The Lessons Learned From Emergency Robot Deployments 12
aarondubrow writes: Robin Murphy, director of Center for Robot-Assisted Search and Rescue at Texas A&M University and one of the leading researchers in the field of disaster robotics, has used robots and UAVs for search-and-rescue missions and structural inspections during more than 20 disasters, from 9/11 to Katrina to Fukushima and the 2015 Texas floods. The Huffington Post carried a story where she describes five lessons she's learned from her robot deployments and research.
Number 6. (Score:1)
This. (Score:2)
The Robots you are likely to see Looking for you in the future are most likely "Peace Bots" there to help subjugate or kill you, depending on their orders.
Humans are so fallible; most people won't shoot the unarmed defenseless women and children; no prob for Bots.
AI is going to Change the World, eventually.
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Kinda Thin (Score:3)
It's a glossy HuffPoTech article, has a few interesting examples, but is not a deep dive on the subject by anyone's estimation. This said, slashdot geeks would enjoy more depth in this area. After all, we're geeks, coders, and engineers.
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Comment removed (Score:3)
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These five things will amaze you, especially number 4!
God how I hate those ads...
We made one, $850 (Score:2)
Any connection to the move to ban sexbots? (Score:2)