The identification of a person with a telepresence robot
"I have been part robot since May. Instead of legs, I move on gyroscopically stabilized wheels. Instead of a face, I have an iPad screen. Instead of eyes, a camera with no peripheral vision. Instead of a mouth, a speaker whose volume I can’t even gauge with my own ears. And instead of ears, a tinny microphone that crackles and hisses with every high note."
http://www.wired.com/2015/09/my-life-as ... -longread/
Artiicle: My Life As A Robot
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Re: Artiicle: My Life As A Robot
I find it quite interesting as she explores how it is to be connected to the world through the means of a machine body. For us the story starts a bit shallow, because she explains mostly the obstactles she was facing (clunky interface, ogling coworkers, "too helpful" coworkers). However, she's got the point where she's let her coworkers speak Because when we see the face, our brains can’t help but project the rest of you, and so it was like you were actually being carried.
And that's interesting. Give it facial expression and it's a person. It just works.
Okay, we're focusing on sex here so there's obviously a lot more missing.
And that's interesting. Give it facial expression and it's a person. It just works.
Okay, we're focusing on sex here so there's obviously a lot more missing.
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