Ray
Kurzweil
The
Restless Genius
About
Ray Kurzweil
RAY KURZWEIL
is an inventor, entrepreneur, author, and futurist. Called
“the restless genius” by the Wall Street Journal and “the
ultimate thinking machine” by Forbes, Kurzweil’s ideas on
the future have been touted by his many fans, ranging from Bill
Gates to Bill Clinton. MIT’s Marvin Minsky writes that “with
his brilliant descriptions of the coming connections of
computers with immortality, Kurzweil clearly takes his place as
a leading futurist of our time.” George Gilder writes that
“Kurzweil’s ideas make all other roads to the computer
future look like goat paths in Patagonia.” Sun Microsystems
Chief Scientist, Bill Joy, whose own discussions of the promise
and peril of technology have attracted worldwide attention,
writes in his now famous Wired magazine cover story that “I
can date the onset of my unease to the day I met Ray Kurzweil,
the deservedly famous inventor of the first reading machine for
the blind and many other amazing things.” Stevie Wonder writes
“Ray’s technology and ideas have truly been among the
sunshines of my life. Kurzweil’s writings are a wonderful riff
on the next century from a keen seer, a great inventor, and a
good friend.”
Kurzweil’s most
recent national best-selling book, The Age of Spiritual
Machines (Viking), has received widespread acclaim. It has
achieved the #1 status on Amazon in the categories of both
science and artificial intelligence and has been published in
nine languages. The New York Times writes, “Kurzweil’s
latest book ranges widely over such juicy topics as entropy,
chaos, the big bang, quantum theory, DNA computers, quantum
computers, Godel’s theorem, neural nets, genetic algorithms,
nanoengineering, the Turing test, brain scanning, the slowness
of neurons, chess playing programs, the Internet—the whole
world of information technology past, present, and future.
Kurzweil’s writings are for anyone who wonders where human
technology is going next.” Wired magazine writes, “Ray
Kurzweil has a knack for spotting the next new thing. He has
been charging into the future for nearly 40 years. He’s best
known for guerrilla assaults on conventional wisdom.” John
Casti of Nature describes Kurzweil’s latest book as a “mind
expanding account of the rise of intelligent machines. . .
.nothing less than a blueprint for how to shove Homo sapiens off
centre-stage in evolution’s endless play. . . .If you buy into
Kurzweil’s Law of Accelerating Returns—and all empirical
evidence currently available supports it completely—then the
replacement of humans by machines as the primary intellectual
force on Earth is indeed imminent.”
Ray Kurzweil is
widely regarded as one of the leading inventors of our time.
TIME Magazine writes, “Kurzweil’s eclectic career and
propensity of combining science with practical—often
humanitarian—applications have inspired comparisons with
Thomas Edison.” Kurzweil was the principal developer of the
first omni-font optical character recognition (OCR), the first
print-to-speech reading machine for the blind, the first CCD
flat-bed scanner, the first text-to-speech synthesizer, the
first music synthesizer capable of recreating the grand piano
and other orchestral instruments, and the first commercially
marketed, large-vocabulary speech recognition. These
technologies continue today as market leaders in their
respective industries, industries that Ray Kurzweil pioneered.
Kurzweil has successfully founded and developed nine companies
in OCR, music synthesis, speech recognition, reading technology,
virtual reality, financial investment, medical simulation, and
cybernetic art. Kurzweil’s web site, KurzweilAI.net, is a
leading resource on artificial intelligence, with more than
1,000,000 readers.
Ray Kurzweil
received the $500,000 Lemelson-MIT Prize, the nation’s largest
award in invention and innovation, and was inducted in 2002 into
the National Inventor Hall of Fame. He also received the 1999
National Medal of Technology, the nation’s highest honor in
technology, from President Clinton in a White House ceremony. He
has also received scores of other national and international
awards, including the 1994 Dickson Prize (Carnegie Mellon
University’s top science prize), Engineer of the Year from
Design News, Inventor of the Year from MIT, and the Grace Murray
Hopper Award from the Association for Computing Machinery. He
has received twelve honorary Doctorates and honors from three
U.S. presidents. He has received seven national and
international film awards.
Kurzweil is a widely
sought speaker and has given keynote presentations at many
leading venues, including the Microsoft CEO Summit, the World
Economic Forum, Pop!Tech, PC Expo, Business Week, The Council on
Foreign Relations, SIGGRAPH, Cowen, TED, ICASSP, the American
Psychiatric Association, Agenda, and many others. His
presentations to diverse audiences combine wit and keen insight
into contemporary issues of technology and its impact on
society. His lectures often include appearances by “Ramona,”
his “virtual female alter ego,” and other engaging
demonstrations of cutting-edge technologies that Kurzweil and
his teams have developed.
Kurzweil has written
five books and hundreds of articles. In recent years, there have
been hundreds of articles each year by or about Ray Kurzweil in
leading publications, including most major national magazines.
His first book, The Age of Intelligent Machines (MIT
Press), was named Best Computer Science Book of 1990. This book,
written in the late 1980s, has been acclaimed for its remarkably
accurate predictions about the 1990s and early 2000 years. His
new book Fantastic Voyage: Live Long Enough to Live Forever
(Rodale Books), coauthored with Terry Grossman, M.D., describes
the science behind radical life extension. His latest book, The
Singularity is Near, When Humans Transcend Biology (Viking
Sept 2005), expands upon the ever accelerating rate of
technological change and examines the union of human and
machine.
KEYNOTE FEE CATEGORY: $37,500 *
* Honorarium can
vary depending on presentation length, distance to venue and many
other factors. All fees are plus travel expenses and subject to
change, so please call for an exact quote.
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