studiot Posted August 16, 2020 Posted August 16, 2020 I just caught part of a TV program called Spy in the Wild. BBC1 1735 - 1835 today. I will have to complete it on iplayer /catch up. It shows the most amazingly realistic robotic artificial animals designd to fool real animal herds in the wild in order to video the. These robots look like the real thing, orangutangs, crocs, egrets, penguins, sea otters etc and have sound vision and realistic action. These are unprecedented scientific tools but watching them made me wonder the title question How soon before we can make a Terminator ? They are so nearly there. Watch the programme if you get a chance. 1
iNow Posted August 16, 2020 Posted August 16, 2020 (edited) I believe Boston Dynamics already has Edited August 16, 2020 by iNow 1
Strange Posted August 16, 2020 Posted August 16, 2020 The bigger question is: when will we be able to send the Terminator back in time?
MigL Posted August 16, 2020 Posted August 16, 2020 If one of those Boston Dynamics machines had sai "I'll be baak" I would have been scared.
joigus Posted August 16, 2020 Posted August 16, 2020 Job description of the guy with the hockey stick? "My job is to try very hard to piss off a robot"
iNow Posted August 17, 2020 Posted August 17, 2020 I’d be remiss right now not to draw attention to the Robots thread from @michel123456 over here:
Endy0816 Posted August 17, 2020 Posted August 17, 2020 (edited) Disney has some cool ones for use as stunt robots. Besides battery life, main roadblock is that they tend to focus on one particular area rather than the more rounded sort of requirements a terminator might have. I think if we really wanted to we could do it within a few years. 9 hours ago, Strange said: The bigger question is: when will we be able to send the Terminator back in time? Well most times around Skynet doesn't invent it until later in the war. This last time was an outlier though and it came up with temporal displacement early on, so you never know. Edit: 10 hours ago, studiot said: I just caught part of a TV program called Spy in the Wild. BBC1 1735 - 1835 today. I will have to complete it on iplayer /catch up. It shows the most amazingly realistic robotic artificial animals designd to fool real animal herds in the wild in order to video the. These robots look like the real thing, orangutangs, crocs, egrets, penguins, sea otters etc and have sound vision and realistic action. Just wanted to add that this is a really good program and they have parts of it on PBS and youtube, if anyone is interested. Edited August 17, 2020 by Endy0816
ahmet Posted August 17, 2020 Posted August 17, 2020 (edited) On 8/16/2020 at 9:55 PM, studiot said: I just caught part of a TV program called Spy in the Wild. BBC1 1735 - 1835 today. I will have to complete it on iplayer /catch up. It shows the most amazingly realistic robotic artificial animals designd to fool real animal herds in the wild in order to video the. These robots look like the real thing, orangutangs, crocs, egrets, penguins, sea otters etc and have sound vision and realistic action. These are unprecedented scientific tools but watching them made me wonder the title question How soon before we can make a Terminator ? They are so nearly there. Watch the programme if you get a chance. pahahaha never mind such things. mmm, listening musics gives more pleasure than imaging such things peheh A recommendation: I suggest that you visit Antalya's The Land Of Legends or vialand in istanbul or any else a good theme park rather than imaging such things, I guarantee more pleasure. Edited August 17, 2020 by ahmet
studiot Posted August 18, 2020 Author Posted August 18, 2020 16 hours ago, ahmet said: pahahaha never mind such things. mmm, listening musics gives more pleasure than imaging such things peheh A recommendation: I suggest that you visit Antalya's The Land Of Legends or vialand in istanbul or any else a good theme park rather than imaging such things, I guarantee more pleasure. Glad you (briefly ?) enjoyed my thread. The first time I visited Turkey (1970) I cycled across and then caught ferries back through to the Greek islands.
ahmet Posted August 18, 2020 Posted August 18, 2020 (edited) ..................... Edited August 18, 2020 by ahmet seems off topic,also moderator's note
Phi for All Posted August 18, 2020 Posted August 18, 2020 ! Moderator Note The subject is robots. Please open a new thread to discuss favorite theme park rides.
Airbrush Posted September 1, 2020 Posted September 1, 2020 (edited) Very funny remarks above, but the question has not been answered. How long until robotic and AI technology reach the level of a terminator robot, just like in the first Terminator movie? My guess is it will take a long time, maybe 100 years? Edited September 1, 2020 by Airbrush
dimreepr Posted September 1, 2020 Posted September 1, 2020 33 minutes ago, Airbrush said: Very funny remarks above, but the question has not been answered. How long until robotic and AI technology reach the level of a terminator robot, just like in the first Terminator movie? My guess is it will take a long time, maybe 100 years? The question can't be answered, because a week is a long time in politics...
Endy0816 Posted September 1, 2020 Posted September 1, 2020 (edited) 44 minutes ago, Airbrush said: Very funny remarks above, but the question has not been answered. How long until robotic and AI technology reach the level of a terminator robot, just like in the first Terminator movie? My guess is it will take a long time, maybe 100 years? Mostly just a matter of power and onboard computing requirements this point. Could slap an animatronic head on to a torso frame along with biomimetic limbs though. Give, realistically, multiple cloud-based programs ls control over that various bits and then just setup a control program to provide overall direction. A few different learning algorithms wouldn't be all that unrealistic either to add in. Edited September 1, 2020 by Endy0816
dimreepr Posted September 1, 2020 Posted September 1, 2020 17 minutes ago, Endy0816 said: Mostly just a matter of power and onboard computing requirements this point. Is it though? That's like saying "fusion is just a matter of energy and pressure"... Of course it can be done, but that doesn't mean we can do it.
Airbrush Posted September 1, 2020 Posted September 1, 2020 7 hours ago, dimreepr said: Of course it can be done, but that doesn't mean we can do it. Yeah humans have other problems to deal with like climate change and pandemics before fooling around with a lark like this. The terminator robot is very sophisticated. It is indistinguishable from a real person. And it is very tough, almost indestructible. Maybe in a couple of hundred years, if we survive other problems.
Endy0816 Posted September 2, 2020 Posted September 2, 2020 12 hours ago, dimreepr said: Is it though? That's like saying "fusion is just a matter of energy and pressure"... Of course it can be done, but that doesn't mean we can do it. The brain might be in the cloud and T-6969 might need a power cable but would be as realistic as anything. 4 hours ago, Airbrush said: Yeah humans have other problems to deal with like climate change and pandemics before fooling around with a lark like this. The terminator robot is very sophisticated. It is indistinguishable from a real person. And it is very tough, almost indestructible. Maybe in a couple of hundred years, if we survive other problems. Always going to be something going on. Granted this year it sure does feel like everything is happening at once. Think only something like stunt robots might need to be both human looking and especially durable. Even evil AI's would typically be better off optimizing one way or the other.
Sensei Posted September 2, 2020 Posted September 2, 2020 (edited) On 8/16/2020 at 8:55 PM, studiot said: These robots look like the real thing, orangutangs, crocs, egrets, penguins, sea otters etc and have sound vision and realistic action. These are unprecedented scientific tools but watching them made me wonder the title question How soon before we can make a Terminator ? They are so nearly there. Hilariously, you are more excited about "how they move".. but you should be more interested "what they think"..... Making "move like animal" and/or "move like human" is THE EASIEST part of the job.. Edited September 2, 2020 by Sensei
Sensei Posted September 2, 2020 Posted September 2, 2020 Essentially, A.I. can be indistinguishable from from smartphone, smartwatch, a few millimeter wide chip, or so.. but if you (human) are thinking it must look like "Terminator" (anthropoidal cyborg) then things are worser than I thought so.. You can have smartphone smarter than you already, and have no idea about it, don't realize it, don't take into account.. Because it does not look like "typical A.I. from sci-fi movies" (which is anthropoidal cyborg and/or some supercomputer in a large sphere or a box taking the entire room or building space)..
Prometheus Posted September 2, 2020 Posted September 2, 2020 If we're talking terminators, i.e. assassination, then something like the imagined slaughterbot is a more realistic goal.
dimreepr Posted September 2, 2020 Posted September 2, 2020 2 hours ago, Sensei said: Hilariously, you are more excited about "how they move".. but you should be more interested "what they think"..... Making "move like animal" and/or "move like human" is THE EASIEST part of the job.. You know this is in the 'lounge' right? 1 hour ago, Sensei said: You can have smartphone smarter than you already Let's not jump down that rabbit-hole. 1 hour ago, Sensei said: Because it does not look like "typical A.I. from sci-fi movies" (which is anthropoidal cyborg and/or some supercomputer in a large sphere or a box taking the entire room or building space). Kinda the point of the OP... 6 hours ago, Endy0816 said: The brain might be in the cloud and T-6969 might need a power cable but would be as realistic as anything. So long as it doesn't have to drive. 😛
studiot Posted September 2, 2020 Author Posted September 2, 2020 1 hour ago, dimreepr said: So long as it doesn't have to drive. Would that be because it's a hard drive ? 8 hours ago, Endy0816 said: The brain might be in the cloud and T-6969 might need a power cable but would be as realistic as anything That about describes the original T - Model, currently posing as President. 1
dimreepr Posted September 2, 2020 Posted September 2, 2020 8 minutes ago, studiot said: Would that be because it's a hard drive ? That about describes the original T - Model, currently posing as President. Depends on the question...
studiot Posted September 2, 2020 Author Posted September 2, 2020 My answer to the thread question has to be Before studiot can spell properly.
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