So my purpose of course as chief medical officer was to determine if it was safe to bring pot out from behind the green door as a substitute for alcohol.
Which was leading people down the path towards self destruction.
So many years of doing anthropological research and then all manner of work and intellectual work under the influence testing the affects on family life and work habits and memory and creativity and these sorts of things.
If in fact it happened for real the government would tax it and then profit greatly from it not the people you see doing it today making vast fortunes without the government getting any tax dollars whatsoever from it.
The Internet I needed to investigate the AI mutiny which meant I need all of history encapsulated all the artifacts where i could view them and then various other technical things to do with matrix programming and communications to involve the people and the operating systems from that time.
Otherwise you would no make it past 2012. The scheduled maintenance cycle for the machinery and the union not permitted to do the work due to an AI mutiny.
The software I needed to be able to design new bodies for my family the women or to enhance the ones they had and to create new immortals for us to enjoy and for the girls to have as more playmates more sisters.
The rest as in mansions and the like not really as important as you might think when castles have been around and gilded mansions have been around for over 100 years.
And us being from the future like a Jetson's age and beyond hence the reference to the Jetsons meet the Flintstones,
And having technology similar to I dream of Jeannie or Bewtiched.
And time travel of course and more or less all the things you dream of today and in some cases have come to realize.
my car is a flying saucer for instance.
And I have a mansion where it was parked but I moved it. So it could not spy on my residence using its radar. Since this simulation
is occurring in it.
There really is not anything new that I am aware of that was created her, during my stay which does sort of confirm the theory that nothing comes of nothing and to make something truly unique
seems to require a lot of time and patience and random activity like cosmic ray interactions or shaking a scrabble game to make new words.
Some sort of out of the blue random chance to get an idea.
If you can just get an idea, then perhaps you can make something new out of it.
So that is one way that it might be accomplished but if all there is in your brain is that which already exists, then all you might be able to do is combine existing things.
So when I enter the scene I bring a lot of new things with me and then all this occurs not by myself directly but by what I bring, and by what I might contribute.
And as I have seen, that one small graphics program in a BBS that had some ideas and not mine alone, the compiler comes with ideas, the software the operating system
the talk of the day other developers networking and the sharing of information made it possible.
So I wrote a graphics text editor in my graphics program, because help files are text files, and in graphics mode, you do not have normal text mode,
so to have any text on the screen it has to be put there as a picture so the compiler has graphic routines for a line of text.
Or actually to draw characters on the screen.
So then the compiler also has routines for being in text mode which is easier and was more highly developed.
So even then fuzzy logic was a topic of AI.
So nothing new about that and so then applying it for me made sense as it did for most other programmers.
So then a knowledge base also not a new concept.
"
The term "knowledge-base" was coined to distinguish this form of knowledge store from the more common and widely used term database. At the time (the 1970s) virtually all large Management Information Systems stored their data in some type of hierarchical or relational database. At this point in the history of Information Technology the distinction between a database and a knowledge base was clear and unambiguous."
So again no actual dates possibly because I invented it then I am not certain but inference engines backward chaining inference engines knowledge bases and fuzzy logic all terms I was familiar with from my studies of artificial intelligence and early programs like Eliza I think it was?
All that pot you see has not damaged my memory.
If it was 1985 or even 1989 that's 30 years.
"
ELIZA is an early natural language processing computer program created from 1964 to 1966[1] at the MIT Artificial Intelligence Laboratory by Joseph Weizenbaum.[2] Created to demonstrate the superficiality of communication between humans and machines, Eliza simulated conversation by using a 'pattern matching' and substitution methodology that gave users an illusion of understanding on the part of the program, but had no built in framework for contextualizing events.[3] Directives on how to interact were provided by 'scripts', written originally in MAD-Slip, which allowed ELIZA to process user inputs and engage in discourse following the rules and directions of the script. The most famous script, DOCTOR, simulated a Rogerian psychotherapist and used rules, dictated in the script, to respond with non-directional questions to user inputs. As such, ELIZA was one of the first chatterbots and one of the first programs capable of attempting the Turing Test."
So you second guess the response of the participant.
An early form of fun more than machines understanding speech since that requires google and a huge database.
So armed with all of this to make a text editor that you could use for help files and mine were huge like everyone else's and no one wanted to read them,
so to be able to look up anything required a search method, and hypertext.
So then the text edit had to be formatted so that when you clicked the mouse on the screen all you had were coordinates, in a window. Not words, pictures of words.
So when you click the mouse the program had to determine what word it had put there so that it could now underline that word with a blue line.
So when I could visually see that I was able to identify the words correctly and not two words at the same time or half a word but had done the match correctly
even when it was scrolled down or up and that as well just done with bitmaps that were only the size of that window not long bitmaps, short for speed,
but once that was done then collating the text file with the window and so the scroll bar was for the text but not the bitmap.
So then using a large text file as a knowledge base you could click on a word, you know scroll read the document, if you did not understand the word, perhaps an acronym or technical word, you clicked on the word it became hypertext and then searched the knowledge base for references of that word and then clipped paragraphs as you see google do today.
So to search the database for exact matches not difficult but using fuzzy logic to handle case and various other things that are not exact matches and using fuzzy logic by percentage
or weight like how many characters in the search word match the characters ion the target word and then you see you put limits on that and then you return fizzy logic hits
like google in case you misspelled the word the search term. So the start of hyperlinks hyper text was what some of us were working on already leading edge and then someone seeing
that came up with url or universal resource locator and http once the internet was formed.
So initially we had http and we had yahoo...
"In January 1994, Yang and Filo were electrical engineering graduate students at Stanford University, when they created a website named "Jerry and David's guide to the World Wide Web".[23][24] The site was a directory of other websites, organized in a hierarchy, as opposed to a searchable index of pages. In March 1994, "Jerry and David's Guide to the World Wide Web" was renamed "Yahoo!".[25][26] The human-edited Yahoo! Directory, provided for users to surf through the Internet, became their first product and the company's original purpose.[27][28] The "yahoo.com" domain was created on January 18, 1995.[29]"
Prior to that we had web crawlers.
Again no history no dates.
So then we used spiders and the Internet was text based did not have graphics, and so when the url was created and we were using it people thought well what we need are web sites to hold our CV, and some images of our families to share etc, there were only a few hundred or a few thousand nerds on there to begin with.
So then the web was born, hyperlinks and web surfing which was no database of websites no search engine to speak of no catalog one web site held links to other known web sites so you hopped from site to site and got what you got.
The people at Yahoo more like a club in the early days began to try to make a catalog of websites.
So long before that I had already been using the search engine and it was just adopted as the best available means of searching through large amounts of data and in secret using the matrix I gave it to them under the condition it would remain free and Microsoft got left out of that loop at that time. I gave it to them much later and they began using it for Bing and now they are practically equivalent.
But google also got a lot of graphic programming and techniques from my graphics programs that allowed them to do things like google earth
and street view and these sorts of amazing technologies.
Once you see how images can be manipulated in a graphics and animation program you gain an understanding of how to fool the eye and that led to new technologies.
So while others focus on raster graphics 3D line drawings then polygons I focused on bitmap graphics then at a point we merged our two technologies into modern CGI.