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Re: 20 Questions AI
Thu, January 27, 2005 - 5:50 PMMy question: stop light - # of Qs: 17 questions:
I am guessing that it is a traffic light?
Yes , No , Close
17.Is it worth a lot of money? No.
16.Do most people use this daily? Yes.
15.Is it commonly used? Yes.
14.Does it travel on roads? No.
13.Is it usually colorful? Yes.
12.Can it save your life? Yes.
11.Can it be stolen? Maybe.
10.Is it used for transportation? Yes.
9.Does it produce light? Yes.
8.Is it man made? Yes.
7.Can you buy it? No.
6.Can it make a sound? Yes.
5.Is it smaller than a loaf of bread? No.
4.Could it be found in a classroom? No.
3.Is it pleasurable? No.
2.Can you find it in a church? No.
1. It is classified as Other.
Additional info:
You were thinking of a traffic light.
Can it make a sound? You said Yes, I say No.
Can it be stolen? You said Maybe, I say No.
Freakin' crazy! -
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Re: 20 Questions AI
Thu, January 27, 2005 - 6:04 PMMy item: headphones # of Q's: 19
I am guessing that it is a watch?
Yes , No , Close
19.Would you find it in an office? Sometimes.
18.Does it usually have four corners? No.
17.Do you put things in it? No.
16.Is it worth a lot of money? Sometimes.
15.Is it a metal? Sometimes.
14.Does it communicate? No.
13.Does it make music? No.
12.Does it make noise? Yes.
11.Is it made of metal? Maybe.
10.Can you switch it on and off? Sometimes.
9.Does it move? No.
8.Is it smaller than a loaf of bread? Yes.
7.Does it store information? No.
6.Is it used with a computer? Sometimes.
5.Is it used for entertainment? Yes.
4.Does it have writing on it? Yes.
3.Does it weigh more than a duck? Sometimes.
2.Is it straight? No.
1.It is classified as Other.
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Re: 20 Questions AI
Mon, January 31, 2005 - 11:11 AMI tried this around election time last year and fooled it with "ballot."
Of course, once you tell it what you're thinking of, it adds it (and your answers) to the database. So, over time it gets "smarter."
Hmm. I wonder if it's part of some AI project to get people to a) think of and b) categorize common everyday objects. And I wonder if the guessing algorithms take into account the frequency that things are suggested/guessed, to more accurately simulate human thought.
Maybe I'm giving it too much credit.