http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3ay_QNie ... be&t=21m6s
It got me wondering. We sort of have two "speeds" around here. On the one hand, modernistic electronic/digital fembots with all that entails (hardware/software distinction, etc) and on the other hand clockwork dolls. What about intermediate points on that spectrum? Analog circuitry and tape-based fembots, like those envisioned in the clip ('70s/'80s). Alternately, vacuum-tube based ones like those that would have been imagined in the '40s and '50s. You could mix the latter with a Rocketpunk or Space-Opera theme to great effect, I think.
One fun aspect is that the behavior, operations, and way they malfunction is distinct for each category. Honestly, a lot of the malfunction stuff that gets written here fits better with the way analog electronics work anyway. Digital systems tend to just stop working when they break, with no graceful degradation. The sounds, sights, and feel of normal and abnormal operation all differ between a tape-based gynoid (say, who wanders too close to a magnet) and a tube-based one (what happens when one inevitably burns out?).
An obvious downside is the damage to suspension of disbelief. I've tried my hand at clockwork stories in the past because I quite like the aesthetic, but I find myself getting stopped up on questions like "how is she powered? It can't be with turns of that little key, given how many Watts she uses just moving around!" Thankfully such questions bother me less when reading what other authors here have written (looking at you Longtimelurker
