What's interesting, Elliott, and quite important is that A.I. and advanced robotics can help us learn more about the mechanics of the human body. The more we can learn about the human body and even the cognitive science behind A.I. the closer we get to advancing the medical field and even treating cancer. The body is more or less an organic robot formed by intelligent design. Each cell has its own program. You can agree or disagree. But looking at the robot shows that it was programmed and therefore needed a programmer. Think about that. The more we advance in the science behind this "expensive toy" the closer we can get to understanding basic components of human make up and creation. So, show some respect...
The device is aimed at gamers and TV watchers, generating a 3D image with use of a pair of 0.7-inch OLED panels, which each display separate images, doing away with the ghost imagery that often comes along with 3D displays.
The most commented posts on Engadget over the past 24 hours.
Now that we've thrown 'em off the trail, use the form below to get in touch with the people at Engadget. Please fill in all of the required fields because they're required.
its a freaking dinosaur toy. what is the big deal? so its got some servos and some software. its still just a really expensive toy.
What's interesting, Elliott, and quite important is that A.I. and advanced robotics can help us learn more about the mechanics of the human body. The more we can learn about the human body and even the cognitive science behind A.I. the closer we get to advancing the medical field and even treating cancer. The body is more or less an organic robot formed by intelligent design. Each cell has its own program. You can agree or disagree. But looking at the robot shows that it was programmed and therefore needed a programmer. Think about that. The more we advance in the science behind this "expensive toy" the closer we can get to understanding basic components of human make up and creation. So, show some respect...