| Title: | Europe-Swas-Artificial-Intelligence | 
| Moderator: | HERON::BUCHANAN | 
| Created: | Fri Jun 03 1988 | 
| Last Modified: | Thu Aug 04 1994 | 
| Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 | 
| Number of topics: | 442 | 
| Total number of notes: | 1429 | 
    PLEASE, DON'T FORGET TO SUBMIT YOUR "REVIEW" OF THE JOHN WALTERS
    BOOK I GAVE YOU DURING THE FORUM. REMEMBER, THAT WAS PART OF THE
    DEAL!!!!
    
    SUBMIT IT AS A REPLY TO THIS NOTE.
    
    IN ANTICIPATION .... JIM
| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 71.1 | TEST is the difference | MUNEDU::BUERKERT | HEINZ 57-Varieties | Mon Feb 06 1989 13:54 | 27 | 
|     
    I started reading it and found already lots of exciting points:
    1) this is the first book in the AI-literature I have seen which
        gives the part TEST/VALIDATION and MAINTENANCE the wheight these
        topics need - namely a lot!
    
    2) I like the emphasis in the beginning of the  book on the fact
        that ' Knowledge crafting" is a software engineering/crafting
        task and NOT so terribly different to "traditional" system - what
        some(!) people following the AI-flag like to claim.
                                                 
    3) I like the distinction prototype vs. pilot. Think about:
    	can you install a prototype or a pilot at your customer?
    	I feel the phrase PROTOTYPE is getting misused more and more
    	for interrupted (and often not continued) development.
    
    4) the book is extremely easy to read for non-native English
    	speakers/readers
    
    5) I like the analogy with crafting e.g. boats (even if I understand
    	less about boats than about E.S.). It makes 'new' methods understandable
        by explaining them with familiar concepts.
    
              
    Thank you for this book
    
    Heinz
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| 71.2 | I finally read it ... | GLOBI::MANSER | They call me _tinker_ | Wed Jul 19 1989 10:33 | 25 | 
|     	
	o  Part I+II
	   - provides a very detailed and complete description of the 
	     development cycle of an ES
           - begins from scratch (-> maybe repetition for some readers)
	o  Part III
	   - can (must) be recommended to anyone interested in knowledge
             representation
    	   - well and cleary written with helpful examples (-> super !!!)
	o  The book as a whole
	   - very good book for practitioners as well as for beginners in the
 	     field of ES (-> best book I've ever read about ES by far !!!)
	   - contains a lot of "common sense" about development of an ES,
	     things one should now, but often is forgotten during a project
	   - makes good use of pictures, examples and analogies
	o My recommendation
	   - read the chapters of this book again while you're doing a
	     project,
	   - use the book as a "handbook" to check if you're not missing any 
	     important points
	   - recommend this book to anyone interested in _really_ doing ES
    
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