Diode propulsion could power microbotshttp://www.newscientisttech.com/article/dn11386?DCMP=Matt_Sparkes&nsref=bot
3/15/2007 2:49:18 PM
They can figure that out, but no one can fix the damn tww clock.
3/15/2007 2:53:29 PM
or produce winning sports seasons
3/15/2007 2:57:46 PM
What department would this be in? This sounds interesting.
3/15/2007 3:00:50 PM
I saw "McRib."
3/15/2007 3:18:45 PM
This is awesome. Imagine just injecting some bots into the body and have them kill cancer cells, or unblock arteries. Although, playing devil's advocate, you could use these as one helluva blackmail. pay me 5k or ill send the robots to start killing your brain and penile tissue.
3/15/2007 3:47:31 PM
so where are the hot robot sluts?
3/15/2007 4:14:38 PM
^^ Not sure that will be any more effective than "pay me $5k or I'll shoot you in your brain and penile tissue."
3/15/2007 4:21:26 PM
but living in a bond movie would be so much cooler
3/15/2007 4:23:05 PM
This is awesome. Nanotech FTW.
3/15/2007 4:25:01 PM
3/15/2007 7:34:37 PM
Spooky shit, GoldenViper. I don't like the idea of machines passing the Turing test.
3/15/2007 10:09:11 PM
The Outer Limits TV show has done several episodes about "nanobots." In an episode called "Small Friends," Gene Morton, a jailed scientist, has created incredible microscopic robots that can fix anything mechanical. But when another inmate sees their amazing abilities, he demands that the microbots either break him out of prison or the scientist will be killed.http://www.mgm.com/title_title.php?title_star=NEWOUT-ROBOT[Edited on March 15, 2007 at 10:24 PM. Reason : .]
3/15/2007 10:24:15 PM
How's that play against Asimov's rules of robotics?
3/15/2007 10:24:59 PM
3/16/2007 5:32:49 AM
3/16/2007 7:40:42 AM
Interesting article, but a few points:
3/16/2007 8:38:27 AM
3/16/2007 9:06:40 AM
3/16/2007 9:21:23 AM
Yes, I understand that we could match the "processing power" of the human brain soon. I'm saying that that doesn't mean anything. You don't just have that much power, hit a button, and create AI. Intelligence is not a raw function of power. In fact, if that was the case, we'd already have AI. It would simply think slower than we do.Regarding the household robot you linked to: slightly interesting. I think the face recognition is neat, but nothing amazing or shocking about it and I don't see anything there resembling intelligence.
3/16/2007 9:26:43 AM
3/16/2007 9:58:50 AM
3/16/2007 10:37:35 AM
3/16/2007 10:49:14 AM
3/16/2007 11:10:55 AM
We'll all probably want to get the hardware upgrade as well.
3/16/2007 11:20:58 AM
physically or mentally?
3/16/2007 11:31:47 AM
What do you mean? People who cling or are limited to biological brains won't be able to match those with better hardware. How much that comes to matter remains to be seen.
3/16/2007 11:47:26 AM
That goes back to my point. If you've got, for lack of a better term, a "robot brain" then are you even human? If not, what is the use of humans? What purpose do they serve. Are you even you if you replace your brain with an electronic one?[Edited on March 16, 2007 at 1:27 PM. Reason : .]
3/16/2007 1:26:20 PM
3/16/2007 1:34:26 PM
I don't think its a we'll have to see question. It's a pretty here and now philosophical question.
3/16/2007 2:29:53 PM
yeah, I saw that outer limits episode. it wwas aight.
3/16/2007 11:40:32 PM
Well, we will need a considerable understanding of the brain to use that knowledge to create strong AI. This project is already underway. But we won't have to have unlocked all the mysteries about the brain, thinking, and consciousness at that point.
3/17/2007 8:22:35 AM
I for one welcome our new microscopic overlords!
3/17/2007 11:01:25 AM