Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
British Sign Language – Sign Language, Breetish Sign Leid, Iaith Arwyddion Prydain, Cànan Soidhnidh Bhreatainn, Teanga Chomharthaíochta na Breataine Signed in: the United Kingdom; Budukh – Budad mez Spoken in: Azerbaijan; Buginese – ᨅᨔ ᨕᨘᨁᨗ Spoken in: South Sulawesi, Republic of Indonesia; Buhid – ᝊᝓᝑᝒᝇ
Project A — TRS-80 Model 4P; Project Alabama — Avowed (upcoming Obsidian Entertainment RPG) Project Atlantis — Nintendo Game Boy Advance; Project Café — Nintendo Wii U; Project Chess — IBM PC; Project Ganges — ShoppingList.com; Project K — Apple eMate 300; Project Needlemouse — Sonic The Hedgehog 4 Episode 1; Project Pipeline ...
Controlled natural languages are natural languages that have been altered to make them simpler, easier to use, or more acceptable in certain circumstances, such as for use by people who do not speak the original language well. The following projects are examples of controlled English:
Project Santos was the name of an Amazon task force that was intended to rival Shopify, one of Amazon's biggest e-commerce competitors, Insider reported. In its early stages, Project Santos built ...
Artificial Linguistic Internet Computer Entity (A.L.I.C.E.), a natural language processing chatterbot. [51] ChatGPT, a chatbot built on top of OpenAI's GPT-3.5 and GPT-4 family of large language models. [52] Claude, a family of large language models developed by Anthropic and launched in 2023. Claude LLMs achieved high coding scores in several ...
The team was based in building 42, hence Project 42. [187] [188] Project 7 — Early program to recruit implementors of both commercial and academic languages to target the Common Language Runtime. 7 was a prime factor of 42, metaphorizing the relationship between Project 7 and Project 42 (see above). [189] Roslyn.NET Compiler Platform
This is an index to notable programming languages, in current or historical use. Dialects of BASIC, esoteric programming languages, and markup languages are not included. A programming language does not need to be imperative or Turing-complete, but must be executable and so does not include markup languages such as HTML or XML, but does include domain-specific languages such as SQL and its ...
The project successfully released over 6500 items and stories online, which can be freely downloaded and used for education and research. The project was funded by the Joint Information Systems Committee. In 2011, the team at the University of Oxford received further funding from Europeana to run a similar crowdsourcing initiative in Germany.