Notice both of these are structured data. This one, the the I stuff the data itself. It's not that hard to do it, but more often than not, we're going to play in the assisted area. You have to have some logic in there, which we can definitely do without a hot key. Based this, this is when it's unassisted. We're gonna tell it to go ahead and run the rules. And so it's not gonna act on its own right. Assisted usually means we're going to either hit a hot key or use a gooey or something. This top part here notices, says Trigger based or the R P. Actually, Will I let a webinar on, um, neural networks, which is, is in that kind of realm, but we're not touching it in this in this course, because this is just to introduce talky and internal automation. And then there's the AI and machine learning type stuff, and in those, it's, ah, very unstructured data.
And in auto hockey, where you were in one of these two areas, more often than not, when I'm using it, I'm in the assisted mode, for his honesty is that is the basic stands by itself. Ah, human is still usually involved versus the unassisted, where humans not involved. And there is a spectrum here where the RPI assisted. It's not real robots, but it's basically something sitting on your computer that is going to interact with another program. When you think of virtual robots, it makes a lot more sense.
We're not dealing with robots, but software in itself could be considered a robot. So when you think about our p A and R P A stands for robotics process automation, I really hate that term. 01 02 RPA vs AI: So before we get started deep diving into auto hockey, I want to talk a little about what auto hockey is on what it isn't.
This is going to be much more focused of an intro course and the process and flow on how to go over it. The dash automate er dot com and I have a lot of free videos there. You can find me it over the automate er dot com. But but for this video and this course, we're going to learn how to use on a hockey, so I hope you appreciate it. I I love it because it's simple to learn easy to use, but sometimes I use other tools. We're gonna find ways to work smarter, not harder. And so what I presented here is gonna be a lot of programming, but it's it's coming from someone that's like you that hasn't actually done necessarily programming before or not a hockey. And, uh, I think I'm uniquely qualified to present this to you because I have worked through it from a non programmers perspective. I've been using out of hockey for about nine years. I want to give a little background about myself.
And I am recording this video on auto hockey and basically to intercourse in how to use on a hockey.