Movie |
Hacker | Artificial Intelligence
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7/10
IMDbBest Documentary Poster | 2017
2016 | Werner
Best Documentary | 2016 | Werner
Herzog says Elon Musk was very shy on camera, sometimes pausing for minutes at a time before replying to Werner Herzog's questions.
The muffins and croissants on the table in the Catsouras interview were laid out by the family for Werner Herzog and crew. Cinematographer Peter Zeitlinger suggested that the food should stay in the shot to make it more interesting.
Werner Herzog says he told the Catsouras family to look back at him when they finished their comments, to create a very mysterious image as all the eyes look in one direction.
Astronomer Lucianne Walkowicz has a prominent tattoo on her left shoulder of the horse drawings at Chauvet Cave, a major focus of Werner Herzog's 2010 documentary, Cave of Forgotten Dreams (2010).
Werner Herzog wanted to interview Tim Berners-Lee for the film, but he was unavailable. He also wanted to include a section about the internet currency Bitcoin.
"Professor Leonard Kleinrock: [Recalling the first internet message] Now, what was that first message? Many people don't know this. Professor Leonard Kleinrock: All we wanted to do was log in from our computer to a computer 400 miles to the north up at Stanford Research Institute. Professor Leonard Kleinrock: To log in, you have to type "L O G" and that machine was smart enough to type the "I N". Professor Leonard Kleinrock: To make sure this was happening properly, we had our programmer and the programmer up north connected by a telephone handset, just to make sure it was going correctly. Professor Leonard Kleinrock: So Charlie typed the "L" [Mimicking the conversation over the telephone handset] Professor Leonard Kleinrock: and said "You get the 'L'?" Professor Leonard Kleinrock: Bill said, "Yup, got the L." Professor Leonard Kleinrock: Typed 'O'. Professor Leonard Kleinrock: "You get the 'O'?" Professor Leonard Kleinrock: "Yup, got the 'O'." Professor Leonard Kleinrock: Typed in the 'G' and crash! The SRI computer crashed. Professor Leonard Kleinrock: So the first message ever on the internet was "LO", as in "lo and behold". We couldn't have asked for a more succinct, more powerful, more prophetic message than "LO"."
"Lawrence Krauss: Most Science-fiction missed the most important thing in the world, which is the internet itself. They had flying cars. They had rocket ships. None of that exists, but the internet governs our lives today. It used to be that when you communicated with someone, the person you were communicating with was as important as the information; Now on the internet, the person is unimportant at all. Becoming your own filter will be the challenge of the future. Will our children's children's children need the companionship of humans - or will they have evolved in a world where that's not important? It sounds awful doesn't it? But maybe it will be fine, and the companionship of robots and an intelligent internet will be sufficient. Who am I to say?"