These are great points. This is why I say that computers don't *actually* do 
anything. All they do is arrange information in a way that humans can 
understand and act upon. That human may be a software developer who then feeds 
that information to a manufacturing device to build a widget. Or it may be 
information provided to the accountant so that a printer can actually pring the 
paychecks. 

All these are incredibly useful things, but the computer is not "doing" any 
work in terms of moving mass. And what it looks like they are doing, say flying 
an airplane or drawing a spreadsheet, is really an illusion created by a long 
string of software developers to transform information we understand into a 
binary form, make some calculations, then convery the binary information back 
to another form of information. 

Bob S


> On Aug 5, 2018, at 14:35 , Mark Waddingham via use-livecode 
> <use-livecode@lists.runrev.com> wrote:
> 
> Hmmmm - I think that is missing the point about what the current 'AI' 
> technologies that exist actually do (as far as I can see anyway - I'd be more 
> than happy to be proved wrong!)...
> 
> They are merely mappings from one form input to another form of input - they 
> themselves don't do any action - the actions still have to be implemented 
> somehow.
> 
> Alexa for example by itself does diddly-squat beyond map voice to a lower 
> level actionable command (with an element of context, certainly which makes 
> it slightly interesting) - it's the skills that people 'like us' implement 
> which actually do the thing Alexa interprets that we want to be done.
> 
> Same with google assistant, siri, wolfram alpha, even google search - I can 
> type 'what is 100 usd in gbp' and it gives me the answer.
> 
> However the reason google search can do that is because some programmer at 
> google has added a hook which knows that when that pattern is searched for it 
> should call a program that has been explicitly written which looks up the 
> current exchange rate and then renders the result in a nicely formatted 
> string which appears at the top of the search results.
> 
> Warmest Regards,
> 
> Mark.
> 
> Sent from my iPhone


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