Steve,
Many thanks for your post.
You say “you can’t find a way to put it on line”. This is something that I have never said. What I have said is
words to the effect that I feel it is more important that I spend my time on further developing Simplex.
With regards to the Loebner Prize, I have always thought it would be fun to enter but stopped pursuing the idea when
I read about how I had to connect to some interface software etc. Moreover, my original enthusiasm for doing this
changed when I read Moham Embars (winner in 2012?) original website, seemingly now no longer accessible!
Wikipedia’s current entry on this competition has also had a bearing:
QUOTE
Within the field of artificial intelligence, the Loebner Prize is somewhat controversial; the most prominent critic,
Marvin Minsky, has called it a publicity stunt that does not help the field along.[1]
In addition, the time limit of 5 minutes and the use of untrained and unsophisticated judges has resulted in some
wins that may be due to trickery rather than to plausible intelligence.[citation needed]
UNQUOTE
Having said that, I do think it would be fun to enter ... I would like to emphasise the word fun. In any event, I remain
grateful to this competition for providing frequent pointers to questions which do demonstrate whether a system is possibly intelligent.
Moreover that competition by it’s very nature has guided me in many ways. Not least, by ensuring that Simplex is
able to learn. ie The competition requires the system pretend to be human so the system needs its’ own life story.
That itself led me to ensure that Simplex learnt from a stream of statements such as:
your name is simplex
you were born on ... ...
You like ... ...
Your favourite ...
etc etc etc
(NB No clues from capital letters or punctuation because speech has none!)
Following my golden rules of programming (where possible always cater for the general case rather than the specific case) that in turn led me to ensure that statement such as:
My Aunt Sally’s piano teacher is called David
Davids phone number is ... ...
This in turn led me to ensure that Simplex could understand any form of relationship between people etc. I could go
on but it’s late and my second whisky is nearly finished.
To sum up ... the idea of having ‘a back story’ at first sight seems irrelevant to AI but every entity has one. Moreover,
every entity has relationships with other entities. These two facts have profound implications for any AI system.
Jim.