Talk:Robot/Lead under discussion

  • A robot is a mechanical or virtual intelligent agent that can perform tasks automatically or with guidance, typically by remote control.
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  • Robots can be autonomous, semi-autonomous or remotely controlled.
removable (repeats first sentence)Mllyjn (talk)


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  • By mimicking a lifelike appearance or automating movements, a robot may convey a sense that it has intent or agency of its own.
removable (vague)Mllyjn (talk)
  • The branch of technology that deals with robots is robotics.
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  • When societies first began developing, nearly all production and effort was the result of human labour, as well as with the aid of semi- and fully-domesticated animals.
removable (why trace robots back to the origins of civilization?)Mllyjn (talk)
  • As mechanical means of performing functions were discovered, and mechanics and complex mechanisms were developed, the need for human labour was reduced.
removableMllyjn (talk)
  • Machinery was initially used for repetitive functions, such as lifting water and grinding grain.
removableMllyjn (talk)
  • With technological advances more complex machines were slowly developed, such as those invented by Hero of Alexandria (in Egypt) in the 1st century AD, and the first half of the second millennium AD, such as the Automata of Al-Jazari in the 12th century AD (in medieval Iraq).

It's really cool and surprising that robots have such a long history but this paragraph makes it sound like robots were common and inevitable. Mllyjn (talk)

  • They were not widely adopted as human labour, particularly slave labour, was still inexpensive compared to the capital-intensive machines.
removable (Was expense really the only limit on historical robots?)Mllyjn (talk)
  • Men such as Leonardo Da Vinci in 1495 through to Jacques de Vaucanson in 1739, as well as rediscovering the Greek engineering methods, have made plans for and built automata and robots leading to books of designs such as the Japanese Karakuri zui (Illustrated Machinery) in 1796.
  • As mechanical techniques developed through the Industrial age we find more practical applications such as Nikola Tesla in 1898, who designed a radio-controlled torpedo, and the Westinghouse Electric Corporation creation of Televox in 1926.
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  • We also find a more android development as designers tried to mimic more human-like features including designs such as those of biologist Makoto Nishimura in 1929 and his creation Gakutensoku, which cried and changed its facial expressions, and the more crude Elektro from Westinghouse Electric Corporation in 1938.
  • Since then we have seen robots finally reach a more true assimilation of all technologies to produce robots such as ASIMO which can walk and move like a human. Robots have replaced humans in the assistance of performing those repetitive and dangerous tasks which humans prefer not to do, or are unable to do due to size limitations, or even those such as in outer space or at the bottom of the sea where humans could not survive the extreme environments.
  • Man has developed an awareness of the problems associated with autonomous robots and how they may act in society. Fear of robot behaviour, such as Shelley's Frankenstein and the EATR, drive current practice in establishing what autonomy a robot should and should not be capable of.
removable
Is this true? Has any research organization, robot manufacturer or policy group taken Mary Shelley's Frankenstein into account when making policy about robots? As I said before, I think bringing up Frankenstein really confuses the issue.Mllyjn (talk)
  • Thinking has developed through discussion of robot control and artificial intelligence (AI) and how its application should benefit society, such as those based around Asimov's three laws.

Again, is this true? Mllyjn (talk)

  • Practicality still drives development forwards and robots are used in an increasingly wide variety of tasks such as vacuuming floors, mowing lawns, cleaning drains, investigating other planets, building cars, in entertainment and in warfare.
ref neededMllyjn (talk)

References edit

  1. ^ Pearce, Jeremy. "George C. Devol, Inventor of Robot Arm, Dies at 99", The New York Times, August 15, 2011. Accessed February 7, 2012. "In 1961, General Motors put the first Unimate arm on an assembly line at the company’s plant in Ewing Township, N.J., a suburb of Trenton. The device was used to lift and stack die-cast metal parts taken hot from their molds."