

![]() 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 Human Machine Interaction
Autonomous
Systems for remote sensing and inspection |
One major clue testifies to the fact that 2001 depicts
fiction not fact: things work smoothly. The only failures are central
to the plot, the main one being the apparent failure of HAL himself;
yet even this lapse is more a result of an unresolved conflict of
goals rather than of error. Two other, human, errors -- one
trivial, one potentially lethal -- also occur. When David Bowman
removes his food mush from the food-preparation unit, he burns himself
slightly. His potentially lethal mistake comes when he forgets to take
along his helmet as he rushes to the space capsule to try to rescue
Frank Poole. (More about this mistake later.)
The film represents an unobtainable utopia where technology works flawlessly and humans make no errors in using it. Today, researchers spend considerable effort studying human-machine interactions in an attempt to minimize difficulties and problems. Watching 2001, we see no difficulties. What a welcome change from the reality of NASA's Apollo 13 -- a flight beset by troublesome -- and therefore realistic -- mechanical and design problems. The major tour de force of 2001, of course, is HAL, that magnificent computer with the forbidding stare. HAL was the embodiment of perfect technology. Nothing is beyond his powers, not even lies or full voice understanding -- even of elliptical sentences spoken at a distance. HAL's voice output is kindly, strong, and very human-sounding. With HAL on board, one wonders, why are humans even needed on the mission? -- a thought that obviously occurs to HAL, who concludes that they aren't. Yet, the otherwise perfect HAL errs and only manages to kill four of the five humans on Discovery.
Ah, the 1960s -- era of profound optimism in technology! Technology
could do no harm. Computers would get bigger and bigger, both in
physical size and in power. Artificial intelligence (AI) was just
around the corner. Why, by January 12, 1997, the date of HAL's
creation, the AI problem would surely be solved: computers would be
able to mimic -- and exceed -- the highest achievements of human
intelligence.
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