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Robo tech | 10:55 PM |



Today, the robot is one of those predictions that has come to pass, but only in that "Well, sort of" kind of way. We have thousands of robots in our factories turning out everything from cars to electrical tooth flossers. Japan is positively stinking with them (robots, not tooth flossers). Not to mention all the mechakaiju giant robots that stomp Tokyo periodically, if Japanese cinema is anything to go by.
But these robots aren't what we had in mind. The robots of today are all basically descendants of Unimate; the one-armed industrial robot of the '60s. They're programmable machines that carry out a specific sequence of tasks time after time without error or deviation. For example, a robotic palletizer in the packaging industry. They're incredible machines and the latest models incorporate a remarkable range of sensors and artificial intelligence software, but to the uninitiated they look very little different from the other factory machines that surround them. Not like this illustration of a factory humming with anthropomorphic workers busily handling lathes and stamping mills.
Not that robots of the future were supposed to be just serving drinks and building Twonkies. They had grimmer duties when their fleshy masters thrust blasters into their metal hands and sent them off to war.
Take this lot, for example, from The Defenders by Phillip K. Dick. In this story, the Earth has been devastated by decades of atomic war and the human race lives in huge underground bunkers while their robot soldiers battle it out on the surface. Turns out that the robots just waited until the last human hit the bunkers and then the lot of them downed rifles, kicked back, and whipped up a batch of daiquiris with no one the wiser.
To coin a phrase, ten out of ten for style.
One of the strangest things that I discovered as I researched this section is that it is rather different than other aspects of Future Past. When it came to spaceships, aeroplanes, cars, and so forth, there was no end to speculative designs. It was easy to find Robert Goddard's spaceship design, an idea for an aeroplane with circular wings, or atomic-powered tanks, but robots were surprisingly thin on the ground, which is remarkable when you consider how ubiquitous they were supposed to be in the future landscape. Why so few blueprints or even projected views of what the mechanical man of tomorrow would look like? There were some, as we'll see, but nothing like the torrent of Moon landers and atomic pens. Given how so many vastly underestimated the problems of actually building a robot, it's hard to say if this dearth is due to having too little to go on or overweening confidence that metal men would come tumbling off the shelves any day now.
Whatever the reason, we still developed a very clear idea of what robots would be like in the 21st century, but in this case the source was largely that of pulp fiction and Hollywood rather than visionaries of the engineering world. Perhaps nature abhors even a speculative vacuum

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