The military will be leading the way to perfect Robot intelligence. I would spec a GI robot to track its prey by sensing his DNA profile in the same way that a bloodhound tracks scent. There should also be a face and body recognition function as a backup, but some collateral damage would be incurred where two people look alike. There would be a behavior recognition function that would select a target based on aggressive or criminal behavior.
Police robots will be a related program but with a non lethal weapons capability. All units would be networked and integrated with sensors and flying drones stationed around the city. Robot prison guards would be insensitive to inmate provocation and assault imbued with enough strength to make all resistance to prison rules futile. On Thu, Feb 18, 2016 at 11:19 AM, Chris Zell <chrisz...@wetmtv.com> wrote: > It’s all well and good to discuss these AI systems as if they nearly > existed and were practical but I know of no major utility or corporation > that has an automated answering system that offers much of anything > > Beyond frustration and anger. Customers are carefully funneled into > lengthy choices that often end up in pointless loops in careful avoidance > of contact with any human intervention. I would add that while I admire > work on robotics done in Japan, companies such as JVC > > and Panasonic can be nearly impossible to deal with (and let’s not ignore > power and cable companies in the US). “Watson” they are not! Email and > phone numbers of executives often seem to be top secret to avoid > inconvenient complaints by the public – with their revulsion expressed > > towards you openly should you happen to find a way thru the carefully > designed communication barriers. > > > > Intelligent robots? I think there’s a l-o-n-g way to go on this topic. > You’re ready to cure cancer while I can’t find out why my cable modem > isn’t delivering internet or what important changes were made to P2 (video) > cards. > > >