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“Digit is a two-legged robot designed and built by Agility Robotics to not only approximate the look of a human, but to walk like one, too.” So says a press release from
touting the automaker’s partnership with the company that builds high-tech robots that unfurl from the back of a van and in the process
look a little too much like the droids
from
.
See what we mean? Keep watching and you’ll see that the little blue robots are extremely impressive, but they definitely don’t walk like the humans whose jobs they are
ultimately designed to replace
. They actually
walk like the human-impersonating aliens from The Arrival
.
Digit is capable of carrying packages weighing as much as 40 pounds and dropping them off at someone’s front door, traversing over uneven terrain, climbing and descending stairs, and avoiding obstacles in its path. The data necessary to make this final step of the delivery process would theoretically be shared from a self-driving delivery vehicle. Like, for instance, a
van outfitted with all the sensors and software needed for full autonomy.
“A
is capable of creating a detailed map of the surrounding environment, so why not share that data with Digit instead of having it recreate the same type of information?” writes Dr. Ken Washington, Ford’s Chief Technology Officer,
. “After all, both Digit and the
need to know where they are in the world, where they need to go and how to get there.”
There’s something about all of this that reminds us of
the words of the fictional Dr. Ian Malcolm
portrayed by Jeff Goldblum in
Jurassic Park
. “Your scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could, they didn’t stop to think if they should.”
Check out the video above for a creepy demonstration of our impending robotic future set to a playful soundtrack, and then
read the entire story from Dr. Washington
on why all of this is necessary in the first place. Or not. You could always join us in the robot-proof bunkers we’re planning to start building later this afternoon. Because, as you may have figured out by the many movie references in this story (we purposely left out
until now), the gap between science fiction and science fact is narrowing by the day.
from Autoblog http://bit.ly/2HPvJ2X