then their life will be worse than death and oblivion. There will be nobody they could brag about their wealth and power in front of. There will be nobody to rule over.
That’s what humanoid robotics is for. They’re going to exterminate us all and rule over a world just for them, provided for through infinite robotic labor that will never revolt.
If you try to get into robotics, you will quickly get that things are not like in some SciFi stories or marketing bullshit. Robots are complex things with a lot of points of failure and wearing parts. You still need a lot of people to service robots. And no, they will not work forever flawlessly servicing generations of inbred survived elite. Even car assembly line simple 4DOF robot doing one operation need weekly imaintenace by human and will fail in a month without it.
They will just end with tons of broken robots in a less than a year.
PS: humanoid robots is a total idiocy from any technical side.
The only thing preventing general purpose humanoid robotics is lithium-ion batteries. They just don’t have the energy density—and their recharge cycle/lifespan is too crippled—to make a sustainable platform.
Form and design of human body based on completely different approach to the conversion of energy to the movements and all other stuff, and electromechanical approach to the robotics just does not fit in this form and design. Humanoid robot is a very ineffective, fragile and limited design if you use electromechanics.
Because of different nature of internal design, humanoid robots will always fall into "uncanny valley" when you will try to make them more human-like. Different way of movements, different motion planning limited by electromechanic will never allow them be something more than overpriced and useless toys.
You could make human-like general purpose robot, but it will be the worst possible design from all points of view, from efficiency of energy to work conversion to the perception of this thing by people.
In the same way that people ourselves are a compromise of efficiency, a humanoid robot is a similar compromise. If a self-contained platform can be made to do multiple tasks otherwise suited to individual robots, you save on the construction and maintenance costs of the individual robots. A person’s home doesn’t have room for a cooking arm in the ceiling of the kitchen, a laundry arm in the ceiling of the basement, a housekeeper arm sliding around every single room to do the cleaning… but it does have room in a closet for a humanoid robot to stand while plugged in.
I’m totally fine with the uncanny valley being extremely hard to overcome. I don’t want robots hiding out as real people in real life like they do on the Internet. Forget skin coatings; just give me robot robots.
That’s what humanoid robotics is for. They’re going to exterminate us all and rule over a world just for them, provided for through infinite robotic labor that will never revolt.
If you try to get into robotics, you will quickly get that things are not like in some SciFi stories or marketing bullshit. Robots are complex things with a lot of points of failure and wearing parts. You still need a lot of people to service robots. And no, they will not work forever flawlessly servicing generations of inbred survived elite. Even car assembly line simple 4DOF robot doing one operation need weekly imaintenace by human and will fail in a month without it.
They will just end with tons of broken robots in a less than a year.
PS: humanoid robots is a total idiocy from any technical side.
The only thing preventing general purpose humanoid robotics is lithium-ion batteries. They just don’t have the energy density—and their recharge cycle/lifespan is too crippled—to make a sustainable platform.
Batteries is not the only problem.
Form and design of human body based on completely different approach to the conversion of energy to the movements and all other stuff, and electromechanical approach to the robotics just does not fit in this form and design. Humanoid robot is a very ineffective, fragile and limited design if you use electromechanics.
Because of different nature of internal design, humanoid robots will always fall into "uncanny valley" when you will try to make them more human-like. Different way of movements, different motion planning limited by electromechanic will never allow them be something more than overpriced and useless toys.
You could make human-like general purpose robot, but it will be the worst possible design from all points of view, from efficiency of energy to work conversion to the perception of this thing by people.
In the same way that people ourselves are a compromise of efficiency, a humanoid robot is a similar compromise. If a self-contained platform can be made to do multiple tasks otherwise suited to individual robots, you save on the construction and maintenance costs of the individual robots. A person’s home doesn’t have room for a cooking arm in the ceiling of the kitchen, a laundry arm in the ceiling of the basement, a housekeeper arm sliding around every single room to do the cleaning… but it does have room in a closet for a humanoid robot to stand while plugged in.
I’m totally fine with the uncanny valley being extremely hard to overcome. I don’t want robots hiding out as real people in real life like they do on the Internet. Forget skin coatings; just give me robot robots.