Scientists have just resurrected “ELIZA,” the world’s first chatbot, from long-lost computer code — and it still works extremely well.

Using dusty printouts from MIT archives, these “software archaeologists” discovered defunct code that had been lost for 60 years and brought it back to life.

    • Dasus@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      I tried it a fair bit and it seemed to just give vague questions as answers. I wondered why but it was essentially modeled to play a psychiatrist in terms of the sort of language one might use,

      So if you write “unhappy” or smth it’ll goe “why are you unhappy” /“did you come to me because you’re unhappy” etc.

      Very simple ofc but would’ve been impressive 60y ago.

      If you input *help you’ll see commands and *cacm repeats the ELIZA / DOCTOR conversation from the original paper so you can sort of see what it’s capable of when the writer knows pretty much exactly what to prompt. (There’s still some variance in but eh…)

    • Fredselfish@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Yeah it talks down to you kinda funny but limited on knowledge. Kept asking if I was sure. Then when I said yes just replied I understand.

      You need to know the keywords to have an actual conversation with it if you even can.

      Still pretty neat to bring back a sixy year old code.