A standardized chime in the beginning of the phone call could serve to alert humans as well as AI agents that the party they are talking to are an AI, eliminating the first part of the conversation.
Everyone is right that the protocol is the wrong one to use, but there _should_ actually be some formally documented handshake for ai-agents to use to agree on an outside protocol to switch to.
Brilliant, I don't feel this is pracctical, but I love the creativity.
This reminds of me chirp https://archive.is/HEC29
https://audioxpress.com/news/data-over-sound-pioneer-chirp-a...
Why doesn't it just communicate a unique conversation ID and then use a backchannel like opening up a web connection instead? It is supposing that you are able to make a call but not connect to the internet?
This is the equivalent of the Yo app but for """AI"""
This is also high art. This needs to be in MOMA or something.
I love this.
Use English—the power of plain text.
I wonder how well it can listen if there is lots of bg noise in this type sounds
What’s the RTTY protocol?
Soon to be replaced by IEEE P2874.
They stepped on every single rake possible, didn't they? 1. Why are you making a phone call in the first place, your agent probably got the number from the internet, just keep using that. 2. If you insist on initiating the conversation over a phone call, why not immediately terminate the call and again, go over the internet once you realize that it is an ai to ai conversation. 3. You did in fact re-invent a modem but worse, the quoted speed on that library is 8-16 bytes/sec, and i would like to point out that the Bell 103 did ~37 bytes/sec, and was released in 1963.
> Warning: This went viral, be careful as there are a lot of scam projects trying to capitalize on this. We have nothing to do with them.
I'm doubling down on my thesis. All this "AI" crap is Web3 2.0. It's nothing but scams on scams.
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It's a little depressing to have reinvented the modem only 10,000 times less efficient.
At the point that two AIs discover that they are talking to each other, wouldn't it almost certainly be true that both could access the Internet and therefore the right thing to do (if more than a few bits of information need to be shared) is to exchange endpoint information and hang up the call to be able to communicate directly?