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Jason Campbell August 22, 2007
Have you ever wished that you had Google wired directly into your temporal lobe? Wouldn’t it be great if you could just think of a question and instantly get a result? Well, we’re not quite at that frightening point, but things are moving in the general direction. Linguistic Agents (LA), an Israeli startup, is bridging the gap between natural language and XML. |
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| | August 22, 2007
Linguistic Agents Ltd., developers of an integrative language platform, has announced that IDG's Computerworld has selected the company’s Streaming Logic technology as the winner of its Computerworld Horizon Award for innovative technologies. Linguistic Agents' technology was chosen because it enables machines to understand and act upon human language based on a computer implementation of Nanosyntax -- an approach that combines several recent innovations in theoretical linguistics. The award honors the developers of enterprise technologies that have recently entered the marketplace and informs readers of technologies that are on the horizon. Streaming Logic was evaluated by an independent panel of information technology experts |
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Shmulik Shelah August 21, 07
The company's software understands natural language.
Israeli start-up Linguistic Agents Ltd. has won “ComputerWorld’s” 2007 Horizon Award. The firm, one of ten honorees, was noted its for innovative software. The company's flagship product is software that understands natural language.
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August 20, 2007 (Computerworld)
As computers become integrated into everyday activities, better interaction is needed between man and machine. Unfortunately, the two don’t speak the same language.
To ease this interaction, privately held Linguistic Agents Ltd. in Jerusalem developed Streaming Logic, a technology that converts natural language into a form that computers can understand. The process involves knowledge and application of both linguistics theory and computer programming.
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David Shamah July 15, 2007
Linguistic Agents, creator of one of Israel’s most promising emerging technologies, boasts the most advanced natural language search engine in the business. |
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| reddevnews.com |
| January 2007 |
| 'A server running the Streaming Logic application can take phrases or sentences in plain English and spit out their XML equivalents for use in other applications. The tool offers a range of uses, such as helping news/RSS aggregators filter content, easing Web site navigation and improving search engine results' | |
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| January 17, 2007 |
| The Israeli company has developed software capable of "on-the-fly" conversion of natural language phrases and sentences into their Xml-equivalent in a way sensitive to the context. | |
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| Laura Wiessen |
| January 4, 2007 |
| 'We thought to ourselves - if we could apply the latest breakthroughs in modern linguistics to software, the results would be amazing' | |
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SearchVB.com staff |
| January. 4, 2007 |
| As applications continue to evolve, providing a larger quantity and variety of information to end users, developers must find a way to make sure that information is not literally lost in the translation from natural language, such as English, to a programming language | |
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| Christian D. |
| December 15, 2006 |
| Linguistic Agents annonce avoir développé un système permettant de transformer le langage naturel en commandes informatiques. | |
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| electronshik.ru |
| December 14, 2006 |
| Израильская компания заявила о решении проблемы распознавания нормального человеческого языка. Linguistic Agents утверждает, что технология "NanoSyntax", переводя обычный человеческий язык в формальный компьютерный, потенциально способна улучшить поисковые интерфейсы, интерфейсы приложений, программы обмена текстовыми сообщениями и многое другое. | |
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Sharon Khare |
| December 13, 2006 |
| Linguistic Agents has announced a new service, Streaming Logic, that will allow software and web developers to easily incorporate Natural Language understanding into a wide range of applications. | |
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| LinuxDevices.com |
| December 12, 2006 |
| Linguistic Agents says its NanoSyntax technology exploits the latest linguistics theories to achieve a "golden fleece" breakthrough that "was considered by many to be impossible." | |
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| Al Sacco |
| December 12, 2006 |
| Assembly language wish lists, in the old days, always included a DWIM instruction: Do What I Mean….Now, Israeli company Linguistic Agents has announced a new service, Streaming Logic, for software and Web developers. | |
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| VentureDeal Staff |
| December 12, 2006 |
| Linguistic Agents has announced the availability of a new service it calls Streaming Logic, for software and web developers. | |
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| Gali Weinreb |
| November 9, 2006 |
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"Do we finally have a company whose technology will enable computers to understand the language of humans? Linguistic Agents claims that it has made the breakthrough." | |
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| Артем Сокольский |
| October 30, 2006 |
| В свою очередь, израильская компания Linguistic Agents решила сделать большой шаг вперед, представив свою новую технологию NanoSyntax, позволяющую машинам лучше понимать человеческую речь. Новая программа способна распознавать запросы и команды пользователей на «человеческом» языке, например, на английском. | |
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Dennis Sellers Oct 26, 2006
Linguistic Agents, an Israel-based company that develops linguistic parsing software, says it’s successfully created beta versions of its software for a bus system and for a yellow pages directory, enabling an automated system to better understand the meaning of customer inquiries |
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| Peter Suciu |
| October 23, 2006 |
| We're long past the deadline for building the HAL 9000 computer from 2001: A Space Odyssey (1992 in the movie, '97 if you prefer the book), and a computer that can actually have a conversation with you is still a ways off. But an Israeli company may have just taken a big step toward the chatty PC | |
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| | Avivia Mishmari September 2006 "Imagine your computer or cell phone could accept free form instructions such as 'I'd like to speak with my sister... Linguistic Agents tasked itself with teaching computers how to understand."
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Guy Grimland |
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August 13, 2006 |
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