http://www.we-make-money-not-art.com/ar ... xactly.php
I fear there would be a lot of humping robots if this thing were widely released.
Robot Acts out your Dreams
Moderators: FrankM, el, Dmmoore
- Princess Leia
- Posts: 641
- Joined: Sat Feb 02, 2008 2:44 am
Re: Robot Acts out your Dreams
Interesting, but can it dance?
May a plethora of uncultivated palaeontologists raise the dead in a way that makes your blood boil
Re: Robot Acts out your Dreams
I looked for robot-related threads and found this one. Now to business, a robot at LGA that resembles Dummy Pilot. Perhaps we can get a report from him or Flyboy on whether they feel "uncomfortable" by this aggressive robot.
Women, security think LaGuardia's surveillance robot is ogling them, report says
As part of a new security program that’s said to be “in the testing phase,” airport officials have placed an autonomous surveillance robot outside Terminal B, but the ‘bot — officially called the Knightscope K5 — isn’t winning any fans among passengers or even its human security counterparts, The New York Post reports.
It’s upsetting to have that thing creep up on you,” one female security guard revealed to the Post. “It’s a pain in the a--. It keeps bothering people.”
The same security guard theorized that her male co-workers at LaGuardia were remotely manipulating the robot so they could “get a better look” at her — though officials in charge of the building of Terminal B say this wouldn't be possiible.
"The bot cannot be hijacked; there is no mechanism for allowing a human to control it [that way]," a representative for LaGuardia Gateway Partners tells Fox News, adding that the robot works via "geofencing," or sensing objects or persons nearby, and then readjusting its course autonomously.
“Whatever if being alleged is not possible," added LaGuardia Gateway Partners in response to accusations of human-manipulation.
Regardless, the Post reported that “several” travelers felt the robot was ogling them, too, with one saying the robot came less than a foot away from her knees. “It was coming right up to me, and at first, I was like, ‘What the freak is that?’
Passengers on social media have also commented on the robot’s odd actions, with one newscaster likening it to an “84-year-old man emerging from the restroom trying to remember where his gate is,” and movie critic Matthew Zoller Seitz capturing its “creepy noise” on film.
LaGuardia debuted its Knightscope K5 earlier this year. The robot’s capabilities include video surveillance and live broadcasting of said video, in order to report news of accidents or safety concerns.
“They just laugh at it,” one security guard told the Post, adding that he found the robot to be a “waste of money.”
(I'm not providing a link since it is from another website of concern to our moderator)
Women, security think LaGuardia's surveillance robot is ogling them, report says
As part of a new security program that’s said to be “in the testing phase,” airport officials have placed an autonomous surveillance robot outside Terminal B, but the ‘bot — officially called the Knightscope K5 — isn’t winning any fans among passengers or even its human security counterparts, The New York Post reports.
It’s upsetting to have that thing creep up on you,” one female security guard revealed to the Post. “It’s a pain in the a--. It keeps bothering people.”
The same security guard theorized that her male co-workers at LaGuardia were remotely manipulating the robot so they could “get a better look” at her — though officials in charge of the building of Terminal B say this wouldn't be possiible.
"The bot cannot be hijacked; there is no mechanism for allowing a human to control it [that way]," a representative for LaGuardia Gateway Partners tells Fox News, adding that the robot works via "geofencing," or sensing objects or persons nearby, and then readjusting its course autonomously.
“Whatever if being alleged is not possible," added LaGuardia Gateway Partners in response to accusations of human-manipulation.
Regardless, the Post reported that “several” travelers felt the robot was ogling them, too, with one saying the robot came less than a foot away from her knees. “It was coming right up to me, and at first, I was like, ‘What the freak is that?’
Passengers on social media have also commented on the robot’s odd actions, with one newscaster likening it to an “84-year-old man emerging from the restroom trying to remember where his gate is,” and movie critic Matthew Zoller Seitz capturing its “creepy noise” on film.
LaGuardia debuted its Knightscope K5 earlier this year. The robot’s capabilities include video surveillance and live broadcasting of said video, in order to report news of accidents or safety concerns.
“They just laugh at it,” one security guard told the Post, adding that he found the robot to be a “waste of money.”
(I'm not providing a link since it is from another website of concern to our moderator)
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 7 guests