▲ | Fargren a day ago | |||||||
All of those are arguments for why robots should generally have wheels rather than legs, except for when legs are specifically needed. | ||||||||
▲ | electroly a day ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
Furthermore, mobile robots currently in home use--vacuum and mop robots--are all wheeled, of course. We've shown we can accommodate wheeled robots in the home if we feel like the payoff is worth it. | ||||||||
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▲ | Jensson a day ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |||||||
> except for when legs are specifically needed. Exactly, we need legs when they are specifically needed, and we already have wheeled robots so building legged robots that can move like a human will cover so many cases we currently cannot cover. And even more important are arms and hands, and legs is a precursor to that, they are much simpler so its smart to start with legs to then try to make good arms and hands. | ||||||||
▲ | ffsm8 a day ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
Give me the option of a humanoid looking across that takes care of all in house chores and one that's that utility based with wheels and arms, I will likely choose the humanoid one even with a 100% premium price. I mean I wouldn't buy either unless I could be certain it's not uploading all data to the cloud and be fully controlled by a user hostile company, but if we're talking fantasy tech ala Detroit: become human... Yeah, it'd be willing to spend a lot of money to have all chores taken care of by a humanoid robot. And in before someone talks nonsense again wrt "you already can, just pay someone to do it for you"... I do not want to have strangers in my home. This is also essentially why I wouldn't want any cloud connected bot anywhere innit. | ||||||||
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