Erik Naggum <erik@naggum.no> wrote:
+---------------
| there's something in the engineering culture that just doesn't quite get
| this idea that people want to be relieved of remembering accurately, and
| there's no limit to what people don't want to remember. whenever I call
| directory assistance, for instance, chances are that I will call again
| the next time I need the same number unless I write it down, but all of
| this stuff is already in electronic form, so why can't the stupid
| telephone just record it? sigh. some technologies are so lame.
+---------------
This month's Scientific American has three articles about some very
interesting work being done at the MIT Media Lab's "Project Oxygen" for
imbuing such characteristics into hand-held devices, especially speaker-
independent voice-response systems with enough knowledge of English that
you could say "Call the last number I asked directory assistance for",
and it would.
They have a working prototype weather information system that handles
qeuries like these [paraphrased from memory, but see the sidebar on the
second "Oxygen" article]:
Q: What's the weather in Boston?
A: The current weather in Boston is 54 degrees with clear skies.
Q: How about Washington?
A: The current weather in Washington is 49 degrees and raining.
Q: And tomorrow?
A: The forcast weather for Washington tomorrow is 51 degrees and
occasional light rain showers.
-Rob
-----
Rob Warnock, 8L-855 rpw3@sgi.com
Applied Networking http://reality.sgi.com/rpw3/
Silicon Graphics, Inc. Phone: 650-933-1673
1600 Amphitheatre Pkwy. FAX: 650-933-0511
Mountain View, CA 94043 PP-ASEL-IA