technology about robot | ||||||||
NEWS | ||||||||
Sometimes We Feel More Comfortable Talking To A Robot I asked Sherry Turkle, a professor of science and technology at MIT, to listen to the responses. She couldn't tell whether people were talking to BlabDroid or me. Turkle has been studying human-machine relationships for decades. She says it really doesn't take much to get humans to open up to a robot.
| ||||||||
Would YOU turn your loved one into a robot clone? Swedish scientists are using AI to build ... Put simply, a robot clone of your grandma could become a next generation voice assistant, just like how we communicate with Amazon's Alexa or Apple's Siri. Scientists believe the technology could evolve even further, resembling the sentient human clones depicted in the hit Netflix show Black Mirror.
| ||||||||
Maricopa police deploying next-level technology Maricopa police say the department's new $60,000 tactical robot is already being deployed on high-risk calls. ABC15 ... The machine, a Mini Caliber SRT manufactured by ICOR Technology, is equipped with five cameras, lights, and a high-reaching arm capable of searching bags and opening doors.
| ||||||||
Could a brick-laying robot disrupt the construction industry? Sam can lay a brick every 8.5 seconds, according to The Financial Times. At that rate, Sam can lay 3,000 bricks in an eight hour shift whereas a human worker can lay an average of between 300 and 600. "I can call up all the data on my phone," architect Nate Podkaminer, who has Sam working on his ...
| ||||||||
What it felt like to visit the most tech-centric Olympics ever Robots offering visitors directions and water. VR that lets you hurtle headfirst down an ice track. Welcome to the 2018 Pyeongchang Winter Olympics, where emerging technologies seem to be everywhere. South Korea is trying to use the event to highlight its leadership in wireless connectivity by building ...
| ||||||||
Worry less about the march of the robots, more about techno panic It looks at technologies that are already available, or will be in the next five years, and identifies three kinds of threats: "digital" (sophisticated forms of phishing or hacking); "physical" (the repurposing of drones or robots for harmful ends); and "political" (new forms of surveillance or the use of fake videos ...
| ||||||||
Robot to conduct your medical tests for Dubai visa soon It would be a one-stop destination for all medical fitness tests required for processing employment visas. The centre uses the latest AI technology to identify a customer through facial and Iris print. A special robot then conducts the tests. After the tests are completed, the system automatically sends the ...
| ||||||||
No immigrants please, only robots But Hirohisa Hirukawa, director of robot innovation research at Japan's National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, says that research money is best spent on cheaper, low-tech robots that ease the burden on nursing staff rather than supplanting them, and boost the autonomy of ...
| ||||||||
Dick Wolfsie gets robotic at McKenzie Center for Innovation and Technology This time, Wolfsie took another visit to a familiar place at the McKenzie Center for Innovation and Technology. This time around Wolfsie got an inside look at the robotics program that has been established since around 2000. Each year, the students of the program are tasked with creating a robot that can ...
| ||||||||
New firefighting robot gets put to the test WALK-MAN was developed through a European Union-funded project that also includes the University of Pisa in Italy, the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) in Switzerland, the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology in Germany, and the Université Catholique de Louvain in Belgium.
| ||||||||
See more results | Edit this alert |
You have received this email because you have subscribed to Google Alerts. |
Receive this alert as RSS feed |
Send Feedback |
No comments:
Post a Comment