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June 05, 2005

AI: expert systems and Cyc

[Crazy But Able] One of the first real successes of the AI community was in the field of expert systems. The idea goes like this: what if we could distill all of the experience, knowledge, and wisdom of an expert in a field and put all of that concentrated knowledge into a computer program? Then anyone could use the computer program and be really smart about whatever the program knows about...

Some slightly related from Technorati and Google.

http://staff.ncst.ernet.in [Staff.ncst.ernet.in] Sasi's home: Constraint programming for solving complex problems. Invited talk at the ISAI-2001 international symposium, Kolhapur. InAkerkar R (ed), Artificial Intelligence - Future trends, Allied publishers, 2002.

Bizrules.com[Bizrules.com] BizRules.com | News & Library | Articles | Rules and CRM: Originally known as Inference in the 1980's, it became Brightware in the 1990's, and spun off into MindBox last year. According to Richard Barfus, President and CEO of MindBox, "The very process of personalization is enhanced when you use business rules and AI technology. And I mean personalization for complex products - I'm not talking about buying books. For complex products, personalization only makes sense if you talk about eligibility in conjunction with profitability.

http://blogindm.blogspot.com [Blogindm.blogspot.com] Blog in Dm: There is a subset of the Carlebach Purist, which is the hippie musician Carlebach Purist, who knows all the Carlebach tunes and knows that Shlomo, who he has never met, wouldn't want a trumpet player to play on his tune, especially when the trumpet,(or sax or trombone) player played with Shlomo numerous times. Which is kinda like the Choson who once told me that he didn't want trumpets at his wedding because they sound so obnoxious. Then he told me that he loved Miles Davis, who played...wait, what instrument is that?

[Kingsblog.org.uk] The King's BLOG: I say just green but of course there are many shades of green ranging right the way through from light green to dark green.  Sometimes there are little clumps of largely faded coloured flowers but they don't amount to much in contrast to what can be found in certain Kingsley gardens - maybe the gardeners stole all the wildflowers and replanted them at home in their gardens - I think we should be told.

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Posted at June 5, 2005 11:23 AM

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