Seattleite
Well-known member
I've been thinking about weird things, do that a lot, and I realised there'd be a HUGE market for robots that could look and act believably as people. I know this idea is so not original there's no way nobody's working on it, and they'd make a fortune if they could make an affordable (read: <$10,000 and <$1,000/year upkeep) model, but how likely is it that they'll manage a passable facsimile in the next, say, 20-30 years?
In order to qualify, it needs:
Competant navigation. (Hardest part.)
Highly competant voice and facial recognition.
Convincing artificial personalities.
Learning AI.
VERY good safety precautions.
An appropriate power source (easiest part) and strong, efficient, flexible motorised parts.
A LOT of political and religious hurdles leaped. And I mean a LOT. (Actually, nevermind navigation. THIS is the hardest part. Of anything. EVER.)
In order to qualify, it needs:
Competant navigation. (Hardest part.)
Highly competant voice and facial recognition.
Convincing artificial personalities.
Learning AI.
VERY good safety precautions.
An appropriate power source (easiest part) and strong, efficient, flexible motorised parts.
A LOT of political and religious hurdles leaped. And I mean a LOT. (Actually, nevermind navigation. THIS is the hardest part. Of anything. EVER.)