A woman who could be an artificial intelligence girlfriend for the entire world is about to go on a trip to the stars.
The Artificial Intelligence Research Institute (AIRI) has partnered with NASA to launch a supercomputer called AIRI-11 to explore and map the Milky Way Galaxy.
The trip will take them to the far reaches of the universe, the Institute’s director, Anil Dash, told CNN.
“We are going to explore the farthest reaches of our universe, to explore all of the galaxies that we can see and find all the interesting things that are out there,” Dash said.
“That’s the goal.”
The trip will include a stop at the International Space Station.
The institute has plans to explore beyond the stars in the 2030s.
“Our trip will explore what it is like to live in space, how you can live in orbit and what it’s like to be in space,” Dash told CNN in a video interview.
“We want to create worlds where you can have a life beyond the planet, where you have the ability to live and do anything, even if it’s just on the surface.”
It will be the first time the AIRI has taken a trip into space.
The company is the brainchild of a group of Stanford University researchers and engineers, including former NASA astronaut Mark Kelly.
The trip is being sponsored by NASA and the National Science Foundation, Dash said, and will be free of charge.
The AIRI is one of the world’s largest research centers for artificial intelligence.
It recently hired a group led by former Google CEO Eric Schmidt to research and develop new methods of making artificial intelligence more human-like.
AIRI, which is also known as the Machine Intelligence Research Lab (MIRL), has been involved in a number of projects, including developing facial recognition systems for military use.
In addition to the trip to outer space, the AIISI will explore deep space, exploring the planets beyond the sun.
Dash said they will explore planets like Europa, Titan and Enceladus.
The institute’s first goal is to map a large swath of the sky that includes Jupiter and Saturn, and then study the moons of Jupiter, including Europa and Titan.
It also plans to make a flyby of the icy moon Io, which was discovered in 2005.
In the 2030’s, Dash hopes to make an attempt at a trip in deep space.
“That would be an exploration of a moon, and we’re looking forward to seeing that in the next few years,” he said.
“If we can find an ice planet, it would be really cool to go and look for a sample of ice,” he added.