by Jonathan Vorce
How do you give a computer instructions to do something?
One way is to write a program that the computer can understand – a program that details out what your instructions are. That requires that you know computer programming, though. Plus you have to figure out the right way to program your instructions. But what if things were reversed a bit? What if the computer could speak your language, rather than forcing you to speak its language? Suddenly things aren’t nearly so complicated.
The Neuric Brain can do just that: it can take commands in the form of plain English text. Some of the types of commands which the Neuric Brain understands and can act on include:
- Direct commands, such as “If you see a UFO, report the incident to me.”
- New relationship creation, such as “If a person calls a terrorist, that person is a person of interest.”
- Definition/condition satisfaction, such as “An electronic financial transaction consists of a withdrawal of funds from one bank account, and a deposit of funds into another bank account.” “If an electronic financial transaction takes place, report the incident to me.”
Seemingly unrelated events that might take a person days to track and assess can be found and connected by simply telling the Brain in plain English what to look for.




