and curiosity
10:08The first thing is that the model who draws like Van Gogh
10:10He didn't need anything to learn how to draw like him.
10:12However, he takes his painting.
10:14No, no, we don't need to wait a year and a half.
10:16We don't need Microsoft scientists to analyze the board for him; there's no need.
10:18All you have to do is wait for him
10:20Until he dreams of it, that's it.
10:22The second thing is that the picture that appears
10:24The panel will be 100% a product of the model.
10:26He doesn't take parts of a Van Gogh painting.
10:28The truth and he puts it on top of each other
10:29No, he's actually painting a new picture.
10:31This model has the same style as him.
10:34Generative Adversarial Networks
10:36Or GAMS, and that's a little bit
10:38One of the results obtained by Dr. Al-Jamal
10:40In his research paper, and since then
10:41The games have models
10:43It takes a picture and turns it into a drawing for you.
10:45In the style of a particular artist, no
10:47You can also give it a picture and change its details.
10:49In the example in front of you, you are giving her your picture.
10:52And change your hairstyle and that's how it is.
10:54You can give her words and she'll give you pictures.
10:56To express it, you could say you want a picture
10:58The chair is shaped like an avocado or
11:00Cartoon image of a penguin wearing a blue cape
11:02And it indicates treachery and red leaps
11:04Yellow pants or tennis shoes
11:06She looks at herself in the mirror or a drawing
11:08Elephant and Dragon Hybrids
11:09Or indeed, my dear, you could tell him a picture
11:11Al-Dahih dressed as Hitler (picture)
11:14Al-Dahih and the one around him are scum
11:15Two nerds are arguing together and it's going to be a disaster
11:17This doesn't mean that only computers can write like Al-Daheeh.
11:20This can produce the images he wants for Al-Daheeh.
11:22From these images, a video can be created.
11:24By either seeking help from a human being
11:26And he makes him read the script
11:27And then he changes his face using De Pfac
11:30Or he leaves him completely alone.
11:32Because there are already models who can produce videos
11:34No, and you can even give her pictures.
11:36Lord, protect me
11:45I don't mean to remind you of the cases of the nerd
11:47It's just writing and pictures.
11:49We did it in Al-Masamid, with all due respect to Uncle Shatman, of course.
11:51But where is the voice that will convey the message?
11:53Where is the dramatic music? Where are the amazing sound institutions?
11:56Can a computer say whatever it wants in anyone's voice?
11:58Can he perform music he composed himself?
12:00I'll go out, my dear, and come back and tell you.
12:02At one of the concerts on the Oregon State University stage
12:06The program for the concert included three pieces.
12:09One, two, three, that's it, Abu Hamad!
12:10The first is an unknown piece of fabric.
12:13The second is a piece composed by artificial intelligence, but in a style similar to Bakh
12:16The third piece is composed by Dr. Musi in the same style as Bakh
12:20After the party ended
12:22Those present asked which of the three pieces was the true one composed by Bakh
12:26Which one of them was created by artificial intelligence, and which one of them was created by another human being?
12:29Aziz was surprised that most of the audience said that the piece he composed was artificially created, but in reality, it was composed by a doctor.
12:37Music
12:37And the biggest surprise is that they said the real piece by Bach himself, the one that isn't famous, is the piece that was actually composed by him.
12:45Artificial slaughter
12:46This artificial zakat program is called EMI
12:48Experiments in Musical Intelligence
12:50And it's being worked on by Dr. and musician David Cobb
12:53It works exactly like Microsoft did with Rembrandt's keyboard.
12:55Dr. Cobb has compiled a huge database containing the works of the most famous musicians in history.
12:59Metwfen, Mozart, Shovan, List, and many others
13:02An entry for the EMI program said
13:04What exactly are the recurring elements in each of their songs?
13:07What are the notes that are repeated a lot and how do they come after each other?
13:10And let EMI produce something similar
13:12EMI's genius in imitating music is, first and foremost, Cobb's genius.
13:16Because he's the one who programmed how it works from beginning to end.
13:18If Cobb himself didn't know music, he could never have invented it.
13:21But in 2016, and using machine learning this time
13:24This PhD student, whose name is Wujud, is here.
13:26He decided to build a model called Dem Bukh
13:29He can play musical pieces like those of Bakh
13:31Good year, he learned from about 389 cut-off points.
13:35That's a very small number, my dear, compared to the models we've seen before in photos.
13:39You need to learn from millions of examples
13:41Not only that, but unlike any other artificial zakat production
13:44The music produced by artificial zakat is starting to be taken seriously.
13:47In 2016, the University of Authors, Composers and Music Publishers in France
13:51The title of composer was officially awarded for the first time to an artificial intelligence called AIVA.
13:57And this guy, my dear, is trying to kill someone
13:58This is artificial zakat; it composes its own music.
14:01Of course, he learns from many examples.
14:03But what comes out of it is something completely new.
14:05You'll find tracks available on YouTube and Spotify.
14:07We might find him a concert later in Riyadh Season.
14:10With all these developments, I believe it's only a matter of time.
14:13If someone takes El Da7ee7's music and starts releasing new music for us
14:16It is placed in the background of the speech, the title sequence, and the ending.
14:18As for the beautiful sound, there are indeed many applications.
14:22The voice clinic procedure is performed
14:23You train a model on your voice and make him say anything.
14:26I think, my dear, the time will come when you and I should be afraid.
14:30So the computer now has a script, image, and sound.
14:32Has the era of humanity ended? And the most important question...
14:35Is this how someone in need looks for work?
14:37But my dear, just to be sure, and because I've always trusted you with honesty.
14:40We'll try it ourselves and see.
14:42One of the photo models, for example
14:44Show me the pictures I'm going to show you
14:45When he took some pictures from Al-Daheeh and learned from them
14:47Did you see the pictures, my dear?
14:48What's wrong with it?
14:49Huh?
14:49any?
14:50And why is there someone who posted my picture with a story?
14:51Thank you, Captain, but
14:52Where is the zakat?
14:53This is artificial.
14:54But apparently
14:55The artificial zakat models
14:57From the pure one
14:57But better results were achieved with another model.
15:00We tried the first one on a picture of the room
15:01He's going to give us these results.
15:02And when he took some pictures of Al-Daheeh, he learned from them
15:04These results are expected
15:05Tanima, my dear, this model is
15:07The one who looks like Rushdie Abaza
15:08And the likeness of Alwar Sadat
15:10Mohamed Salah's lookalike
15:12Anyway, my dear, I'm praying on this site.
15:13If there were someone like Al-Dahih
15:15He appears with a lookalike of Rushdi Abaza
15:17With a lookalike of Sadio Mane
15:18And it remains like the dreams of an afternoon nap.
15:21The important thing is what comes next
15:22Let's try it.
15:23Nadi is another model of what he writes
15:24How many episodes are there in the scripts?
15:25And we'll have him write one of his own.
15:27Ready, my dear?
15:28The next episode is on right now.
15:30100% Artificial Intelligence
15:32Yalla 5 4 3 2 1
15:34action
15:41Dear viewers
15:43May the peace, blessings, and mercy of God be upon you
15:45Welcome to a new episode
15:47From the Al-Daheeh program
15:48Excellent, great
15:49Today we'll talk about the connection between him and the pyramids.
15:52He is the one who wrote
15:53Malash Gladiator
15:54We are between you and the first day of the results
15:57This is a game, the problem is
15:58But these aren't specific ones.
16:00Life, dear viewer
16:01You are very slaves
16:03Did you see, my dear artificial penis, how it made you cry?
16:05From the perspective of the psychological engine
16:07Hera Namid's
16:08Her time
16:09Indeed
16:10Lucien started to receive votes from the members
16:13Napoleon Garagoa the military
16:18According to Derich time, we don't reach Malik with it.
16:20Tonight, Napoleon went from man to legend in less than a year.
16:24I'm just like you
16:25I don't understand anything
16:26Someone suggested, "Why don't we build a computer that can beat the world champion in chess?"
16:29What Rachels wants to do is simply
16:31It changes the definition of the word selfishness.
16:33But that will never diminish the importance of the Gulf.
16:35Of course, we can see all these changes.
16:37So I can tell its color from it
16:39No, for me the solution is simple.
16:40And that is, I will tell you about his year.
16:42Otherwise, they wouldn't have spent all their philosophy, artists, and poets on it.
16:46I don't know what's going on, my dear.
16:47Naturally, when they get married, they have a higher capacity for understanding.
16:51I have no idea where this came from.
16:52What's wrong with you, game?
16:53And he also learns more things than humans have learned.
16:57I won't know, my dear.
16:58During the three thousand years that lasted more than three months
17:00And not only that, he is still used as an example to this day.
17:03The proof is that until the middle of the 19th century
17:05The wicked dancer danced from beginning to end
17:08And no one was offering condolences
17:09With the Proceso eye and the GPio working, they are calculating
17:11If you plug it in while you're in Sweden
17:13You'll never love the person you want.
17:14The truth is, you're not the only one.
17:16I asked all the international exhibitions
17:17The one after the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917
17:20He declared that socialism is complementary
17:22Of course, in order to create your own YouTube channel
17:23You need to break YouTube itself.
17:25Or is it a dream with raisins?
17:27He is your guide amidst your clothes and your people
17:29What are you waiting for? Get up and serve!
17:30Let's go down and look at the sources
17:31Even if we're on YouTube
17:32Subscribe to the channel
17:33With your permission, dear, I'm going to take a picture of the water where I sleep.
17:35Do you need anything?
17:36That was the industrial skill with you
17:38I leave you with the true zakat
17:43Dear viewer, I want to reassure myself and say
17:46It seems that I am in grave danger
17:48I will see, meaning
17:48So, my dear, if I end up looking like those pictures
17:50And I'm talking like this
17:51So I have no problem
17:52Fine, thank God
17:53You are still in danger, dear viewer.
17:54According to the report
17:55The spread in the boy's economic form
17:572020
17:57By 2025
17:5985 million jobs
18:01Humans will be replaced in it
18:02artificial irrigation
18:03The topic is so serious that there's a website dedicated to it.
18:05His name
18:05Will robots take my job
18:06You can access it and write your job descriptions.
18:08And what percentage of the risk does it present?
18:10Your job will be taken by artificial intelligence.
18:12It means the models that are worn out from the nerd
18:14artificial fish
18:15Although it's a beginning and perhaps funny
18:16But God is the protector.
18:17It may be a matter of time
18:19and a little bit of data actor
18:20And a little bit of development in computers
18:21And the machine will be able
18:22Learn correctly
18:23A full episode of Al-Daheeh is being produced
18:24Or a song or a movie
18:26They contain sound, image, and text.
18:27Without any human intervention
18:28Question here
18:29Is the product that the machine will produce
18:30Art or what is happening
18:31The answer to this question, my dear, is pending.
18:33How do you see this art?
18:35For example, someone might say
18:36The painted picture
18:37It is a collection of lines and colors
18:38He tells you that the machine learns it
18:40Just like a person learns it
18:41And she was influenced by Da Vinci's words
18:42When he said
18:43If you brought a piece
18:44And don't make it dirty
18:44She threw it onto a silver plate.
18:45So, the one who will draw on it
18:47It will be a good start
18:48You are looking at a work of art
18:49Or the words of Janjokh, for example
18:50The one who saw
18:51The creative process
18:52It's not something that happens just once out of nowhere.
18:53The process involves small, repetitive steps.
18:56Until you reach the final product
18:57And these two things
18:58You start from a random need
18:59And you start working one thing at a time
19:01In semi-mechanical steps
19:02Until you reach the artwork
19:04Two things a computer can do
19:05Therefore, the product he produces
19:07I could consider it art
19:08On the other hand
19:09You'll find a completely different opinion
19:10I see art as the state of the artist.
19:12And the feelings he wants to convey to you
19:13His experience in life
19:15It means ah
19:15Artificial intelligence may have the ability
19:17It mimics his lines and colors in the painting
19:19He also creates things on his own.
19:20But the most important thing will be missing from this product.
19:23It is the motive and the desire
19:24Why did the computer decide to express this particular feeling?
19:26Why did he decide to present it in the form of a drawing?
19:28Will he be able to understand?
19:29Why do we even make episodes about Dabke in the first place?
19:31Some of the criticisms that were made
19:32For the models I mentioned before
19:34It was all about the fact that the machine didn't feel anything.
19:36When I see a painting
19:37Or I listen to a musical piece
19:38I feel for the one who made it
19:39I want to feel it
19:40But what is this computer feeling?
19:41Why does he still live through the appeals?
19:43Or he might cut down another group of fools
19:44Or he has a talent
19:45or innate preference
19:46To draw or play music
19:47Yes, then I might take the argument.
19:49Therefore, this view of art
19:50You'll see that machine production isn't art.
19:52By God, we have a calculator.
19:53Without her, I wouldn't have passed the exam.
19:55Whether by solving it or by writing the cheat sheet on its back
19:57So you and I and you, my dear
19:59We are all flesh and blood
20:00From the best of them
20:01So curse them, as they expressed their experience as machines.
20:03She doesn't yet have feelings as complex as ours.
20:05And I mean Rome, she said she was offered
20:07Someone hit it hard to get it working
20:09Or the computer can't recognize the audio output.
20:11So he felt like a mute in a world of speakers
20:14These are all still problems of a zero-sum world
20:16But, my dear, finally, and not lastly
20:17Let's look at the previous cases
20:18See the upcoming cases
20:18Tanzi Bas from sources
20:19Our souls are on YouTube
20:20Subscribe to the channel
20:21And now back to the question of the episode.
20:22Can a computer write an episode for Al-Dahih?
20:24for him?
20:25What does he have in front of him?