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Full Discussion: Role of AI in any OS
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Role of AI in any OS Post 88480 by Neo on Friday 4th of November 2005 02:28:28 PM
Old 11-04-2005
AI seems to be losing favor. Studies show that, in the current day and age, even with powerful processors and cheap memory, computers have the "intelligence" about equal to an earthworm.

The area that is gaining ground is in agents (I would hesitate to call them "intelligenct agents") that do small tasks for humans.

I just had a long telphone conversation with student working on his thesis who interviewed me on this topic, and the mental image to keep in mind is Tom Cruise in front of the large parabolic screen in the movie "Minority Report".

In Minority Report, Tom Hank's character is shown working with a large screen supported by what appears to be agent-based software supporting information retrieval and human data analysis.

Agents help humans, but the 'intelligence' is in the human mind.
 

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SYSTEMD-ASK-PASSWORD(1) 				       systemd-ask-password					   SYSTEMD-ASK-PASSWORD(1)

NAME
systemd-ask-password - Query the user for a system password SYNOPSIS
systemd-ask-password [OPTIONS...] [MESSAGE] DESCRIPTION
systemd-ask-password may be used to query a system password or passphrase from the user, using a question message specified on the command line. When run from a TTY it will query a password on the TTY and print it to STDOUT. When run with no TTY or with --no-tty it will query the password system-wide and allow active users to respond via several agents. The latter is only available to privileged processes. The purpose of this tool is to query system-wide passwords -- that is passwords not attached to a specific user account. Examples include: unlocking encrypted hard disks when they are plugged in or at boot, entering an SSL certificate passphrase for web and VPN servers. Existing agents are: a boot-time password agent asking the user for passwords using Plymouth; a boot-time password agent querying the user directly on the console; an agent requesting password input via a wall(1) message; an agent suitable for running in a GNOME session; a command line agent which can be started temporarily to process queued password requests; a TTY agent that is temporarily spawned during systemctl(1) invocations. Additional password agents may be implemented according to the systemd Password Agent Specification[1]. If a password is queried on a TTY, the user may press TAB to hide the asterisks normally shown for each character typed. Pressing Backspace as first key achieves the same effect. OPTIONS
The following options are understood: -h, --help Prints a short help text and exits. --icon= Specify an icon name alongside the password query, which may be used in all agents supporting graphical display. The icon name should follow the XDG Icon Naming Specification[2]. --timeout= Specify the query timeout in seconds. Defaults to 90s. A timeout of 0 waits indefinitely. --no-tty Never ask for password on current TTY even if one is available. Always use agent system. --accept-cached If passed, accept cached passwords, i.e. passwords previously typed in. --multiple When used in conjunction with --accept-cached accept multiple passwords. This will output one password per line. EXIT STATUS
On success, 0 is returned, a non-zero failure code otherwise. SEE ALSO
systemd(1), systemctl(1), plymouth(8), wall(1) NOTES
1. systemd Password Agent Specification http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/PasswordAgents 2. XDG Icon Naming Specification http://standards.freedesktop.org/icon-naming-spec/icon-naming-spec-latest.html systemd 208 SYSTEMD-ASK-PASSWORD(1)
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