Updated: 1/30/2004; 8:08:25 AM.
a hungry brain
Bill Maya's Radio Weblog
        

Saturday, July 13, 2002

The Loebner Prize for the first system to pass the Turing test. [John Robb's Radio Weblog]

Here are my morning coffee notes (ala Dave -- with the same caveats).  Will online customer service quickly become an automated activity?  I think it could.  This is rapidly becomming something this isn't a wild idea anymore (particularly given the low hurdle posed by untrained customer service reps I have had the displeasure of interacting with lately).

Check out the incarnations of the Alice Bot (the engine can be downloaded in multiple forms).  Then check out the animated 2D pictures available via the Pulse Veeper.   Now check out the quality of Loquendo's text to speech engine.  The art of the interaction would be to create a set of responses that cover all classes of customer service inquiries (suprising easy I would suspect given the time I spent doing something similar at my last job), enable access to customer account and inventory data, and combine the three different programs detailed above for an integrated experience. 

After this is done, provide data-driven flash animations of actions taken by the automated customer service rep.  For example: 1) making a credit to an account, 2) transfer of funds, 3) selection of an item for purchase, 4) instructions on how to assemble a product, and 5) instructions on how to send back an item.   Visual animated display of complex actions or info is extremely important for retention. 

In thinking about this, customer service may not be the appropriate place to apply this technology.    E-learning may be a better application.  A free form, seemingling intelligent Q&A bot that incorporates prerecorded bits of audio/animation to walk you through modules of instruction would be very cool.  Add voice to text so you can verbally interrupt a presentation to ask a question and it gets eerie.  Given that home schooling is a large market that is growing by 15% a year, and the basic modules of instruction are well understood, this could be extremely profitable at a low cost of development.

It could also be done in an app that runs on your desktop. [John Robb's Radio Weblog]

    

Software Engineering at Microsoft [Slashdot]    

New Scientist.  Scientists generate complete polio virus from scratch using little more than commonly known data and widely available tools. This was anticipated but never done before.

Frankly, this process sounds too easy.  What's not mentioned is that low cost DNA manufacturing machines could make it possible to mass produce the virus in a couple of weeks (most of the older model equipment can be bought at low cost, it's just a little slower).  I suspect that this process would also work in building designer proteins (like prions).  Note:  this kind of work can be done in a very sloppy manner and still generate signficant results.

Let me announce that this little experiment makes it officially the day that one person with a $50 k basement lab could declare war on the world, and make it an even fight.  Very, very scary thought. No need to wait for nanotech grey goo, or nuclear proliferation, etc.  Too bad that almost nobody will pay attention to this. Read "The White Plague" ASAP. [John Robb's Radio Weblog]

    

© Copyright 2004 William J. Maya.
 

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