Robots Quotes
Most Famous Robots Quotes of All Time!
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Normally, in the presence of radiation, communication links fail. But with autonomous robots, you don't need communications.
Our nano-quadrotor robots are made to be as lightweight as possible: less than a fifth of a pound and palm-sized. They can do an aerial backflip in half a second, accelerate at two Gs, and fly rotor blade to rotor blade in three-dimensional formations - and they do all this autonomously.
Most American films have now become mindless. The human element has been removed, so you are just left with the surrogate human, which is the robot, so coincidentally or, rather, ironically, they are making films about robots, without realising they are talking about themselves.
All in all, I don't think robots and greater automation can bring about a utopian world as I imagined it would as a kid 50 years ago.
Robots are very tricky to design and expensive, whereas humans are cheaply manufactured. Humans can handle things with greater manual dexterity than most robots I've known.
In 2008, I decided I wanted to begin a new venture, so I started Rethink Robotics. We build factory robots that a person can learn to train in just a few minutes. In May 2011, I stepped off the iRobot board.
As a child I was very into gadgets and machines and robots. The idea of experimenting with machines to create art was always something I tinkered with.
Opposition to immigration is an emotional argument, and human beings are emotional, not robots powered by data.
Kids are really inspired to not just apply senses to robots and machines, but to try them on themselves.
The human condition is not perfect. We are not perfect specimens, any of us. We're not robots.
If we could communicate at the speed of thought, we can augment our creativity with the low-level stuff that AI and robots and 3-D printers and fab labs and all that do.
Our robots are signing up for online learning. After decades of attempts to program robots to perform complex tasks like flying helicopters or surgical suturing, the new approach is based on observing and recording the motions of human experts as they perform these feats.
The great mystery is why robots come off so well in science-fiction films when the human characters are often so astoundingly wooden.
Immigrants are not the main threat to the industrialized world's workforce: robots are - or, rather, artificially intelligent robots are.
If intelligent robots are our competitors and, to some extent, cerebrally alike - enough for us to discuss their ethical standing - why would they be above the law? Should they not contribute to our societies, too? And why would they be exempt from taxes?
Is manned space exploration important? Yes - not least because it simply works much better than sending robots.
I don't want to be in a movie with 20 minutes of dialogue and then stand around while the robots start explosions.
But I'm not imaginative. I couldn't look into the future, like Star Wars or Robots or anything like that.
We're going to become caretakers for the robots. That's what the next generation of work is going to be.
If I could do anything, I'd be an engineer of some sort. I used to build robots.
It turns out umpires and judges are not robots or traffic cameras, inertly monitoring deviations from a fixed zone of the permissible. They are humans.
When Steven Spielberg comes to you and says, 'Hey do you want to write a movie about robots?' You just say yes.
If you don't need umpires out there, and you can put robots out there, then why do we need ballplayers?
We're not going to see an exclusively robotic factory, but we will see the optimum use of robots and people.
We're seeing the arrival of conversational robots that can walk in our world. It's a golden age of invention.
I'm Dr. David Hanson, and I build robots with character. And by that, I mean that I develop robots that are characters, but also robots that will eventually come to empathize with you.
Robots have gotten steadily more capable, but humans' expectations that robots should have minds keeps biting robot developers.
The 'Star Wars' films are known for their exotic aliens, sophisticated robots, sleek technology, and planet-sized battle stations.
Zombies, vampires, Frankenstein's monster, robots, Wolfman - all of this stuff was really popular in the '50s. Robots are the only one of those make-believe monsters that have become real. They are really in our lives in a meaningful way. That's pretty fascinating to me.
The other one I did was 'I, Robot.' I take apart Isaac Asimov's Robots world.
When I was building robots in the early 1990s, the problems of voice recognition, image understanding, VOIP, even touchscreen technologies - these were robotics problems.
At MIT, in Professor Rodney Brooks' lab, I was involved in a project, led by Anita Flynn, to build robots using techniques similar to those used in building silicon chips. We got some silicon micro-machined motors to move a bit, but this didn't lead to an actual product.
I visualize a time when we will be to robots what dogs are to humans, and I'm rooting for the machines.
If we were to lose the ability to be emotional, if we were to lose the ability to be angry, to be outraged, we would be robots. And I refuse that.
After I joined Google and stopped working on robots - I'd built some self-driving tractors on farms in the meantime - I was always tinkering and playing with robots at home and just as a hobby.
I'm excited about bringing robots into the market, about having the most effect in the world.
I don't think that globalisation is anywhere near the threat that robots are.
Automation is no longer just a problem for those working in manufacturing. Physical labor was replaced by robots; mental labor is going to be replaced by AI and software.
Instead of working to give robots personhood status, we should concentrate on protecting our human workers. If that means developing a more cooperative approach to ownership of autonomous trucks so millions of drivers are not left out in the literal cold, so be it.
The Korean government is the first to declare that if you replace people with machines you have to pay a tax. It's a tax on robots. They make private companies internalise the social cost of unemployment. Social benefit is not the same as private benefit. We have to realise this.
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