Google's newest software is named 'Parsey McParseface' -- no, seriously
Today, Google introduces Parsey McParseface -- a free new tool, born from Google's research division to help computers better parse and understand English sentences. "We were having trouble thinking of a good name, and then someone said, 'We could just call it Parsey McParseface!' So… yup," says a Google spokesperson. Parsey McParseface is a piece of a larger framework called SyntaxNet, itself a big part of Google's popular home-built TensorFlow software for building artificial intelligence, as explained in a blog entry. With this release, any developer anywhere can download, use, and even start to improve Google's tools in their own software. One of the biggest problems in artificial intelligence, today, is that speech recognition by computers may be better than ever, but they still have trouble understanding exactly what we mean. After all, language is complicated: Consider that "Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo" is a 100% gramatically correct sentence in American English.
May-13-2016, 05:00:20 GMT
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