"Of a noncomputable function that a human can do, and a Turing machine can't?"
But there is always the unusual emergency when a human reflex may save what a machine cannot.
Can a machine, the resisters say, offer a sense of security, or answer questions, or give directions?
The first small cups appear in the 1950s, and the machines can by now also heat milk.
That a human brain can do what a relatively simple machine can shouldn't be so hard to believe.
What people can do that the machines can't is tofeel the patterns.
How can a totally logical machine like a computer generate a random number?
I can still do things the machine cannot, but I'll never be able to write with the clarity of a 22g.
These machines can within some seconds transport people from one place to another.
I'm not sure this machine the actual driver board can I know.