Introduction


Peter Small (1996)



Welcome to the Web site continuation of Lingo Sorcery

 

The Lingo Sorcery book ended with an epilogue promising that the book was only a beginning and would be continued on the Web. Well here it is, this site contains three extra chapters which will expand a little on the contents of the book.

This site also contains some other stuff which will take you on to introduce you to some new and exciting possibilities: the design of Intranets, Web objects and intelligent agents. This is where my current interests lie and I hope to drag some of you along with me.

I had planned to include this material in the book itself but the total content exceeded the publisher's brief and had to be pulled out at the editing stage. It was this that prompted the idea of extending the book onto the Web.

Not being confined to the practical limitations of publisher's book sizes, I have also been able to include a little background information to give you some idea as to where these ideas came from and, more importantly, where they are heading.

This Web site also provides me with an opportunity to create an essential link between the Lingo Sorcery book and my CD-ROM "How God Makes God" (HGMG) which was the source for many of the ideas.

HGMG provides an explanation of human life in terms of probability, game theory and computer concepts. Whether or not you agree, with the conclusions arrived at in HGMG, the product does present many neat paradigms, explanations and technical tricks which are useful for understanding and exploiting biological intelligence mechanisms. These provide the seeds for exploring the possibilities of creating intelligent agents for use on the Internet.

For those who might have arrived at this site without having read Lingo Sorcery, "Lingo Sorcery - The magic of lists, objects and intelligent agents" is a guide to object oriented thinking and programming using a computer language called Lingo (used by Macromedia for their multimedia authoring application DIRECTOR).

The book is not necessarily limited to users of Director as the main purpose of the book is to provide an understanding of lists, objects and object oriented programming mind sets. These abstract concepts are essential for anyone wanting to design creatively and profitably in the environment of the WWW and the book may well serve as a primer before going on to more arcane object oriented stuff like Java.

The background to these two publications is a story of some thirty five years of unconventional research which has combined many different disciplines and a host of unusual social experiments.

This Web site is a continuation of this work and concerns taking the first practical steps towards designing Web robots and intelligent helper objects which have decision mechanisms which can emulate crucial elements of the human brain. Such intelligent agents could prove to have innumerable applications for Internet marketing, information retrieval, education and games.

Although much of what you will find at this Web site will have a strong element of fantasy and illusion, this is part of the object oriented armoury: which should prove to be eminently practical and useful for Web designers and computer programmers in general.

In the techy stuff (the Lingo worked examples at the end), you will discover the practicality of giving a software object (or a Web robot) a brain - complete with logic and emotional control mechanisms. Although exampled in Lingo, the principles are understandable enough for the techniques to be used with a variety of other computer languages.

BTW, I make no apologies for using the terms "emotion" and "brain" in describing software mechanisms. These mechanisms were mapped across from the models of biological systems which were used in HGMG.

Once you have overcome the conceptual hurdle of realizing that the design of such intelligence and a brain is at all possible, imagine letting these mechanisms loose: to interact within the environment of the Internet...

Enjoy.

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Peter Small August 1996

Email: peter@petersmall.com

Version 1.00


Note: The "techy" part of this 1996 website has not been included but it is summarised in the Bot seminar notes (See 'References' on main site pages).


©Copyright 1996 Peter Small