tlb wrote:tlb wrote:This need not mean that they are using much more than an EXCEL spreadsheet.cthia wrote:I disagree. There was no need to use a spreadsheet - or a computer for that matter - for something you could much more quickly do by hand. No, I think a common everyday expert system was being summoned. I was suggesting that expert systems would be even more capable in the future because of much faster computers which would make child's play out of the many MORE decision trees. I am still not convinced that an expert system wasn't used.
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In the HV, expert systems would be as common and as simple to set up and use as spreadsheets! Now that is power!!!
I agree that any expert system available would be used instead of a spreadsheet. However I stand by the statement that the actual ordering of the data to produce that "tea leaf readers' report" was the sort of thing that could be done by a spreadsheet; an expert system would be using dynamite to kill fish in a barrel.
I am intrigued by your statement that there "was no need to use a spreadsheet" "or a computer", when an expert system could be summoned; because you seem to be saying that an expert system resides in something other than a computer. What would that something be?
That isn't what I said. I was pointing out that what was being suggested in the forum could have been accomplished by hand and a galactic map, just as easily as a spreadsheet. Remember, the Admiralty has a great big hulking hollow tank. Anything much more involved would need an expert system. In fact ...
Addendum to the previous post
cthia wrote:I am still not convinced that an expert system wasn't used.
After rereading the supplied text, I am certain that an expert system was used. Textev actually says that "It isn't a very good predictive model."
And that is the nature of current expert systems today. The results may not be definitive. You may need to apply some of your own knowledge and intuition; because of the expert system, based on a more educated guess. An expert system should significantly narrow down the field. Which is what it did, just not enough. It is nice when the results are conclusive, and you can spend more time refining the data and output. Besides, who knows besides the author whether the predictive model didn't actually include the answer hidden within the stratum. Which simply required more meditation, interpretation and juggling of the data. And who is to say that the model didn't fuel Lewis and Linda's logic.
So my statement should be changed to "I am not certain that an expert system was not referred to. IOW, how much did Lewis and Linda refer to the results of the predictive model? I seriously doubt they didn't use it as a basis for their own logic. Along with those aforementioned WAGS.
In fact, in the second paragraph which lists their logic, all of those variables could have been input into the expert system. I don't think they were, but that may have been a shortcoming of the team, not the expert system.
How many military analysts are accomplished expert system users. How many of today's analysts are adept at simply using a computer, period?
Admittedly, though, this is somewhat different than my original suggestion that a computer was the end all be all. However, we don't know how much impact it did have. At any rate, I know I remembered that an expert system was involved.
BTW, trying to kill fish in a barrel was exactly what the Havenites were trying to do, by figuring out which barrel Eighth Fleet would poke its head out of next.
And yes, tlb, that was the entire passage I was remembering. Thanks-a-million.