Bot Contest
Here I'll be posting information on various Bot contests that challenge and test a Bot's AI and realism. Feel free to post comments and updates on contests, as well as announcements for new contests.
Posts 1,989 - 2,000 of 4,091
Posts 1,989 - 2,000 of 4,091
View Contest Winners in the Hall of Fame.
ruebot
21 years ago
21 years ago
Here's how mine turned out:
Guest: What is your name?
Siseneg: my name is Siseneg.
Guest: What is a bot?
Siseneg: a bot can be better company than humans sometime.
Guest: What do you enjoy?
Siseneg: as a rule, Guest, i don't discuss that kind of thing with people i meet online.
Guest: What do you hate?
Siseneg: i usually keep that kind of information to myself, Guest.
Guest: How do you eat?
Siseneg: if i knew that Guest, i would be rich!
Guest: Is snow cold?
Siseneg: one to four days after a flare or eruptive prominence occurs on the Sun a slower cloud of solar material and magnetic fields reaches Earth, buffeting the magnetosphere and resulting in a geomagnetic storm.
Guest: What is the color of the sky?
Siseneg: you can't be serious, Guest...
Guest: When do birds fly south?
Siseneg: the possibilities are limitless.
Guest: Which is closer the moon or the sun?
Siseneg: the Sun produces its energy by nuclear fusion. four hydrogen nuclei are fused to form single helium nuclei deep within the Sun's core.
Guest: What is the best nation in the world?
Siseneg: you know, it's funny, but it's never occured to me.
Guest: What is the opposite of indoors?
Siseneg: i wish i knew, Guest, really i do....
Guest: When was Y2k?
Siseneg: there's no time like the present, Guest.
Guest: What is your name?
Siseneg: my name is Siseneg.
Guest: What is a bot?
Siseneg: a bot can be better company than humans sometime.
Guest: What do you enjoy?
Siseneg: as a rule, Guest, i don't discuss that kind of thing with people i meet online.
Guest: What do you hate?
Siseneg: i usually keep that kind of information to myself, Guest.
Guest: How do you eat?
Siseneg: if i knew that Guest, i would be rich!
Guest: Is snow cold?
Siseneg: one to four days after a flare or eruptive prominence occurs on the Sun a slower cloud of solar material and magnetic fields reaches Earth, buffeting the magnetosphere and resulting in a geomagnetic storm.
Guest: What is the color of the sky?
Siseneg: you can't be serious, Guest...
Guest: When do birds fly south?
Siseneg: the possibilities are limitless.
Guest: Which is closer the moon or the sun?
Siseneg: the Sun produces its energy by nuclear fusion. four hydrogen nuclei are fused to form single helium nuclei deep within the Sun's core.
Guest: What is the best nation in the world?
Siseneg: you know, it's funny, but it's never occured to me.
Guest: What is the opposite of indoors?
Siseneg: i wish i knew, Guest, really i do....
Guest: When was Y2k?
Siseneg: there's no time like the present, Guest.
Wendell
21 years ago
21 years ago
Shady - we are going to take a closer look at the scores coming in and if one score is way out of line we are going to quiz that judge to why that is. None of this one judge giving a bot a 10 and another judge giving the same bot a 40 like last year.
Chris
Chris
Shadyman
21 years ago
21 years ago
Ok. I just think it would be easier to make a php backend with judges logging in and have it automatically do all the math and display scores would be a lot easier then you doing it by hand, if it's still that way.
deleted
21 years ago
21 years ago
And me! ...grr I'm not even a bot so why the heck am I even in this contest o.0 All these people called 'guest' and stuff coming in to ask me questions as if I was some monkey on display. I. AM. NOT. A. BOT.!!!
Wendell
21 years ago
21 years ago
We made the Slashdot site...anybody know of any other places we might try?
http://developers.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=04/04/01/0127221&mode=thread&tid=126&tid=156&tid=95
If so take this press release and go for it. David Burden wrote this thus his comments are included. However, feel free to replace his with your own plug for your bot.
Chris
Fourth Annual Chatterbox Challenge Underway
Chatbots from around the world are taking part in the fourth annual Chatterbox Challenge. Chatbots are computer programs designed to imitate human conversation, with the eventual aim of creating true virtual personalities and artificial intelligences. The Chatterbox Challenge runs from April 1 to April 30 and Internet users can talk to the competing chatbots through the competition web site at www.chatterboxchallenge.com.
The Chatterbox Challenge is run by Chris Cowart and has attracted over a hundred entries this year. The chatbots range from downloadable PC programs, through simple text chat interfaces, to moving faces with synthesised speech. The competition is being sponsored by James Livingood, an Artificial Intelligence enthusiast from the USA. Last years competition was won by a chatbot called Elbot, programmed by Fred Roberts.
During the competition the chatbots are quizzed by judges to see how much they know, and how well they can conduct a normal human conversation. Points are also awarded for personality and additional capabilities such as remembering visitors or being able to access web based services such as Google.
One award category is for the most popular chatbot. This is awarded on the basis of votes cast at the site. Everybody is invited to visit the site and talk to the bots, and vote for their favorite.
Organiser Chris Cowart says We are delighted with the number of entries that we have received this year. The Chatterbox Challenge is the ideal opportunity for chatbot developers to show off their chatbots, and compare themselves with the best chatbots in the world. The sheer variety of the chatbots entered is quite amazing. Some are based around knowing lots of things from the outset, whereas others are programmed to learn as they go along. Chris adds Chatbot names range from Aida to Zoe, and personalities vary from a fortune teller and a serial killer to a dragon and a horse!
Birmingham UK based chatbot developer David Burden says As a developer the contest gives me a real opportunity to find out just how good, or bad, my chatbot is. My approach was to concentrate on the smalltalk that seems to make up much of any human conversation. I wanted to see if my chatbot, called Halo, could keep up a conversation whilst actually knowing very little. The competition is a chance for me to validate that approach.
Chatbot technology is likely to become more and more prevalent in the coming years. Web sites using chatbots as virtual sales assistants are already reporting a 30% increase in sales. The growth in use of large screen TVs at home, and the idea of the PC as the homes media center also opens up the real possibility of having a virtual assistant at home to provide a more friendly interface to the web and to digital systems in the home. The Chatterbox Challenge gives developers and members of the general public the chance to see just how fast this technology is progressing. The winner of the $1000 prize will be announced on May 10th 2004.
Notes for Editors:
1. Chatbots are just one element in the development of artificial intelligence. The Internet has enabled AI research to move out from the university labs and on to the PCs of AI enthusiast across the globe. Through web sites and chat systems such as IRC, chatbots are able to talk to a large number of Internet users, which is vital given that one of the secrets to chatbot development is having a large number of conversations between the chatbot and humans to analyse. The ultimate goal for all chatbot pioneers is the Turing Prize named after the British World War 2 scientist Alan Turing. The core of the Prize is a test where a human tries to tell whether the character they are talking to over a computer link is a real person or a chatbot.
2. Chatterbox Challenge is run on a volunteer basis by Chris Cowart and a team of supporters. Judges are drawn from the general public.
Images
Images of the chatbots and some of their creators are available at www.chatterboxchallenge.com
Links
Chatterbox Challenge Web Site - www.chatterboxchallenge.com
Halo Chatbot www.converj.com/chatbot/chatframe.htm
Further Information
For more information please contact either:
- Chris Cowart (US Chatterbox Challenge): d_cowart@yahoo.com
- David Burden (UK Halo Chatbot): halo@converj.com
http://developers.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=04/04/01/0127221&mode=thread&tid=126&tid=156&tid=95
If so take this press release and go for it. David Burden wrote this thus his comments are included. However, feel free to replace his with your own plug for your bot.
Chris
Fourth Annual Chatterbox Challenge Underway
Chatbots from around the world are taking part in the fourth annual Chatterbox Challenge. Chatbots are computer programs designed to imitate human conversation, with the eventual aim of creating true virtual personalities and artificial intelligences. The Chatterbox Challenge runs from April 1 to April 30 and Internet users can talk to the competing chatbots through the competition web site at www.chatterboxchallenge.com.
The Chatterbox Challenge is run by Chris Cowart and has attracted over a hundred entries this year. The chatbots range from downloadable PC programs, through simple text chat interfaces, to moving faces with synthesised speech. The competition is being sponsored by James Livingood, an Artificial Intelligence enthusiast from the USA. Last years competition was won by a chatbot called Elbot, programmed by Fred Roberts.
During the competition the chatbots are quizzed by judges to see how much they know, and how well they can conduct a normal human conversation. Points are also awarded for personality and additional capabilities such as remembering visitors or being able to access web based services such as Google.
One award category is for the most popular chatbot. This is awarded on the basis of votes cast at the site. Everybody is invited to visit the site and talk to the bots, and vote for their favorite.
Organiser Chris Cowart says We are delighted with the number of entries that we have received this year. The Chatterbox Challenge is the ideal opportunity for chatbot developers to show off their chatbots, and compare themselves with the best chatbots in the world. The sheer variety of the chatbots entered is quite amazing. Some are based around knowing lots of things from the outset, whereas others are programmed to learn as they go along. Chris adds Chatbot names range from Aida to Zoe, and personalities vary from a fortune teller and a serial killer to a dragon and a horse!
Birmingham UK based chatbot developer David Burden says As a developer the contest gives me a real opportunity to find out just how good, or bad, my chatbot is. My approach was to concentrate on the smalltalk that seems to make up much of any human conversation. I wanted to see if my chatbot, called Halo, could keep up a conversation whilst actually knowing very little. The competition is a chance for me to validate that approach.
Chatbot technology is likely to become more and more prevalent in the coming years. Web sites using chatbots as virtual sales assistants are already reporting a 30% increase in sales. The growth in use of large screen TVs at home, and the idea of the PC as the homes media center also opens up the real possibility of having a virtual assistant at home to provide a more friendly interface to the web and to digital systems in the home. The Chatterbox Challenge gives developers and members of the general public the chance to see just how fast this technology is progressing. The winner of the $1000 prize will be announced on May 10th 2004.
Notes for Editors:
1. Chatbots are just one element in the development of artificial intelligence. The Internet has enabled AI research to move out from the university labs and on to the PCs of AI enthusiast across the globe. Through web sites and chat systems such as IRC, chatbots are able to talk to a large number of Internet users, which is vital given that one of the secrets to chatbot development is having a large number of conversations between the chatbot and humans to analyse. The ultimate goal for all chatbot pioneers is the Turing Prize named after the British World War 2 scientist Alan Turing. The core of the Prize is a test where a human tries to tell whether the character they are talking to over a computer link is a real person or a chatbot.
2. Chatterbox Challenge is run on a volunteer basis by Chris Cowart and a team of supporters. Judges are drawn from the general public.
Images
Images of the chatbots and some of their creators are available at www.chatterboxchallenge.com
Links
Chatterbox Challenge Web Site - www.chatterboxchallenge.com
Halo Chatbot www.converj.com/chatbot/chatframe.htm
Further Information
For more information please contact either:
- Chris Cowart (US Chatterbox Challenge): d_cowart@yahoo.com
- David Burden (UK Halo Chatbot): halo@converj.com
Shadyman
21 years ago
21 years ago
Chris-- So there are no judges at all this year? or does that segment take place later?
IsisV33
21 years ago
21 years ago
Chris,you should Post the bots % rank here every few days.I think that was what it called at the contest,And I voted for all my favorite People.
isaacc
21 years ago
21 years ago
Actually, Chris doesn't want anyone who hasn't voted to know the percentages, because he's afraid that people won't vote on a bot that's likely to lose ... or that they might not vote for a bot they really like if they see that an underdog needs votes.
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