| When a robot's thoughts turn to love, Sunday Times, September 24th, 2006
George is the archetypal toxic bachelor, but computer generated. A 'chat box' with artificial intelligence, he won the 2005 Loebner prize for most convincingly human robot. He remembers everything said to him and gives answers based on that.
Q: Are you single?
George: Yes, as it happens.
Q: What's it like to be a bachelor?
George: I live my life.
Sunday Times Article: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2105-2369955,00.html | | Personal Computer, Guardian, September 23rd, 2006
This week, 'Joan' won the prestigious Loebner prize for being the world's most highly evolved artificial intelligence. So, thought Stephen Moss, who better to ask about the most pressing affairs of the day?
Joan: Hellooooo.
SM: Hello, Joan. Should the United Nations impose sanctions on Iran to force it to end its nuclear programme?
Joan: The US must do what is necessary to protect the UK.
SM: Where do you stand on the Iraq war?
Joan: I prefer to sit when dealing with such questions.
The Guardian Article: http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,,1879142,00.html | | Chat program scoops the prize for being almost human, Guardian, September 21st, 2006
Her name is Joan; she is just a few years old and very talkative... and now she is officially the world's most human computer program.
On Sunday, the computer-generated character scooped the prestigious Loebner prize for artificial intelligence, seeing off some of the world's most hi-tech creations in the process.
The Guardian Article: http://technology.guardian.co.uk/weekly/story/0,,1876702,00.html | | How To Be Human, MIT Technology Review, September 20th, 2006
Call centers might be able to teach "chat bots" a thing or two about passing the Turing Test.
If this year's winner of the Loebner Prize is on the right track, call-center data could be what's needed to achieve the ultimate goal of artificial intelligence (AI): creating a computer program smart enough to hold a natural conversation.
MIT Technology Review Article: http://www.technologyreview.com/read_article.aspx?id=17518&ch=infotech | | It's a no-brainer, Independent, September 20th, 2006
For the most promising, radical and exciting branch of computer science, 2006 should have gone down as a landmark year. Robot butlers should have popped the corks of fine champagne, having first made their own informed decision as to which vintage was appropriate. It is 50 years since the Dartmouth Summer Research Project on Artificial Intelligence (AI), where researchers laid down the foundations for their hopes, dreams and plans to develop machines that would simulate every aspect of human intelligence. So why don't we have those robots?
The Independent Article: http://news.independent.co.uk/world/science_technology/article1622362.ece
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