Ray Kurzweil

Ray Kurzweil

Co-Founder & Chancellor, Singularity University

A person with short brown hair wearing a blue checkered shirt, smiling slightly against a plain white background.

Ray Kurzweil is a world class inventor, thinker, and futurist, with a 35-year track record of accurate predictions. He was the principal inventor of the first CCD flat-bed scanner, the first omni-font optical character recognition, the first print-to-speech reading machine for the blind, the first text-to-speech synthesizer, and many more. For these achievements, he was selected as one of the top entrepreneurs by Inc. magazine, which described him as the “rightful heir to Thomas Edison.”

Ray has received a Grammy Award for outstanding achievements in music technology. He is also the recipient of the National Medal of Technology, was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame, and holds honors from three US presidents. Ray has written five national best-selling books including The Singularity Is Near (2005) and How to Create a Mind (2012). He is also a principal researcher and AI visionary at Google, looking at the long-term implications of technology and society

I'm not actually predicting that until 2029 that we will match human intelligence, but computers will nonetheless do things that humans can't do.
We won't be able to solve the major problems that we have without more intelligence. 
I think you have a very different perspective on the future when you consider the exponential growth of information technology.  
My prediction is, in a few decades, we will come to accept entities that are not biological as conscious. 
There's a million apps out there, and if you look through all of them they're doing remarkable things. 
Intelligence actually involves things like being funny, being sexy or expressing a loving sentiment, maybe in a poem or in a musical piece. 
I did do an analysis of the 147 predictions I did for 2009 in my book, The Age of Spiritual Machines, which I wrote in the mid to late 1990’s […]