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I dont understand

Lou1024
2006-01-20
2013-03-21
  • Lou1024

    Lou1024 - 2006-01-20

    Im new to this sort of stuff. When I run the version of mind in Java or Win32Forth, the AI goes far to fast to even write any thing.  When i do get something in, all I get is a "I AM WHAT"

     
    • Arthur T. Murray

      You need to teach the AI mind some facts, such as what various animals eat. For instance, you may enter, "cats eat fish" and "fish eat bugs" and "bugs eat germs". Then you may ask the AI questions such as, "what do cats eat".

      Mind.Forth at http://mind.sourceforge.net/mind4th.html is currently the most advanced version. Many bugs were removed from Mind.Forth in 2005, and now the plan for 2006 is first to finish improving Mind.Forth, then port the improvements to http://mind.sourceforge.net/Mind.html in JavaScript.

      There is a growing installed user base of AI mind enthusiasts who have installed the http://mind.sourceforge.net/Mind.html AI on their local hard disks, where a link at the top of the program invites users to check for an update at the original source of the http://mind.sourceforge.net/Mind.html program.

      For now, only the Mind.Forth AI is properly functional and it should be especially interesting in Tutorial mode.

       
    • Lou1024

      Lou1024 - 2006-01-21

      Thanks, I tried it, but I keep getting the same "I AM WHAT" or "I DO WHAT I DO WHAT"  There is also a considerable amount of time the AI is "Thinking". How long am I supposed to wait?
      Sorry for being a pest,
      Lou

       
    • Arthur T. Murray

      You should say whether you are using Mind.Forth or Mind.html (which is temporarily obsolete) in JavaScript for Microsoft Internet Explorer.

      If you are using http://mind.sourceforge.net/mind4th.html then you may need to make sure that your version of Win32Forth is the http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/win32forth/W32FOR42_671.zip?download described as W32FOR42_671.zip on the source code page. Mind.Forth is being coded in that last release by Tom Zimmer, and may possibly require that particular version of Win32Forth in order to work right.

      When Mind.Forth is properly up and running, it thinks really fast. In Tutorial Mode, it reveals its process of thinking *while* it is thinking.

      The current Mind.Forth deactivates its concepts too rapidly, and so each chain of associative thought tends to die out all too quickly. Then the Ego module resurrects the briefly brain-dead AI mind by activating the ego concept of self, or by identifying the oldest active concept and basing a new thought on the oldest active concept.

      Questions from users are very welcome here. It should be possible to try Mind.Forth until it starts working right -- as described in the User Manual.

       

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