Getting computers to understand and respond to human language is quite hard to obtain even in this technological era. Human language has evolved sophisticatedly over the past centuries. Chatbots have been constrained to solve a lot of problems but many of them were front-line customer support at first, which was effectively automated with the use of chatbots despite the fact, that there is still a lot of time for the research and development sector to completely make it near to the smartness of humans.<\/p>
Building a useful chatbot that can easily be adapted is an everlasting unfinished endeavor, it continues to advance every day but it will take time to evolve as the advanced technologies they can ultimately become. EDDI, the Chatbot framework that has been developed since 2006 and later made open source after ten years of research and development introducing advanced chatbot processing with Natural language parsing, API connectors, and Templating using one of the most powerful software stacks in Red Hat\u2019s Quarkus which is the base on which our Docker containers are built and distributed to Openshift and other Kubernetes based stacks.<\/p>
Now, six years later after making EDDI open-source, we are proud to announce the major update, version 5, which comes with the migration to Quarkus. Bridging the traditional monolithic applications that had tedious startup time and large memory allocation, Quarkus on the other hand, is the evolved and faster Java framework to enable modern Java Applications for cloud-native computing.<\/p>
Quarkus is a Kubernetes-native-driven Java framework made specifically for GraalVM and Hotspot, crafted from the pioneer Java libraries and standards. The goal is to make Java the leading platform in Kubernetes and serverless environments while offering engineers a framework to address a wider range of distributed application architectures.<\/p>
Being smaller and consuming fewer machine resources, Quarkus was born with the idea to be the ideal partner for applications like the EDDI chatbot runtime,which can be used in Microservices and Serverless projects. Due to quarkus, the new major update is now certified from head to toe, including container and operator certification, and is being distributed through the Red Hat and Google Cloud marketplaces, or Docker Hub for those wanting to deploy EDDI on other systems manually.<\/p>