by Dwayne Phillips The old ways of doing AI are still better than some of the new ways in some cases. The answer, of course, is to combine the best of all to do something better. Feed the following into a chatbot: “The cow jumped” The chatbot will finish with “over the moon.” That is […]
Entries Tagged as 'Language'
Symbolic AI, Machine Learning, and Cows
May 18th, 2023 · No Comments
Tags: Artificial Intelligence · General Systems Thinking · Knowledge · Language · Learning · Machine Learning · Word
Words and Distant Lands
February 27th, 2023 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips People in distant lands use the same words differently. Time and generations create distant lands. I was fascinated by this story about younger folks putting things on TikTok et al. Then older folks who admit people to college and hire them for jobs noticed those things. The younger folks spoke in the […]
Tags: Communication · Conversation · Culture · Humility · Language · Time
Speaking English or Some Other Private Language
September 1st, 2022 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips If someone asks a question in English, please answer in English. Please avoid some other private language. In recent conversations, I asked, “Your research, how far ahead in time are you working? Your work may become reality in 1, 5, 10 years?” The answer was, “TRL 4.” (see this for a translation) […]
Tags: Clarity · Communication · Conversation · Language · Respect · Vocabulary
Three Pages, a Thousand Words Plus Figures
August 18th, 2022 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips Any topic and just about any situation. Please provide three pages that contain a thousand words and several figures. Right or wrong, we reach a point in life and history that we need information on this or that. What format? Try the title of this post. On three pieces of standard-size paper […]
Tags: Communication · Expectations · Ideas · Information · Language · Writing
Rigidly Flexible
July 28th, 2022 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips As a writer and just about anyone else, we must be flexible in a rigid manner. The same is true for almost every adjective and its antonym. A writer must be flexible. Except when the writer must be rigid. Except when exceptions arise. The same goes for just about any adjective and […]
Tags: Adapting · Agility · Alternatives · Choose · Communication · Language
The Machine Isn’t Learning
April 21st, 2022 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips “Machine Learning” is one of the biggest misuses of the English language I have seen. The machine isn’t learning. Let’s try to remember what is happening. Data science is a big deal these days. Well, it is until you read the fine print in the Help Wanted ads about data science jobs. […]
Tags: Artificial Intelligence · Computing · Language · Learning · Machine Learning
Nouns or Verbs, Things or Actions
June 14th, 2021 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips The words we use most often provide some indication of our selves. Try some experiments. Learn. Adjust. Try this: right now, write ten words on whatever is in front of you. Napkin. Table cloth. Back of your hand. How many of those ten are nouns? How many are verbs? This one is […]
Tags: Communication · Experiment · Ideas · Language · Patterns · Play · Self
Forward to the Past: Infrastructure as Code and JCL
February 22nd, 2021 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips We tend to reinvent the past as we move into the future. Remember JCL? I took an class in operating systems in 1980 (yes, I am that old). At least that was the name of the class. In reality, it was a class in what IBM called Job Control language or JCL. […]
Tags: Change · Computing · History · Language
Virtual and Social Illiteracy
April 20th, 2020 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips The current situation brings with it the usual proclamations by those who, despite public appearances, appear to be illiterate. We need not join them. The current crisis brings with it, as most do, a new set of slang and expressions. Many of these are issued by public officials who, by all appearances, […]
Tags: Communication · Language
Abuse and Abusers and Other Parts of the English Language
March 23rd, 2020 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips Some of life’s more complicated moral issues are fairly simple when we use words per their meanings. Want to stop abuse at fill-in-the-blank? Don’t bring in abusive persons, i.e., abusers. Want to stop lying? Don’t bring in lying persons, i.e., liars. Funny how the English language works and answers our own questions.