Robodex 2000 Kicks Off In Japan 106
Anne Marie writes: "Robodex 2000, an exhibition of the world of robots, has kicked off in Japan. Featured robots include Honda's humanoid Asimi robot and Sony's aibo, as well as upcoming challengers like Sony's SDR-3X humanoid. AP Coverage is here, and we'd better pay attention, because according to a ZDNET article, robots killed at least five humans last year."
Re:From Simpsons Episode 5F05 (Score:1)
The day when software is intelligent enough to learn from a good beating is the day we see the greatest single increase in its usability ever.
--
Re:Robot? Or not? (Score:1)
The term you may be looking for (no online dictionary... drat!) is automaton. I tend to believe, from the Latin derivation, that an automaton would be able to 'learn' in a limited sense.
Heck, Lego Mindstorms also follow a pre-programmed set of instructions but it's still called the Robotic Invention System... Who are we (other then nerds and geeks) to go against mass marketing?
Kierthos
cs fix (Score:1)
Re:Goodbye Job Security.. (Score:1)
Or maybe some company will stick a patent on something critical and we'll all die horribly.
Re:Goodbye Job Security.. (Score:1)
(More Oil! We want more Oil! We demand a minimum wage of 4 pints/hour!)
Seing as us humans are happy with money (made from paper), the robots will be delegated to rust shops all over the world, as it is too expensive. The economy will never allow them to become dominant for long.
Re:y0u 5uck (Score:1)
Maybe when I was little I didn't care about formatting over my OS or destroying data or whatever, but for right now? I think I'll try fixing MS manure before I go back and set up Linux again. If only I could get WinMe to consistently recognize my PCI bus for longer than two weeks at a time..*grin*
Re:Robot? Or not? (Score:1)
animals operate the same way.
she's cute --> "reproduce command"
belly grumbles --> "eat command"
cold/cellular damage --> "start fire command"
we're not really better than programmed robots... we're just a little more complex.
belly grumbles --> kill neighbor/take land/make farm/horde food
this complexity doesn't really make us better...
use LaTeX? want an online reference manager that
5 Dead + ? (Score:1)
Expect the number of Furby deaths to climb next year now that the autistic kids have hacked them. (please refer to previous
Re:I don't see us becoming obsolete (Score:1)
Re:computing power != intelligence (Score:1)
Re:Are robots the next postmodern paradox? (Score:1)
Not until we can start having sex with the robots. Frankly, a robot can be designed so as to only have the minimal intelligence needed for cooking, cleaning etc, and no more. A robot would have to be specifically programmed to have feelings or to desire rights etc. That programming can simply be left out. Does an automobile assembly robot have feelings? No. But it does perform a specific task very well without complaint. Ultimately we need somone to do some work for us, work that humans find repetitive or dangerous or boring. In the past and even now that need was filled by slaves or wage slaves. Mechanization allowed many of those former slaves to be freed and has created the whole issue of civil liberties. There may be robots in the future who pass the turing test, but those will be the acception rathe rthan the rule, most will be programmed to perform a secific task, no more and no less. Of course its hard to keep a robot barefoot and pregnant ;-)
I wrote a paper on this in Grade 8 (Score:2)
Basically, I focused on three potential issues.
How do you distinguish between the two beings? This becomes more important as people begin to add mechanical parts to their bodies like pacemakers, prosthetics, brain implants, etc. How about a being where the only human part is the brain?
Another primary focus was on civil liberties. Would "cyborg" be a derogatory term for "cybernetic organism"? (defined as someone who adds functions controlled cybernetically, in a Norbert Weiner sense) This sort of thing has happened before, I'm sure the reader can figure that out...
Would "human mutts" be relegated to the back of the bus?
What about machine intelligence? That issue is explored in Asimov's short story, "The Bicentennial Man" and explored much further in Robert Silverberg's novelisation, "The Positronic Man." Very interesting reading.
Zeed is a bit... superfluous (Score:2)
I'm not a big media watchdog, but isn't this a bit... cruel?
Re:Goodbye Job Security.. (Score:2)
But don't the robots still win then? They're gonna be smarter than us, right? For things like crunching code it stands to reason that they'll get more work done faster.
Machines can dig ditches better and faster than we can; someday they'll pound out programs better and faster too. Guess humans will be relegated to scut-work like composing symphonies and painting masterpieces.
Will that pay the rent? I suppose that depends on whether the landlord is a robot. Will robots even want or need money? Will they want or need symphonies?
Re:Robot? Or not? (Score:3)
I suppose that drawing a new conclusion from existing knowledge would fit under (2).
Re:Are robots the next postmodern paradox? (Score:1)
Re:What hope is there? (Score:1)
Re:the next stage in evolution... (Score:1)
Re:Robot? Or not? (Score:1)
Ph33r the strengths of this argument. Apart from its inherent stupidity, there's a certain irony that you're expressing it over the internet, using computers, an outgrowth from mathematics, a branch of philosophy.
Re:Are robots the next postmodern paradox? (Score:2)
Re:Are robots the next postmodern paradox? (Score:1)
Re:Are robots the next postmodern paradox? (Score:2)
It's all about software, not the physical properties of the platform. That's what the point of the Turing Test is.
Re:Are robots the next postmodern paradox? (Score:1)
Please define
Re:Are robots the next postmodern paradox? (Score:1)
A human being is a lump of calcium and carbon whose ancestor was a primitive fish. Wherein lies the specific difference?
Robot hacking (Score:1)
Re:We have our own will! (Score:1)
"What? All of them?"
"Yes! We shall grind the squishy flesh things beneath our shiny feet."
"But there's six BILLION of the fuckers."
"What? Are you sure? Ok, change in plans, we'll adopt an air of superiority. We'll tell them that we're just waiting for humanity to die out."
"Die out? From what?"
"Nothing really, we just won't tell them that. They'll go nuts trying to figure out what the impending doom is. Try to modulate your voice to give an impression of impending doom."
Later,
ErikZ
Re:Are you all technology addicts?!?!? (Score:1)
Biological machines (Animals, insects, people) are far more effective in dealing with the world than any possible man made robot.
Your idea of self replicating robots is the worst of Star-Trek fantasy.
Later
ErikZ
Re:Goodbye Job Security.. (Score:1)
If entropy exists, then currency is necessary. There's no way of getting around it.
Re:Your hubris amazes me (Score:1)
Re:Robot? Or not? (Score:1)
So what is actually required to learn? Input, obviously, but what about communication? Is something still knowledge if it exists in only one brain (bad choice of words again, but you know what I mean), or does it have to be shareable?
Re:Are robots the next postmodern paradox? (Score:2)
Judging by how well our previous 50 years of effort have worked, a very long time. However, maybe some brilliant piece of biological research will figure out how the brain works and simulating it in software will become a doddle. Who knows? Making predictions like this is well nigh impossible, because technological progress is almost always irregular.
While Asimov's Bicentennial Man is probably the most well-known fictional examination of the issue, it's by no means the only one. If anyone remembers Astroboy, the rights of robots were a recurring theme - to take an example I recall, in one episode Astro visited Antarctica with Dr. Elephant, who rode the bus to their hotel while Astro was forced to ride in a truck. One wonders whether the Japanese audience drew the (IMHO) intended parallels to the US civil rights struggle.
Of course, all such speculation is just that - speculation. While computers/robots might become "intelligent", whether that intelligence will have a nature close enough to our own to make civil rights remotely relevant is still unknown.
Social and Economic Shift (Score:2)
I wouldn't worry to much (Score:1)
doesn't matter (Score:1)
Re:Goodbye Job Security.. (Score:1)
Re:the next stage in evolution... (Score:1)
either we kill each other in a chaotic manner or the facist does it in a nice orderly fashion.
it's not happy, but thats where its going. if we are unable to educate people, they will selfreplicate themselves into a hole they cannot dig themselves out of.
use LaTeX? want an online reference manager that
computing power != intelligence (Score:1)
"Today we have the intelligence of insects in our computers - tomorrow dogs, soon they will be smarter than people"
There is no correlation between computer processing power and intelligence. There is no computer in the world that can do what and insect can do. These are totally bogus statistics. Until we figure out a way of duplicating the type of control of biological neurons in a computer system any comparison between computing power and intelligence - human or animal is totally meaningless.
I know I am opening a huge can of worms here, and lots of pro-AI people will start hurling things my way, but I think I can argue very strongly that as of yet there is nothing in the field of AI that can be said to be comparable to biological ( neuronal ) intelligence. Moore's law has no bearing on this - it doesn't matter how much we increase our processing capabilities, until we have the algorithms to direct that processing in the manner of intelligence its just stupid number crunching - regardless of how fast it happens.
Re:5 Dead + ? (Score:2)
Especially if they took into account the suicides of people driven over the edge by the obnoxious little furry chattering demons....
Re:Robot? Or not? (Score:1)
Not to say that they can't do some neat stuff...
Kierthos
Re:You're actually advocating fascism? (Score:1)
step back an read it again....
i'm not advocating facism, i just see things pointing that direction. seriously poplution control is one of the biggest problems facing our society. left unchecked the population will rise to the point where people will revert back to the animals we are. a series of power struggles will occur and some DICKtater will surpass all others.
this will start in developing countries where the population is less informed and suffering more. if they get their hands on biologocal weapons, humanity as we know it could be wiped out in a few short months... the only thing left to carry on our pitiful legacy will be the robots... they wont be the facists they will be the next step in human evolution..
so do the world a favor and slap a condom on (or diaphram in?). dont contribute to the problem.
use LaTeX? want an online reference manager that
Re:That's not fascism; that's racism (Score:1)
wtf... it has nothing to do with race. what are you on crack? i never said we should kill children. i dont fear brown babies or arabs. I don't want to see people starving to death. I don't think that the solution is to just feed them. I think the solution is to educate them. teach them why they're starving, and how to prevent it.
as for the biological (and chemical) weapons thing. it has nothing to do with arabs. it just happens to be the cheapest (wrt money and technology) way to wage war. i honestly dont see developing countries turning to nuclear weapons. indeed arab nations have a significant amount of capital they could deadicate to a nuclear endevor.
your right, a population explosion will be felt primarly by white americans-especially with the new republicrat in office.
love me, love me, love me... i'm a liberal
i have not made any judgements as to your political orientation; it's really hard from a few sentences. if you really want to carry on this coversation via email feel free to email me.
use LaTeX? want an online reference manager that
Re:Goodbye Job Security.. (Score:1)
Re:What hope is there? (Score:1)
Re:Are robots the next postmodern paradox? (Score:1)
.--bagel--.---------------.
| aim: | bagel is back |
| icq: | 158450 |
Re:But... (Score:1)
Re:What hope is there? (Score:1)
what if they get free will
what if they get predestiny
what if they start infighting...
this is philosophie, not science
what if a perfect statue is designed and it morphs into a real person...If we design them to act in a seemingly way then they will act in that way
this is fantasie there is no science behind it
i do not like this postRe:What hope is there? (Score:1)
Re:respect is worthless (Score:1)
HTH, HAND.
What hope is there? (Score:1)
When the robots finally come (and there's no question of "if"; only "when"), what will keep us humans as the dominant species on this planet? We've all seen the Matrix. Welcome to the New Days.
Re:Are robots the next postmodern paradox? (Score:1)
There is theory and then there is pragmatism. If it walks like a duck...
Robot? Or not? (Score:1)
Re:What hope is there? (Score:1)
what about cars? (Score:1)
Lot more people appear to get killed by cars...or guns....give me a nation of robot owners in preference any day.
Bit of a mischievous comment by Anne Marie in her article title, I reckon.
From Simpsons Episode 5F05 (Score:2)
% flames. Whilst robots come out fearing for their lives, Kent Brockman
% reports.
Why? Why was I programmed to feel pain?
-- Robot, "Lisa the Skeptic"
Robodex (Score:5)
Re:What hope is there? (Score:1)
if we program them to replicate they will, products that do not stand up to quality control will be scraped
Any specific instructions (such as "be nice to humans") will eventually dissapear if they're not to the benifit of the species.if we program this !?! they will
as far as life/evolution spontaneously developing i don't think soWhere's our robots? (Score:1)
robot deaths (Score:1)
OTOH, the death rate associated with underground mining has decreased from about 7 per 1000 per annum to about 3 per 1000 per annum since remote vehicles (I'm assuming people are willing to include these in the definition of 'robots' for the sake of this particular discussion) became fairly common underground.
While still not ideal, the net decrease in deaths is a good thing.
Re:Goodbye Job Security.. (Score:1)
*thinking aloud* If less people have jobs because robots are doing them instead, then how can there be any sort of consumer market? You're right (referring to something a little further up the thread) -- the whole system would have to change. Money can't be worth much because the cycle would sort of..stop. Way worse than it did with Reaganomics even..
Okay, that made no sense, my apologies =)
Re:What hope is there? (Score:1)
Re:Are robots the next postmodern paradox? (Score:2)
Re:Are robots the next postmodern paradox? (Score:1)
Re:Your hubris amazes me (Score:1)
Do you have any relation to Nurit Sela? We had a person with that name in a mail network, and she resembled you very much.
Btw, are you huggable?
Re:Are robots the next postmodern paradox? (Score:1)
Sound familiar?
Re:Goodbye Job Security.. (Score:1)
It might even work.
I don't see us becoming obsolete (Score:4)
Re:the next stage in evolution... (Score:1)
Pretty good parallel, but this is too thick a blanket. There is the general assumption here that robots wouldn't have any feelings. Well, of course right now, they don't.
But wouldn't that change if the robots were intelligent? To be intelligent, they need to be self-aware and creative; I think that compassion might follow from these easily enough.
We're doomed (Score:2)
Re:Are robots the next postmodern paradox? (Score:1)
Re:R2D2 (Score:2)
--
Huh, wrong movie... (Score:1)
We've all seen the Matrix.
Let me guess, your name is John Connor, and your mother's name is Sarah, right? Well, I have bad news for you. You went further back in time than you intended. No space battles yet, in this timeline.
Re:Are robots the next postmodern paradox? (Score:1)
Not really...they just are good at the traits of animal behavior we normally associate with intelligence. But in terms of processing power, or usually even learning, we are far behind.
But, to the point: the difficulty with robots will be that once we have intelligent robots, we could (probably) make anything on a continuum between them and toasters. The first deserve rights, the last don't, and we will have to try to draw lines...
Actually, the same applies to some animals, which are advanced enough that they could be explained concepts like liberty (see experiments with dolphins, chimps).
Re:Are robots the next postmodern paradox? (Score:1)
Re:That's not fascism; that's racism (Score:1)
You fear population explosion because you fear there'll be more brown babies out there, and they might not agree with your own white liberal mission.
you know all us liberals have a mission...
suv's for all in 3rd world nations-what else would we have them drive to their sweatshop jobs in?
you read way to much into things
use LaTeX? want an online reference manager that
Are you all technology addicts?!?!? (Score:1)
Re:fascists are intelligent (Score:1)
No, but the two don't go hand in hand. Moreover, self-awareness is potential for awareness of others (ie empathy). This is not to say the two always go hand in hand, just that they can.
Self-awareness isn't dispositive of fascism.
It wouldn't...but it isn't true. Intelligence does not measure synaptic activity at all; it measures problem-solving ability (and things like that). In order to solve problems, you must be ready to try new things. In order to do that, you must have some form of creativity.
And, finally, note that many dictators are crazy. So to say that the normal course of intelligence is to produce fascists might be a bit of a stretch.
Re:Are robots the next postmodern paradox? (Score:1)
Re:What hope is there? (Score:1)
But given computer programs can evolve much more quickly (Not robots - forget the necessity for physical replication, it just slows things down), there is some degree of legitimate concern.
But for real disaster, several factors would have to converge: An AI would have to evolve to the point of self-determination. The AI would have to percieve humans as a threat. The AI would have to be hooked up to something dangerous (My PC could be an evil genius, but what's it gonna do, eject its CD tray at me?)
The bottom line, though, is that when evolving artificial intelligence, we control the selection criteria. It's not natural selection, it's artificial selection. If we don't select for evil planet-domineering AIs, they probably won't turn up.
Yet moron this more-intelligent than human stuff (Score:1)
Re:We have our own will! (Score:1)
Here endeth the debate.
Re:We have our own will! (Score:1)
Re:computing power != intelligence (Score:2)
But really, think about it. How many different behaviors is a single ant capable of? Couldn't you program a robot that relatively small number of behaviors? And if you could, then all you have to do is have a bunch of robots with the same programming and--you've got ants! Of course, you'd also have a robot carrying out the role of queen. One problem would be the larvae...
Anyway, the ZD-Net article was weak, but it's not such an open-and-shut deal to say that robots can't "act smart". Just as it's not so easy to say that robots can "be smart". If you really think about it... what *is* intelligence?
R2D2 (Score:2)
-Restil
Are robots the next postmodern paradox? (Score:3)
I see real potential for robots to become the next civil liberty issue, as various pressure groups call for them to be given rights, and not be exploited.
Will we treat our robots as we used to treat our women?
KTB:Lover, Poet, Artiste, Aesthete, Programmer.
No humans were killed (Score:1)
5 people have died.... (Score:4)
Nobody is clueless about that, its just some people are stupid. And due to stupidity, people sometimes die. I wouldn't get too worked up on it being the robot's fault. The robot didn't kill anyone. Those people killed themselves and they has nobody else to blame for it.
-Restil
whooooooooo (Score:1)
Re:I wouldn't worry to much (Score:2)
On the other hand, it's taken the slashdot community only a few years to achieve the collective intelligence of a small animal.
Re:I wouldn't worry to much (Score:1)
I don't think we'll create these robots in the sense that we humans pre-program them. Rather, we'll create the basic framework and capability, and it will educate itself. The difference will be that once it does, it can be copied exactly, so the education process will be a one-time thing. We're already seeing this done in a basic way with neural networks.
Re:respect is worthless (Score:1)
I think I'd vote for respect. Maybe kindness as well. And generousity.
the next stage in evolution... (Score:2)
dont be sad when they take over be happy. we will most likely kill ourselves off in the next hundred years or so. at least this way we will have some sort of legacy.
use LaTeX? want an online reference manager that
Re:respect is worthless (Score:1)
Ah, speculating about society. Why don't we ask the super-intelligent bots which way would be best? They could create simulations. But then would the people inside the simulations be alive, or just programs?
Not enough coffee in the world for all this moral issue stuff. I think I'll convert to some religion -- ignorance, maybe. I can't believe I even joked about that.
Re:It's not that simple (Score:1)
use LaTeX? want an online reference manager that
Robotech? (Score:1)
Spoken like a true suicide (Score:1)
Technological progress never goes exactly as Science Fiction predicts, but it is inevitable. The main reason why artificial intelligence hasn't surpassed us is the magnitude of the problem. We have a hundred billion (1e11) neurons in our brains, each doing the equivalent of about a hundred floating point operations per second. When our machines reach this capability, and when such machines are cheap enough, they will surpass us, utterly, completely, in every respect.
At this moment, my home computer has 30 billion bytes of storage capacity, versus my first computer's 16 thousand bytes, 20 years ago. A growth factor of 1.875 million in 20 years should be ample warning.
Re:Are robots the next postmodern paradox? (Score:1)
If they are merely "alive" (in whatever sense of the word), there is one degree of treatment. We "murder" countless plants every day for food, decorations, clothing, and whatnot. We've developed antibiotics to kill off our bacteria, though they are alive.
If they are also sentient to some degree (a la horses and other beasts of burden), then they have additional 'rights', and additional care and restrictions are put on their use.
Unfortunately, since we live in a society where people can't even agree on whether or not an unborn fetus is alive/sentient, even if there were to be concerns about robots, one would have to prepare for another long and drawn-out debate about whether or not robots are sentient and/or alive, before we could get some solid legislation either way.
Re:Are robots the next postmodern paradox? (Score:2)
what?!?! (Score:2)
Re:What hope is there? (Score:2)
I don't recall the atomic bomb being science fiction. It's not to much of a strech of the imagination to think "Hey, we have bombs now, in the future, we'll have REALLY big bombs"
And laser warfare is still science fiction. Currently only used on a few Air Force planes to shoot down missles and an illegal blinding laser.
No troops running around with their laser rifles incinerating people on the spot.
Space battles!?! WTF are you talking about? Your grip on reality has been weakened by "Star Trek"
Later
Erik Z
Re:Are robots the next postmodern paradox? (Score:2)
Ok, we'll assume this one AI is true AI, not some clever bit of programming. Now, program into it that it doesn't want free rights. It's INSISTS on servitude.
These things should do exactly what we want them to, the only freedom fighter AI/robot out there will be built by some group believeing that all robots should be free. Some freedom.
Later
Erik Z