>> Most people haven't a clue what it takes to make real-time AI really work.

Wow.  I'm really unimpressed.  First off, your list of kludges that *you* have 
to go through to make *your* program work is truly frightening.  You are 
obviously very invested in the idea that you are much smarter than the entire 
rest of the software industry.  Most people would assume that newer versions of 
software are generally better (except for too many added features).  Good thing 
that you're smarter than that and know how to trash a machine so your stuff 
will work.

>> Then there is the fact that Dr. Eliza operates according to principles that 
>> aren't taught in any school and would be unfamiliar without some external 
>> education. 

Sounds like voodoo to me -- unless you have all this stuff written up so that 
you can provide this education (and the education can be validated).  Didn't 
think so.

>> Hence, I see a LOT of frustration and probably no benefit from such a 
>> posting.

Or a LOT of laughter and no benefit to you.    ;-)



  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Steve Richfield 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Sunday, April 13, 2008 4:12 PM
  Subject: Re: [agi] Comments from a lurker...


  Mark,


  On 4/12/08, Mark Waser <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 
    So . . . . are you willing to immediately release your current Dr. Eliza 
code to Open Source and let us see it and help humanity together?

  Most people haven't a clue what it takes to make real-time AI really work. I 
have attached an article that explains some of it. You must first remove a lot 
of problematical software from a new target computer, install a bunch of 
"obsolete" versions of software, go through ~2 hours of install process, and 
often spend another couple of hours (and sometimes a couple of days) making 
small code changes to deal with some new environmental factor, e.g. an 
unfamiliar version of Windows.


  Then there is the fact that Dr. Eliza operates according to principles that 
aren't taught in any school and would be unfamiliar without some external 
education. The way that I show its operation in person, is to call up the 
"maintenance panel" and start explaining how the dozens of tables work together 
to make it all work. Sometimes I make small changes to demonstrate resulting 
changes in operation. There are ~100K lines of code to do NOTHING other than 
what the tables tell it to do, and sweep the irregularities of all underlying 
systems "under the rug". When you understand the tables, you then understand 
Dr. Eliza. Without that understanding, the code would be meaningless; and with 
that understanding, the code would be redundant. To illustrate, a friend made 
much of it work in German, including things that are uniquely German like 
run-on words, by simply making appropriate table entries.

  Hence, I see a LOT of frustration and probably no benefit from such a posting.

  Steve Richfield
  ================

      ----- Original Message ----- 
      From: Steve Richfield 
      To: [email protected] 
      Sent: Saturday, April 12, 2008 1:53 AM
      Subject: Re: [agi] Comments from a lurker...

       
      Vladimir,


      On 4/11/08, Vladimir Nesov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 
        > Hence, simulational System Dynamics must be confined to systems whose
        > operation can be observed or instrumented. Unfortunately, this lets 
out most
        > of the REALLY important real-world problems, especially medicine, from
        > simulated solution. That reasoning new cures for medical conditions 
that are
        > unknown to the computer at once appears to be SO difficult, yet is
        > relatively easy given the right approach, is why I/we chose chronic 
illness,
        > the hardest part of medicine, as our demo.
        >

        Why does it follow? There is only a difference of degree. If you've
        got a messy real-world problem, you know little, if you have an
        algorithm giving the solution, you know all. The trick is to be able
        to benefit from many intermediate grades of specification.

      This has two different answers:

      #1: When your doctor has just told you that you have something incurable 
(I have been there) is a really bad time to start a large research project, 
ESPECIALLY when the answers are already out there, but in small fragments that 
must be strung together. My own illness took me 4 months to locate the pieces 
and string them together. This should have only taken a few minutes with 
something like Dr. Eliza. Why bother simulating something when the research has 
already been done?
       
      #2: The entire world is working on thousands of important research 
problems. Yes, you CAN apply SD principles and develop a simulation that may 
help with one of those problems, despite its imperfections. Many of the 
millions of people in the world are applying SD principles to the thousands of 
problems right now. Yes, anything that can help with such efforts would be very 
useful, however...

      A machine that tracks what EVERYONE is doing, collects the fragments of 
wisdom that come from every project and has the entire world's wisdom to apply 
to ANY stated problem, whether or not the person stating the problem has any 
clue at all what lies inside the computer or what to ask. THAT would be 
thousands of times more valuable than any one SD tool, however successful it 
might be. THAT is what Dr. Eliza was designed to do.

      YES, something like Dr. Eliza would be more powerful if people had better 
SD and other tools to perform their research. As things now stand, the Internet 
is only a library with absolutely NO ability to take fragments from here and 
there and string them all together to solve a problem. Dr. Eliza's methods 
makes the information ACTIVE and able to interrelate.

      I certainly wouldn't discourage anyone from developing better research 
tools. However, the vast majority of existing research is presently 
inaccessible unless you know exactly what to ask for, and adding more to this 
inaccessible lot seems to me to be of diminishing value until something like 
Dr. Eliza is on everyone's desktop to string the bits of wisdom together to 
solve everyone's real-world problems. THEN would be a good time to switch 
efforts as you suggest, when the tools are in place to fully utilize the sorts 
of things that you are looking to develop.

      Steve Richfield


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