A robot is supposed to be autonomous, not remote controlled. If it's remote controlled then it barely qualifies as automaton, not robot.
The remote controlled robot's intelligence would be somewhere in the computer system of the
Enterprise, just as Moriarty's intelligence always had been. Which means that he couldn't get too far from the
Enterprise, depending on the transmission speed.
Remember that every singe part of every single body is remotely controlled by signals sent along nerves from a brain. Your brain controls your body by remote control.
Is your brain in the tip of your finger? No. But if you pick up a coin, you sense what the fingertip tenses and control it's movements just as well as if your brain was in the tip of the finger. And if you stick your fingertip into a flame you will feel pain on the fingertip just as well as if your brain was in the fingertip. As far as your sensation is concerned, you are just as well off and just as badly off as if your brain was located in the tip of your finger, or in every other part of the body you receive sensations from.
There are creatures whose farthest body part is much less than a single inch from their brain, but the longest sauropods and the longest whales had and have body parts a hundred feet from their brain.
There is logically no difference between sensing and controlling your body with signals sent along nerves, or along copper wire, or by radio signals, or by subspace signals.
Discofan said:
What I wonder about is what happened to the device after the crash of Ent-D? Did someone remember to pick it up?
I have my doubts when I see how Picard treated the precious antique that his mentor gave him not long before he died
Some fans have suggested that Picard put the actual archaeological relic in a museum, or at least in storage on Earth, and kept a replicated copy in his ready room on the
Enterprise which he often took into dangerous situations. Thus the copy in Picard's ready room would not be not the real priceless rare treasure. We can hope.