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Bobenis
06-04-2005, 10:32 PM
For some reason, the future results of this scare me. I can see the wolrd becoming a sort of psuedo Matrix/Terminator/Blade Runner reality very soon.

Asahi (http://www.asahi.com/english/Herald-asahi/TKY200506010188.html)

By 2010, Toyota will fetch tea and tidy your home

06/01/2005
The Asahi Shimbun

Toyota Motor Corp. plans to move from the garage to the kitchen and bedroom.

The auto giant has set up a division to make the company a powerhouse in the potentially lucrative sector of robots for household use.

In 2010, the automaker intends to start selling next-generation household robots to help people receive visitors, raise children and provide nursing care for sick and elderly patients, company officials said.

With the birthrate declining and the population aging, Toyota expects these robots to be in high demand to make up for labor shortages, especially in the services industry, the officials said.

The company expects robot-production to become a major business unit following its automobile and housing divisions, the officials said. A liaison group will be set up with Toyota affiliates, including auto parts maker Denso Corp., to further advance robot technologies.

The automaker has already developed popular biped robots, which are currently playing musical instruments to entertain visitors at the Aichi Expo.

The company's ``partner robot'' development section, a new division made up of about 60 workers, including staff dispatched from affiliates, will try to reduce weight, increase walking speeds and develop long-lasting batteries for the robots.

``The technology to make household robots use tools skillfully is an extension of developing conventional industrial robots,'' a company official said.

In the initial stages, Toyota will develop a type of receptionist-robot that can offer drinks for customers while determining their preferences on cars. These robots will be placed in Toyota's 5,000 sales outlets across the nation.

The automaker also plans to develop robots that will ``live'' with families and do household chores.

Toyota has already set up a study session with medical organizations concerning robots that can be used in health services and nursing care.

To ensure marketability, the retail price for the household robots will need to be kept in a range between 100,000 and several hundred thousand yen, the officials said. The prices should come down when the company starts mass-producing the robots.(IHT/Asahi: June 1,2005)

eire1274
06-04-2005, 11:29 PM
I've seen the Toyota "Partner" robot series, both the biped and the roller, in person. The logic (software) is far from complete, but I'll give Toyota credit for amazing design; the robot is quite limber, and has amazing flexibility.

However, given what I've seen of Honda's "ASIMO (http://world.honda.com/ASIMO/)" robot, which is somewhat more "clunky" than Toyota's... Honda has the software working NOW, down to highly accurate shape recognition, face recognition, and excellent verbal skills (voice recognition and speech).

It seems sad to me that the world is looking to make use of these machines to clean and to care for the elderly... once upon a time, we used to do these things ourselves.

Bobenis
06-05-2005, 12:13 AM
Until they develope a mind and personality of their own. Then learning and thought enter into the equation and all the evil's that can come along with the awareness of the self and emotion. It could become quite scary.

eire1274
06-05-2005, 03:06 AM
Well, there we're dealing with whether or not a digital "mind" can become self-aware. So far, artifical intelligence is a myth... a myth we are trying to make real. But everything, so far, isn't intelligence, it's computers learning a programmed response from a human operator... it is mimicking.

Truthfully, the idea of a computer that not only learns, but has free will (even in thought), is creepy to me. We, with our analog computers (brains), have a degree of randomness in our thinking that is foreign to digital processing. We rethink everything, all the time... and a digital mind wouldn't, because everything would have been considered prior to making the decision...

Bobenis
06-05-2005, 06:50 PM
Well yes...so far but give it 20 years. Did you see my thread on how they have made a simple robot that can replicate itself? It is happening slowly. On BBC recently, there were some scientists who were speculationg that within the next 10 years, computers would start to develope a mind of their own since advancements in computer technology are increasing exponentially. Time will tell. Danger danger Will Robinson...lol.