
Peter Naleszkiewicz – Background and Partner Requirements
A few years after graduating from the University of Maryland with a degree in Computer Science in the mid 80’s (originally double majoring in Physics as well), Mr. Naleszkiewicz founded Progressive Computer Applications, Inc. There he was chief architect and sole developer, including for the flagship product “Graphic Artist”, a Computer Aided Design (CAD) and desktop publishing package that ran on the short-lived Atari ST platform (a Mac-like PC). This software, which he wrote in 6 months, was ahead of its time. It implemented its own virtual memory, a user editable printer driver, integrated Spreadsheet that was also used to store the graphics, and unrivaled code-efficiency (the standard platform had 0.5 MB RAM, 20MB HD and a floppy disk). After Atari shuttered its platform, Mr. Naleszkiewicz took a position with Sprint Data Services as Product Manager, and held several other positions subsequently that leveraged his ability to navigate business and technical worlds. He even self-published an unrelated book in 2012, “Magnified Capitalism” related to his ideas on how to eliminate taxes and improve our society. But he never lost interest in coding design.
As an outlet for his coding expertise, he challenged himself with the hardest problem he could think of – designing an automated system that mimicked human intelligence. Only a few close friends ever knew about this work, as it was just something he enjoyed working on and never planned to publish. He made many breakthroughs over the years as he conquered one challenge after another. Finally, after over 30 years work, the AGI problem is fully solved by the Naleszkiewicz Mind Model (NMM). The problem is that it would take him another decade or two to implement the prototype by himself (coding and testing). He has instead decided that it’s time to share elements of his design to validate his claim to potential partner-developers. The estimate is that a well qualified team of about 20-30 coders could produce a working prototype in about 18 months.
Mr. Naleszkiewicz has stated that terms for any potential partner include:
- Some version of a commercial AGI must be made freely available to the public
- All implementations will keep intact the inherent ethics and morality in the design (No attempts to circumvent)
- The details of the design itself will be released in stages and made fully public within 7 years after commercial release. This will balance the commercial goals of the partner by giving them a huge headstart, but also eventually share the full details of the scientific discovery with everyone.
- The partner can pursue and retain the many patents that will emerge.
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