Photo de l'auteur

Chen Qiufan

Auteur de Waste Tide

21+ oeuvres 352 utilisateurs 16 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Comprend les noms: 陈楸帆, Qiufan Chen

Œuvres de Chen Qiufan

Waste Tide (2013) 317 exemplaires
Nebula: Fantascienza contemporanea cinese (Future Fiction) (2017) — Contributeur — 4 exemplaires
Marea tóxica (2019) 3 exemplaires
Marea tossica (2020) 2 exemplaires
Forger Mr. Z 1 exemplaire
The Year of the Rat 1 exemplaire
Balin 1 exemplaire
Råttans år : fem noveller (2020) 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Broken Stars: Contemporary Chinese Science Fiction in Translation (2019) — Contributeur — 366 exemplaires
Loosed upon the World: The Saga Anthology of Climate Fiction (2015) — Contributeur — 108 exemplaires
The Best Science Fiction of the Year: Volume 1 (2016) — Contributeur — 101 exemplaires
Year's Best Weird Fiction, Vol. 1 (2014) — Contributeur — 98 exemplaires
The Apex Book of World SF 2 (2012) — Contributeur — 87 exemplaires
The Best of World SF: Volume 1 (2021) — Contributeur — 86 exemplaires
Upgraded (2014) — Contributeur — 79 exemplaires
Tomorrow's Parties: Life in the Anthropocene (Twelve Tomorrows) (2022) — Contributeur — 27 exemplaires
Clarkesworld: Issue 160 (January 2020) (2020) — Contributeur — 15 exemplaires
Science Fiction: Voyage to the Edge of Imagination (2022) — Interviewee — 15 exemplaires
Clarkesworld: Issue 115 (April 2016) (2016) — Contributeur — 13 exemplaires
Clarkesworld Year Nine: Volume One (2018) — Contributeur — 8 exemplaires
Clarkesworld: Issue 155 (August 2019) (2019) — Contributeur — 7 exemplaires
Clarkesworld: Issue 163 (April 2020) (2020) — Narrateur, quelques éditions; Contributeur — 5 exemplaires
Clarkesworld: Issue 059 (August 2011) (2011) — Auteur — 4 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Autres noms
Chan, Stanley
Date de naissance
1981-11-30
Sexe
male
Nationalité
China
Lieu de naissance
Shantou, Guangdong Province, China

Membres

Critiques

Ai 2041: un viaggio affascinante nel futuro dell'intelligenza artificiale, scritto da Kai-Fu Lee e Qiufan Chen, offre una panoramica intrigante e ricca di spunti di riflessione su come l'IA permeerà la nostra vita nei prossimi decenni. Attraverso dieci racconti avvincenti ambientati nel 2041, gli autori esplorano le molteplici sfaccettature di questa tecnologia rivoluzionaria, intrecciando sapientemente fiction e analisi scientifica.

Un futuro ricco di opportunità e sfide. Il libro dipinge un quadro affascinante di un futuro in cui l'IA si integra in ogni aspetto della nostra esistenza, dalla medicina all'istruzione, dal lavoro all'intrattenimento. L'IA viene presentata come strumento potente per migliorare la qualità della vita, automatizzare compiti routinari e risolvere problemi complessi. Tuttavia, gli autori non trascurano i potenziali rischi associati all'IA, come la disoccupazione di massa, la sorveglianza invasiva e lo sviluppo di armi autonome.

Un invito a riflettere sul ruolo dell'uomo. Al centro del libro c'è la riflessione sul ruolo dell'uomo in un mondo sempre più dominato dall'IA. Lee e Chen ci invitano a interrogarci su come vogliamo plasmare il futuro con questa tecnologia, a definire i principi etici che la guideranno e a garantire che l'IA sia utilizzata a beneficio dell'umanità.

Un'opera narrativa e scientifica di grande valore. Ai 2041 non è solo un'opera di narrativa avvincente, ma anche un'analisi scientifica rigorosa del potenziale dell'IA. Gli autori, entrambi esperti nel campo dell'intelligenza artificiale, offrono una visione realistica e ponderata delle sfide e delle opportunità che ci attendono. Il libro è ricco di dati, esempi concreti e riflessioni stimolanti che lo rendono un testo prezioso per chiunque sia interessato al futuro dell'IA.

In definitiva, Ai 2041 è un'opera da non perdere per chiunque voglia comprendere le implicazioni profonde dell'intelligenza artificiale per il nostro futuro. Un libro che ci invita a riflettere sul ruolo dell'uomo nell'era dell'IA e a prendere decisioni consapevoli per plasmare un domani migliore.

Oltre ai punti sopra menzionati, vorrei aggiungere che il libro è scritto in modo chiaro e accessibile, anche a chi non ha una conoscenza approfondita dell'intelligenza artificiale.I dieci racconti sono ben strutturati e coinvolgenti, con personaggi complessi e trame avvincenti. Il libro è ricco di spunti di riflessione che invitano il lettore a interrogarsi sul futuro dell'umanità.Consiglio vivamente la lettura di Ai 2041 a chiunque sia interessato al futuro dell'intelligenza artificiale e al suo impatto sulla società.
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Signalé
AntonioGallo | May 8, 2024 |
DNF @ page 150. For a "techno-thriller" it's not very thrilling. Lots of dim superstitions, lots of droning on about who will control the highly polluting waste recycling business, and a girly "love-interest" who has the personality of a wet paper bag - but is available for rescuing by the protagonist, and the occasional bit of torture. Bleugh!
 
Signalé
SChant | 11 autres critiques | Nov 7, 2023 |
An interesting story that gets bogged down a bit and lost its grip on me before it's not-really-climax. A critique of the usual suspects (particularly Americans, but capitalists more generally, the Japanese) but also Chinese that exploit other Chinese, ex-pats, and buried amongst all that perhaps an overall critique of "China today", environmental destruction, and maybe just the modern world. Some of that seems clearly aimed at Chinese targets (the clan leader who returned to China after suffering racism/belittlement only to turn around and practice the same x100 on internal migrants, with the full participation of his co-regionalists, etc.)

Some of it smacks of a certain kind of common (and therefore, perhaps misread on my part?) pro-Chinese/anti-US Japan Western Filipino etc. bias. Definitely a case of SF as social commentary, it's just a little hard for me to interpret with confidence what that commentary consists of.

The story itself left me wanting a bit more... so an AI popped into existence... so maybe the "A" part of that is actually not appropriate. An intelligence popped into existence as a side effect of an experimental virus and heavy metal poisoning... cool, cool. It is not-quite-evil-not-quite-good... it is like a human in that respect... cool, cool. But it is kind of evil... it sure seems like. Yeah, probably. So kill it... okay, cool, I guess. As my brother once called it, "The Heinlein approach."

But, WTF. Was it? Is it? What? And then what? Tell me more. I want to know more about that.

EDIT (a few hours after initial post): I suppose one way of interpreting some of the uncertainty and inconclusiveness is that the various things at stake (traditional vs modernized/ing society; globalized, capitalist exchange vs. older forms of exchange; development's winners vs. development's losers; short term suffering vs longer-term gain; not just technology, but a technologized world vs. a "softer"/slower/more human world; etc. etc. etc.) are still uncertain. Was Mimi 1 "evil"? Mimi 0 ultimately thought so, but Mimi 1 certainly claimed that from a vaster perspective she had great things to offer. So, too, do Scott and TerraGreen, the "evil" Americans. And, to save the world, Mimi 0 --the Chinese, the 'waste person'-- did have to all but die.

I dunno. Maybe I'm searching too hard for a deeper meaning. But worth noting that maybe some of the dissipation, or lack, of a climax is because the book is getting at the point that things are provisional, murky, even undecidable.

Maybe?
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Signalé
dcunning11235 | 11 autres critiques | Aug 12, 2023 |
I think a lot of my experience with this work of flash fuction will be a bit skewed because I have visited China (albeit I have never been to Shenzhen), so I do believe I got to enjoy this story a bit more.

The plot centers around an engineer whose high tech prototype product security job is in danger because the Chinese government has started to dismantle a series of border fences separating Shenzhen and Hong Kong and the companies located somewhat illegally in those lands being paid un foreign currency are about to be eaten alive by the mainlanders. After convincing a coworker to help him distract his boss to send a protoype to a bootleger (a real dog eats dog society), it looks like he is caught and has to flee into a Shenzhen slum where he becomes entranced by a beautiful prostitute named Winter Lotus who has a high tech holographic tramp stamp on her belly and he starts to become curious about her...

I think the highlights of the story is the real life history lesson of rural landowners buildings shambled buildings in prime real estate to get higher severence payme ts when the government inevitably expropriates the land to feed an unrelentingly hungry urban sprawl and how locals don't protest or criticize: they try to game rhe system to make a profit and cash it.

The story was pretty interesting and I would have wanted to know more about the technology the MC uses to spy on Winter Lotus but the book sadly either doesn't develop it much or it was sadly lost in translation.

I do think it was entertaining, informative and a different kind of story rhan what I am used to. Might give the author the benefit of the doubt and read some other of his translated work.
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Signalé
chirikosan | 1 autre critique | Jul 24, 2023 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
21
Aussi par
18
Membres
352
Évaluation
½ 3.6
Critiques
16
ISBN
22
Langues
7

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