What To Expect When Youre Expecting Robots
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For however smart your Roomba or Alexa might seem, historically,
robots have been fairly dumb. They are only able to do their jobs
when given a narrow set of tasks, confined in a controlled
environment, and overseen by a human operator. But things are
changing.A new breed of robots is in development that will operate
largely on their own. They'll drive on roads and sidewalks, ferry
deliveries within buildings, stock shelves in stores, and
coordinate teams of doctors and nurses. These autonomous systems
will find their way into busy, often unpredictable public
spaces.They could be truly collaborative, augmenting human work by
attending to the parts of tasks we don't do as well, without our
having to stop and direct them. But consider, for a moment, the
sorcerer's apprentice. The broom he set to work was also supposed
to be collaborative, too, and should have made his life much
easier.But the broom didn't know how to behave, and the apprentice
no longer understood the thing he had made. The challenge of this
next generation of robots is that, like the apprentice's broom,
they will wreak complete havoc, inadvertently hurting or even
killing people, unless we can recognize a simple truth:
collaborative robots will be the first truly social creatures that
technology has created. They will need to know how to behave in
unfamiliar spaces and around untrained users and bystanders.Robot
experts Julie Shah and Laura Major are among those engineers
leading the development of collaborative robots, and in this book,
they will offer their vision for how to make it in the new era of
human-robot collaboration. They set out the blueprint for what they
call working robots, which in many ways resemble service animals,
and take readers through the many fascinating and surprising
challenges that both engineers and the public will need to address
in figuring out these machines can be responsibly integrated into
society: what they will have to look like, how they will have to
talk to strangers and what robot etiquette will be, whether we will
have to ",robot-proof", public spaces and infrastructure, and how
the safety-critical work of human-robot collaboration will force a
sea change in how the tech industry is regulated. Today, we still
gawk at a car that drives by without a driver.Tomorrow, you might
find yourself driving next to five of them. We can debate whether
the singularity will ever come, but robots need not be
superintelligent in order to revolutionize our relationship to
technology. Read this book to find out how.