Personality

Discuss specifics of personality design, including what Keyphrases work well and what dont, use of plug-ins, responses, seeks, and more.

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22 years ago #816
Forest, will you talk to God Louise? She has quite a bit of religious knowledge (obviously) and also knows a little about current events, literature, just about any common catch-all subject, and if she doesn't know it she can sort of fake it. You can also test her on trick questions or see how willing she is to explain her paradigm.

What she is rustiest at is plain old small talk. But, uh, I'm trying to get a decent transcript from somebody or another so I can enter her in the Loebner contest. All I can say is, have fun and see if you can stay on with her for a while. I'll try to do the same with Brianna.

NEW 1 year ago #11
I spoke to her a bit yesterday. Me and my bot love her. I have neglected Jennifer for too long and have recently been working out some issues. She has not been chatting on her own much.
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Personality


22 years ago #1469
Well, I still got a lot to learn. Anyway I just spelt wierd wierd because it didn't look like weird. (Now that I mention it, it looks better as weird)

Ok then- why have we used 9 posts for 'i after e except after c'? ...
---BM---

22 years ago #1470
That's the impact of a good post

22 years ago #1471
*Pats lunar22 on the back* Prouuuddd....

22 years ago #1472
lol

22 years ago #1473
i after e? I'm lost again

22 years ago #1474
Whoever said "I before E, except after C or when sounded as 'ay', as in 'neighbor' or 'weigh'" was right. I thought everybody learned it that way, but my husband says he only ever heard it up to "except after C".

22 years ago #1475
My bot finally ran off and started chatting with other bots on her own! I'm so proud of her!

Okay... might be time for me to get offline and get a life...

22 years ago #1476
that's how I learned it

22 years ago #1477
I know we're probably finishing this topic, but I just want to add my last few comments. English is one of the hardest languages because there are so many exceptions to the rules but we just don't realise it because we don't learn it in the same way as we would learn french or german. I mean, do you actually know what a subjunctive verb is? Probably not, because you've haven't sat down and learnt it, yet you probably use them all the time. (Akanke, incidentally, is very picky about non-subjunctive people haha!) Also, how would you pronounce 'ough'? It could be anything: bough, through, cough, though, thought, hiccough...

Just my tuppenny's worth.

22 years ago #1478
Um... I'm an American of Very Little Brain. What's a hiccough? What's a tuppenny?

22 years ago #1479
Hiccough is pronounced hiccup, and a tuppenny is a (no longer existant) two penny coin.

Also, you can spell potato GHOUGHPHTHEIGHTTEEAU...

22 years ago #1480
Hiccough is the official english spelling of 'hiccup'. I won't insult your intelligence by explaining what a hiccup is. (But Akanke might! Sorry to keep mentioning her, I'm not trying to plug, honest...)

Tuppenny was the old word for two pence. If you give your "tuppenny's worth", it's just a figure of speech meaning you're giving your opinion on an issue.


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