> in practice we currently have exponentially less real-world data for an exponentially harder problem
Is that where learning comes in? Any actual AGI machine will be able to learn. We should be able to buy a robot that comes ready to learn and we teach it all the things we want it to do. That might mean a lot of broken dishes at first, but it's about what you would expect if you were to ask a toddler to load your dishes into the dishwasher.
My personal bar for when we reach actual AGI is when it can be put in a robot body that can navigate our world, understand spatial relationships, and can learn from ordinary people.
Is that where learning comes in? Any actual AGI machine will be able to learn. We should be able to buy a robot that comes ready to learn and we teach it all the things we want it to do. That might mean a lot of broken dishes at first, but it's about what you would expect if you were to ask a toddler to load your dishes into the dishwasher.
My personal bar for when we reach actual AGI is when it can be put in a robot body that can navigate our world, understand spatial relationships, and can learn from ordinary people.