Absolutely. I wouldn’t call Bresenham AI. In some contexts, like games, I might call A* search AI. But to someone from the Victorian era who paid people to compute taylor series by hand, something basic and flexible like a microprocessor which can run bresenham or FFT or etc. etc. … might have been seen as artificial intelligence. Using a machine to solve a problem that normally requires human brainpower.
Absolutely. I wouldn’t call Bresenham AI. In some contexts, like games, I might call A* search AI. But to someone from the Victorian era who paid people to compute taylor series by hand, something basic and flexible like a microprocessor which can run bresenham or FFT or etc. etc. … might have been seen as artificial intelligence. Using a machine to solve a problem that normally requires human brainpower.