Jag letar efter en bok från 70-talet eller äldre där en man ärver en dator från sin farbror. Boken innebar huvudpersonen, hans vän och en kvinna. Något om artificiell intelligens.
The Great Time Machine Hoax aka A Hoax in Time av Keith Laumer . Det finns en sammanfattning på Wikipedia-sidan .
Låt oss gå över frågan punkt för punkt.
Jag letar efter en bok från 70-talet eller äldre
Laumer's novel The Great Time Machine Hoax publicerades första gången i häftet på 1964 , återbetalas i paperback på 1965 , 1974 , 1978 , etc. . Det var baserat på en tidskriftsserie som framträdde som "A Hoax in Time", på juni , juli och August, 1963 problem med Fantastiska berättelser om fantasi , som finns tillgängliga på Internet Archive ([ 1 ], [ 2 ], [ 3 ]).
där en man ärver en dator från sin farbror
Chester W. Chester IV ärar sin farfar herrgård, halvfull av en jätte dator av sin egen uppfinning:
"The old gentleman called it a Generalized Nonlinear Extrapolator. G.N.E. for short. He made his money in computer components, you know. He was fascinated by computers, and he felt they had tremendous unrealized possibilities. Of course, that was before Crmblznski's Limit was discovered. Great-grandfather was convinced that a machine with sufficiently extensive memory banks, adequately cross-connected and supplied with a vast store of data, would be capable of performing prodigious intellectual feats simply by discovering and exploring relationships among apparently unrelated facts."
Boken innebar huvudpersonen, hans vän och en kvinna.
Chester följs på hans äventyr av sin vän Case Mulvihill. . .
Chester grunted and turned up the collar of his conservatively cut pale lavender sports jacket, thumbing the heat control up to medium. He made his way across the lot, bucking the gusty wind, wrinkling his nose at the heavy animal stink from the menagerie, and squeezed past a plastic panel into the midway. On a low stand under a striped canopy, a broad, tall man with fierce red hair, a gigantic mustache and a checkered suit leaned against a supporting pole, picking his teeth. At sight of Chester, he straightened, flipped up a gold-headed cane and boomed, "You're just in time, friend. Plenty of seating on the inside for the most astounding, amazing, fantastic, weird and startling galaxy of fantasy and—"
Don't waste the spiel, Case," Chester cut in, coming up. "It's only me."
. . . och en "kvinna" som heter Genie:
There was a faint sound from behind them. Chester turned. A young girl stood on the rug, looking around as if fascinated by the neo-Victorian décor. Glossy dark hair curled about her oval face. She caught Chester's eye and stepped around to stand before him on the rug, a slender, modest figure wearing a golden suntan and a scarlet hair ribbon. Chester gulped audibly. Case dropped his cigar.
"Perhaps I should have mentioned, Mr. Chester," the computer said, "that the mobile speaker you requested is ready. I carried on the work in an entropic vacuole, permitting myself thereby to produce a complex entity in a very brief period, subjectively speaking."
Chester gulped again.
"Hi!" Case said, breaking the stunned silence.
"Hello," said the girl. Her voice was melodiously soft. She reached up to adjust her hair ribbon, smiling at Case and Chester. "My name is Genie."
"Uh . . . wouldn't you like to borrow my shirt?"
"Knock it off, Chester," Case said. You remind me of those characters you see on Tri-D that hide every time they see a pretty girl in the bathtub."
"I don't think the computer got the idea after all," Chester said weakly.
"It's pretty literal," Case said. "We only worried about the scenes . . ."
"I selected this costume as appropriate to the primitive setting," the girl said. "As for my physical characteristics, the intention was to produce the ideal of the average young female, without mammary hypertrophy or other exaggeration, to evoke a sisterly or maternal response in women, while the reaction of male members of the audience should be a fatherly one."
"I'm not sure it's working on me," said Chester, breathing hard.
The pretty face looked troubled. "Perhaps the body should be redesigned, Mr. Chester."
"Don't change a thing," Case said hastily. "And call me Case."
Chester moved closer to Case. "Funny," he whispered. "She talks just like the computer."
"What's funny about that? It is the computer talking. This is just a robot, remember, Chester."
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