An expensive toy with no practical use whatsoever.So when we have a machine that can pick up an egg and run in circles attached with a pole with it while wielding a sledgehammer we'll have...what?The problem is still single tasking. This one runs well, this one climbs stairs well, this one can pick up an egg, this one can use a sledgehammer, etc. We won't have science fiction style humanoid robots until we can start integrating these abilities.
An expensive toy with no practical use whatsoever.
That's all a humanoid robot will ever be. Machines, by their nature, tend to be specialized. There are millions of industrial robots right now and they do their jobs very well -- we're all familiar with the robots that weld and paint car bodies. But a machine that looks, walks (and runs) and talks like a human? What would it be good for?
A useful device, yes. But specialized, and not the same thing as a humanoid robot.. . . But I do disagree with the notion that there's no practical use for such things. I can imagine walkingchairs for the handicapped so they don't need ramps to climb curbs or stairs ...
Okay, give some examples of practical uses for a robot that looks and moves more or less like a human being. I’m listening.That's quite a failure of imagination if you can't see them as anything more than toys.
Machines, by their nature, tend to be specialized. There are millions of industrial robots right now and they do their jobs very well -- we're all familiar with the robots that weld and paint car bodies. But a machine that looks, walks (and runs) and talks like a human? What would it be good for?
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