Many network diagnostic/monitoring tools use techniques that at one time were called AI - AI is really a catch-all for "things we haven't learned to do well yet". At one time, using an "expert system" to encode some smarts into software was "AI". Now it's just the way things are done.
A common example of "expert system" that gets coded into modern network tools is more intelligent fault isolation. For example, if 25 different monitored services all fail at the same time, and they're all on the other side of the same router from your monitoring system, then it's *probably* a router failure, not 25 simultaneous server failures.
See? Simple when it's mentioned, nobody calls it AI anymore, but it *used* to be....
2006-08-08 23:57:10
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answer #1
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answered by Valdis K 6
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Hi,
The answer of your question is on the following site it will help you
http://www.alanturing.net/turing_archive/pages/Reference%20Articles/What%20is%20AI.html
2006-08-09 05:55:17
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answer #2
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answered by Pritesh Kabra 2
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