Terry & Utahna Olsen wrote: >Remember that old "Artificial intelligence" program that you could "chat" >with? It was supposed to be a bratty little girl. I think it was written >in Integer or Applesoft. Anyway, what was it's name and can it be >downloaded anywhere? If you mean "Eliza", it wasn't a bratty little girl, it was a Rogerian therapist in style. Basically, it reflecting what you said back to you in a surprisingly natural way by performing simple linguistic analysis of the input and transforming it to produce the output. (Except occasionally, when the program detected that things were getting stuck--when it would ask about something off the wall.) It began life as an academic exercise, written by Joseph Wiezenbaum at MIT on the MAC time-sharing system as a kind of demo. It was named after Eliza Doolittle, who was taught "how to speak" in Shaw's Pygmalion (the source of My Fair Lady). There's a nice article on it by Weizenbaum at: http://i5.nyu.edu/~mm64/x52.9265/january1966.html Many other implementations followed the lead of the original, and some were written in BASIC. -michael Email: mjmahon@aol.com Home page: http://members.aol.com/MJMahon/