Transparent
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Networks | Amazon Prime Video |
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Creators | Jill Soloway |
Writers | Jill Soloway |
Our Lady J | |
Noah Harpster | |
Faith Soloway | |
Sep 21, 2017 | |
Caught this series on Amazon prime video purely by chance but I was hooked straightaway. I ended up watching all the . . . | |
Joey Soloway | |
9 | |
See | |
Reviews | www.imdb.com |
Program creator | Joey Soloway |
Genres | Comedy Drama |
Releas | February 6, 2014 –; September 27, 2019 |
Cast | Jeffrey Tambor |
Gaby Hoffmann | |
Amy Landecker | |
Trace Lysette | |
Kathryn Hahn | |
First episode | USA |
Lab fact 1p starring | Jeffrey Tambor; Gaby Hoffmann; Jay Duplass; Amy Landecker; Judith Light; Kathryn Hahn |
Lab fact 1p no of episodes | 41 |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 729553 |
Golden Globe Award for Best Television Series – Musical or Comedy
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Original Main Title Theme Music
Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Comedy Series
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing for a Comedy Series
Satellite Award for Best Actor in a Television Series - Comedy or Musical
Critics' Choice Television Award for Best Actor in a Comedy Series
Peabody Award - Entertainment
Danny Thomas Producer of the Year Award in Episodic Television - Comedy
Directors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directing – Comedy Series
Satellite Award for Best Television Series – Musical or Comedy
British Academy Television International Award
Critics' Choice Television Award for Best Guest Performer in a Comedy Series
GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Comedy Series
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Costumes For a Contemporary Series, Limited Series or Movie
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Production Design for a Narrative Program (Half-Hour or Less)
18
About Transparent
Members of a dysfunctional family keep secrets from each other. However, things change after a dramatic confession from one of the family members causes everyone to spill out their secrets.
Russell Brand: BBC pledges 'full transparency' in internal review
... He said: " The objective is to be totally Transparent - just share what we have and be really supportive in terms of how we do it...
How long until a robot is doing your dishes?
... " This is a problem that engages a lot of different complex issues in an AI driven robotics system, because bags are floppy, they re Transparent...
UK foreign aid cuts: Thousands will die as a result, says report
... Andrew Mitchell, the development minister, gave it to the International Development Committee as part of his efforts to make UK aid spending more Transparent - as it used to be before the Department for International Development was merged with the more secretive Foreign Office...
Pita Limjaroenrat: Thai election upstart who vows to be different
... And they understood - it was clear, it was Transparent - that this was one of the agendas we wanted to push...
Leicester disorder: Hindu groups set to boycott review
... " And a process of selecting that panel or person that is clear and Transparent - and none of those apply in this case...
Chip shortage: Has Europe's plan arrived too late?
... " How does it increase your resilience against supply disruptions if you source [a percentage] of those chips domestically? Instead, he suggests, car makers and other industries in Europe should make their supply chains more resilient by making them more Transparent - and stockpiling chips in advance of the next crisis...
Charli XCX on your lockdown album: 'Why don't I have this?'
... But this time, the write process is completely Transparent to games, demos and exchange of the first draft on her...
Crypto-Queen: this woman is deceived, the world, and then disappeared
......
How long until a robot is doing your dishes?
By Ben MorrisTechnology of Business Editor
Imagine The biggest market for a physical product you can. Are you thinking of mobile phones? Cars? Property?
They are all chunky markets but in The Coming decades a new product will be rolled out that will dwarf those giants, says Geordie Rose, The Chief executive of Sanctuary AI.
The Vancouver-based firm is developing a humanoid robot called Phoenix which, when complete, will understand what we want, understand The Way The World works and have The skills to carry out our commands.
" The Long term total addressable market is The biggest one that's ever existed in The history of business and Technology - which is The labour market. It's all of The things we want done, " he says.
Before we get too ahead of ourselves, he qualifies that statement: " There is a Long way to go from where We Are today. "
Mr Rose is unwilling to put a time frame on when a robot might be in your house, doing your laundry or cleaning The Bathroom . But others I have spoken to in The sector say it could be within Ten Years .
Dozens of other firms around The World are working on The Technology .
In The UK, Dyson is investing in AI and robotics.
Perhaps The highest profile company in The Market is Tesla, Elon Musk 's Electric Car company.
It is working on, which Mr Musk says could be on sale to The Public in a few year's time.
We will see whether that turns out be The case. What we can say now is that leaps forward in Artificial Intelligence mean The development of humanoid Robots is accelerating.
" Ten Years at The pace The Technology is moving now is is an eternity. You know, every month, There 's new developments in The AI world that are like fundamental change, " says Mr Rose, who has a background in Theoretical Physics and previously founded a quantum computing company.
Mainstream interest in AI exploded late Last Year when a powerful version of ChatGPT was made public. Its ability to generate all sorts of useful text and images has spawned rivals and a wave of investment in AI tech.
But developing The AI that would allow a robot to complete useful tasks is a different and more difficult task.
Unlike ChatGPT and its rivals, humanoid Robots have to navigate The physical world and need to understand how objects in that world relate to each other.
Tasks that seem easy to many humans are major feats for humanoid Robots .
For example, in a trial project, Sanctuary's robot Phoenix has been packing clothes into plastic bags in The backroom of a Canadian shop.
" This is a problem that engages a lot of different complex issues in an AI driven robotics system, because bags are floppy, They 're Transparent . . There 's a place where They open.
" Usually after you manually open The bag, you have to release one hand And Then go and put something in a bag, " says Mr Rose.
" The manipulation of bags is is actually very, very hard for Robots , " he adds - a line which makes today's humanoid Robots seem much less scary than some of their Hollywood counterparts.
Sanctuary has a system for training Phoenix on specific tasks like bag packing. In partnership with a business, it will film a particular task being done And Then digitise The whole event.
That data is used to create a virtual environment which, as well as containing all The objects, simulates The Physics including gravity and resistance.
The AI can then practise The Task in that virtual environment. It can have A Million attempts and when The developers think The AI has mastered The Event in The virtual world, it will be allowed to try in The physical world.
In this way Phoenix has been trained to do about 20 different roles.
Mr Rose sees this as The Way forward for humanoid Robots - mastering specific tasks that will be useful for business. A robot that can do household chores is much further down The Line .
One of The biggest challenges is to give The robot a sense of touch, so it knows how much pressure to apply to an object.
" We have a facility with these types of tasks that comes from an evolutionary heritage, that's like a billion years Long . . They 're very hard for machines, " says Mr Rose.
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A huge amount of work still needs to be done to build a robot that can cope with all The Events that could occur in a home or busy workplace.
" You cannot put a robot in an unstructured environment And Then ask it to move around without basically destroying things. It's too much for Technology to ask at this moment of time, " says Prof Alireza Mohammadi, who established The Robotic Motion Intelligence Lab at The University of Michigan-Dearborn.
He points out that you can put an AI through millions of training scenarios, but There 's always a chance in The Real world that it meets something it has never seen before and react in an unpredictable and perhaps dangerous way.
Part of The Problem , he says, is that humans have an intuitive understanding of context and consequences. For example we might guess that an over-excited dog might jump in front of us and make allowances for that.
Building that into a robot is extremely difficult.
" Within Ten Years we might have Robots that are capable of walking around with some guidance, but not in completely unstructured environments, " says Prof Mohammadi.
But if those challenges can be overcome, then could humanoid Robots start taking jobs currently done by humans?
Mr Rose points out that There is a shortage of workers in many countries and his Robots could One Day fill those positions.
Stewart Miller is The Chief executive of The National Robotarium, a partnership between Heriot-Watt University and The University of Edinburgh, which focuses on AI and robotics.
" Inevitably, There 's going to be Robots doing jobs that were done by human beings in The Past . . The question then is, what does that mean? " he says.
" We will go through some Growing Pains . But when we think about it, we can start emphasising and concentrating on what human beings do Best - freeing up that capacity to do that, and not having to spend time doing what machines are Best doing. "
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com