| autor/autorzy: Edward A. Feigenbaum, Pamela McCorduck |
| tytuł: The Fifth Generation |
| podtytuł: Artificial Intelligence and Japans Computer Challenge to the Wor |
| wydawnictwo: A Signet Book |
| data wydania: 1984 |
| liczba stron: 334 |
| okładka: miękka |
| dostępna ilość: 1 |
nasza cena: 27,00zł
Książka używana. Stan: 4 / 4-. Opis: I was reading "The Age of Intelligent Machines" by Raymond Kurzweil and was intrigued by the section on expert systems. He included an article by Edward A. Feigenbaum, one of the early names in the development of expert systems. (...)
The book reads like a novel. The book was written before the project got into trouble so you get to see the characters while they still had big dreams. The story has all the qualities of a good historical non-fiction book. It has human interest. It takes place in a foreign country, much different than we in the U.S. are accustomed to. Regardless of success or failure, the participants knew their ambitious undertaking would make history. Never before had a project of such magnitude been attempted. The book was written so that non-technical types would buy it and read it without getting discouraged. Yet, it was technical enough that someone with a technical background in computers, like myself (I'm a programmer), could enjoy it as both reading for pleasure and reading to gain additional knowledge (about expert systems, artificial intelligence, and Japan's MITI). Of course, if you're really serious about expert systems, there are better books. For example, "Expert Systems: Principles and Programming, Fourth Edition: Principles and Programming".
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