How would you feel about a subvocalization recognizer? To my knowledge it hasn't been done, but it seems possible. Recognizers seem to like to filter out the vocal chord exitations anyway since they contribute very little to the differentiation of phonemes and are mostly there just to drive the volume up. There must be other ways of deducing vocal tract shapes (e.g. ultrasound)
All of the "Registrars" (currently NSI and Register.com) are using a central db called the "Shared Registry System", which is currently maintained by NSI. The Registry is the db of record for.com,.net, and.org, and registers domains on a first come first serve basis. See http://www.icann.org/QANDA.htm.
Assumption of familiar internet protocol connection layer and crappy consumer-quality routing services. Straw man joke. Laughter.
How would you feel about a subvocalization recognizer? To my knowledge it hasn't been done, but it seems possible. Recognizers seem to like to filter out the vocal chord exitations anyway since they contribute very little to the differentiation of phonemes and are mostly there just to drive the volume up. There must be other ways of deducing vocal tract shapes (e.g. ultrasound)
I've heard that YellowBrix (www.yellowbrix.com) is doing (or at least researching) real AI for news delivery.
Windows 2000 is affected as well, of course.
-tk
All of the "Registrars" (currently NSI and Register.com) are using a central db called the "Shared Registry System", which is currently maintained by NSI. The Registry is the db of record for .com, .net, and .org, and registers domains on a first come first serve basis. See http://www.icann.org/QANDA.htm.