DARPA to invest in digital butlers
Published:
19 July 2003 y., Saturday
Many years after Apple's renowned Knowledge Navigator vision-video and Microsoft's ill-fated agent-as-eager-assistant Bob, Carnegie Mellon University's School of Computer Science (SCS) is creating a digital butler.
Researchers at the School of Computer Science (SCS) have received an initial 7 million dollars from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) as part of a five-year plan to develop a software-based cognitive personal assistant that will help people perk up their productivity in the workplace.
Nicknamed RADAR for Reflective Agents with Distributed Adaptive Reasoning, the software will aid its human master with tasks like creating coherent reports from snippets of information, scheduling meetings, and managing email by grouping related messages, flagging high priority requests and automatically proposing answers to routine messages.
The idea is to develop a system that can both save time for its user and improve the quality of decisions, according to Carnegie Mellon University.
RADAR will handle a number of routine tasks by itself and ask for confirmation on others. Over time, the system must learn when and how often to interrupt its busy user.
Whether the system will be rendered as a photo-realistic human (providing laconic commentary) remains to be seen, but a number of techniques from a variety of fields will be employed, including machine learning, human-computer interaction, natural-language processing and flexible planning.
Šaltinis:
theregister.co.uk
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Software company announced new structure_ of it_s business.
more »
CeBIT: AMD Jump-Starts Competition In Thin-And-Light Notebook Market; Unveils 12 New Mobile Processors
more »
search.lt presents newest links
more »
The company plans to unveil the initiative, called Dynamic Systems Initiative (DSI), at a Las Vegas conference next week when it debuts its new systems management tools
more »
Oracle deal: Good omen for Linux group?
more »
Global DSL subscriptions nearly doubled during 2002, from 18.8 million to 35.9 million
more »
Scam widens; latest seeks Discover Card accounts
more »
The ICT World Forum @ CeBIT 2003
more »
The worm uses infected copies of remote-access app VNC and Internet-communications app IRC
more »
After years of working with code-named chipsets and bundling the processors on a new platform, Intel Corp. Wednesday officially took the wraps of its latest Centrino technology
more »
Europe finds MS guilty, but wonders what to do about it
more »