Encyclopedia of Life "Welcome to the first release of the Encyclopedia of Life portal. This is the very beginning of our exciting journey to document all species of life on Earth. Comprehensive, collaborative, ever-growing, and personalized, the Encyclopedia of Life is an ecosystem of websites that makes all key information about all life on Earth accessible to anyone, anywhere in the world."
Learn how this got started. A Web Page For Every Species.
Over the years I've had many opportunities to work with professionals
from various fields. In every endeavor, computer technology is utterly
transformative. But not every field gets this. Some scientists,
lisenced experts, and professionals are allergic to new technology.
I had an epiphany recently on why some varieties of
professionals are more welcoming of disruptive technology than others.
I realized the types of pros who are most eager to employ the latest
technology are those fields which have already been Turing'd.
We have this long list of tasks and occupations that we humans believe
only humans can do. Used to be things like using tools, language,
painting, playing chess. Now, one by one they get Turing'd. A computer
beats them. Does it better.
So far we've can check off arithmetic, spelling, flying planes,
playing chess, wiring chips, scheduling tasks, welding, etc. All have
been Turing'd.
Computer scientists are great to work with, because in general they are
completely fearless. They were Turing'd long ago. They grok that many
of the tasks they used to do can be done much better by computers. On
the other hand, doctors as a rule are loathed to accept new technology
because what they do is hard to delegate to computers. Ditto for a lot
of biologists.
Within biology there are certain fields that have already been
Turing'd. For instance, phylogeny, the study of taxonomic trees, how
different species are related to each other. Figuring out phylogenetic
trees turns out to be something computers can do better than even the
smartest, most learned humans -- even though nobody believed this only
a little while ago. So phylogenists are Turing'd and very open to new
ways of doing things.
Taxonomists and field biologists, on the other hand, still believe that
computers can't recognize or classify organisms as well as human can.
Ooops. They are about to be Turing'd. Doctors, too.
Once you are Turing'd it is much easier to believe other
occupations which we humans used to do uniquely, can be done by
computers. You tend to be open to disruptive technology in all parts
of your life.
Have you been Turing'd?