As a first approximation to answering these questions

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sujonkumar6300
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As a first approximation to answering these questions

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We were told about a project in which Watson could support salespeople by suggesting a sales proposal based on an analysis of the customer's purchasing patterns, their purchase history, their "feelings" on social networks, and recent news about them.

But, speaking of applications that involve highly sophisticated natural language interaction, what do we mean when we say that a computer “understands” Spanish, for example? That the machine is “intelligent,” that it can “think”?

Alan Turing suggested in 1950 replacing the question “Can machines think?” with “Can a machine perform well at the 'Imitation Game'?”, a game that consisted of a human spain consumer email list remotely interrogating a man and a woman who were in another room to determine which answer had been given by the man and which by the woman.

If computers could understand our languages ​​as well as the average person does, they would be able to understand a lot of what is written on the Internet, so we could talk to them about a huge amount of subjects, and then, in many cases, it would be difficult to distinguish whether we were “talking” to a machine or to a very intelligent and cultured human being.
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