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BrianRoemmele's profile
Brian Roemmele
Brian Roemmele
Brian Roemmele
@BrianRoemmele

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Brian Roemmele

@BrianRoemmele

we can only see what we think is possible...

transcendence
VoiceFirst.expert
Joined January 2010

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    1. Brian Roemmele‏ @BrianRoemmele 27 Jul 2018
      • Report Tweet

      Brian Roemmele Retweeted Brian Roemmele

      This is a complete simulation of the 1966 era Eliza code (LISP to .JS version) with an in-browser Voice Synthesizer. https://www.masswerk.at/eliza/  This Rogerian Psychotherapist simulation is frustrating yet it portends to a rather huge announcement in late 2019. 🔮🔜 #VoiceFirsthttps://twitter.com/BrianRoemmele/status/1022932822821023744 …

      Brian Roemmele added,

      Brian Roemmele @BrianRoemmele
      In 1979 this $399 ($1300 in 2018) TRS‑80 Voice Synthesizer with Talking Eliza software, $15 and a $600 ($2400 in 2018) TRS 80 computer we had a crude vision of the future. It would take the better part of 40 years for Voice + Intent Recognition to come around. #VoiceFirst pic.twitter.com/oCDi3qOvY7
      1 reply 0 retweets 6 likes
    2. Norbert Landsteiner‏ @mass_werk 27 Jul 2018
      • Report Tweet
      Replying to @BrianRoemmele

      The port path is actually a bit more convoluted: MAD-SLIP (Joseph Weizenbaum on IBM 7094) -> Lisp (port by Bernie Cosell) -> Perl -> JS (by me, 13 years ago). :-)

      1 reply 0 retweets 2 likes
    3. Brian Roemmele‏ @BrianRoemmele 27 Jul 2018
      • Report Tweet
      Replying to @mass_werk

      Norbert, Wow, did not know. Did not know it took this path. And wow 13 years ago for the JS! Thing have moved so fast.

      1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
    4. Norbert Landsteiner‏ @mass_werk 27 Jul 2018
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      Replying to @BrianRoemmele

      That is, I'm not sure, where the Perl version came from, but I guess, it was based on the Lisp implementation. (This Perl version was then the closest to the original available to me and did, indeed, reproduce the transcripts as documented.)

      1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
    5. Brian Roemmele‏ @BrianRoemmele 27 Jul 2018
      • Report Tweet
      Replying to @mass_werk

      Norbert, Indeed. You got me looking for the Perl version. Would love to see how they made the conversion. Such an interesting and historic piece of code.

      1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
    6. Norbert Landsteiner‏ @mass_werk 27 Jul 2018
      • Report Tweet
      Replying to @BrianRoemmele

      Just had a look: It's a program named 'http://escript.pl ' (no, not an URL, Twitter), coming with a rule definition 'escript'. (Just like the original ELIZA program used a rule set called 'DOCTOR', which is Eliza as we know it.) Parses rules to reg-exps and applies them…

      2 replies 0 retweets 1 like
    7. Brian Roemmele‏ @BrianRoemmele 27 Jul 2018
      • Report Tweet
      Replying to @mass_werk

      Awesome! Just found it: http://www.d.umn.edu/~xuxxx401/eliza-perldoc.html … Interesting stuff!

      1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
    8. Norbert Landsteiner‏ @mass_werk 27 Jul 2018
      • Report Tweet
      Replying to @BrianRoemmele

      Looks much like it, but the one I used had pre, post, '*' rules already in 2005 (this one lists them as added in 2009).

      1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
      Brian Roemmele‏ @BrianRoemmele 27 Jul 2018
      • Report Tweet
      Replying to @mass_werk

      Yes. Just tried your Voice Recognition addition. Did not see it with my default the other browser! Fine work sir!

      5:29 PM - 27 Jul 2018
      • 1 Like
      • Norbert Landsteiner
      1 reply 0 retweets 1 like

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