Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Robots. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Robots Quotes And Sayings by 83 Authors including Isaac Asimov,Rodney Brooks,Bill Gates,Bee Wilson,Kevin Kelly for you to enjoy and share.
You just can't differentiate between a robot and the very best of humans.
When I look out in the future, I can't imagine a world, 500 years from now, where we don't have robots everywhere.
Robots will play an important role in providing physical assistance and even companionship for the elderly.
Technology is not a form of robotics but something very human: the creation of tools and techniques that answer certain uses in our lives.
This is not a race against the machines. If we race against them, we lose. This is a race with the machines. You'll be paid in the future based on how well you work with robots.
I have the whole team just around the block! One call and they'll ride in here like cavalry! Riding on... robots! Giant robots! Well, not giant robots, like in Egan, but... but... big enough robots!
In the twenty-first century, the robot will take the place which slave labor occupied in ancient civilization.
Kids love robots. They're this fanciful, cool thing.
In a properly automated and educated world, then, machines may prove to be the true humanizing influence. It may be that machines will do the work that makes life possible and that human beings will do all the other things that make life pleasant and worthwhile
I'm interested in machines that make you aware of the process of seeing and aware of what you do when you construct the world by looking. This is interesting in itself, but more as a broad-based metaphor for how we understand the world.
I am not a robot. I have a heart and I bleed.
Hollywood likes to imagine robots as mechanical copies of ourselves - which is a terrible idea.
If I say 'Find me an interesting painting' to Google, someday a robot could go around the Picasso museum and take a picture for me.
As humans embrace new forms of social media to keep connected with friends and colleagues, our robots are becoming increasingly sociable.
If robots are to clean our homes, they'll have to do it better than a person.
We humans build machines to do things that we see being done in the world by animals and people, but we typically don't build them the same way that nature built us. As AI trailblazer Frederick Jelineck put it beautifully, Airplanes don't flap their wings.
Machines deprive us of two things which are certainly important ingredients of human happiness, namely, spontaneity and variety.
(The word "robot" is from a Czech word meaning "compulsory labor.")
Working out what it would take to program goodness into a robot shows not only how much machinery it takes to be good but how slippery the concept of goodness is to start with.
AI has been solved.
I would love to have a robot at home.
Robotics are beginning to cross that line from absolutely primitive motion to motion that resembles animal or human behavior.
I'm not a robot.
Robots are the new middle class. And everyone else will either be an entrepreneur or a temp staffer.
A robot is an autonomous system which exists in the physical world, can sense its environment, and can ACT ON IT
I would love a robot butler.
The most important thing is a person. A person who incites your curiosity and feeds your curiosity; and machines cannot do that in the same way that people can.
Technology is at the forefront of everything these days - communication, work. It's amazing and scary at the same time how robots have evolved, but I find it hard to believe that robots will completely rule the world. Not in my lifetime anyway.
We invented our computers in the '80s. We networked them together in the '90s. Now we're giving them eyes, ears and sensory organs. And we're asking them to observe and manipulate the world on our behalf.
Well, robots are, of course, the monkey's natural enemy.
We are not thinking machines ...
In the future, I'm sure there will be a lot more robots in every aspect of life. If you told people in 1985 that in 25 years they would have computers in their kitchen, it would have made no sense to them.
Our robots are signing up for online learning. After decades of attempts to program robots to perform complex tasks like flying helicopters or surgical suturing, the new approach is based on observing and recording the motions of human experts as they perform these feats.
Machinery is the subconscious mind of the world.
Odd I should have said those words before and forgotten them. It makes one feel that human beings are just machines after all.
It's hard to guess how smart the machines are, but a good rule of thumb is that they're always smarter than you think.
I don't think the robots are taking over. I think the men who play with toys have taken over. And if we don't take the toys out of their hands, we're fools.
It's becoming increasingly clear that mechanized intelligence can solve a rapidly expanding repertoire of problems.
If we're going to achieve compassion in the machines and also feel safe with the machines, to raise machines with human-like values, we need to make them human-like by simulating, or perhaps eventually imitating, human beings in high accuracy from top to bottom.
A robot must obey the orders given it by human beings except where such orders would conflict with the First Law. [The Second Law of Robotics]
And a revolution of automation finds machines replacing men in the mines and mills of America, without replacing their incomes or their training or their needs to pay the family doctor, grocer and landlord.
Machines built by human beings they will function correctly if we provide them with a very specific environment. But if that environment is changed, they won't function at all.
Will robots inherit the earth? Yes, but they will be our children.
Robots will neither be common nor very good in 2014, but they will be in existence.
You want to know what a robot's designed for. And if it's doing something outside the scope of what it's made to do, you should be very suspicious.
We always thought the robot apocalypse would be fleets of killer drones and war mecha the size of apartment blocks and terminators with red eyes. Not a row of mechanised checkouts
The machine has no feelings, it feels no fear and no hope ... it operates according to the pure logic of probability. For this reason I assert that the robot perceives more accurately than man.
Watson, Deep Blue, and ever-better machine learning algorithms are cool. But the most valuable companies in the future won't ask what problems can be solved with computers alone. Instead, they'll ask: how can computers help humans solve hard problems?
-The renegade robots are now long dead, the metal ones rusted, the human ones bled.
We're fascinated with robots because they are reflections of ourselves.
Corporations turned the human into a robot a long time ago.
By the late twentieth century, our time, a mythic time, we are all chimeras, theorized and fabricated hybrids of machine and organism; in short, we are cyborgs.
Most robots don't program themselves.
The question is, you know, will someone accidentally build a robot that takes over from us? And that's sort of like this lone guy in the backyard, you know - 'I accidentally built a 747.' I don't think that's going to happen.
The Bots are taking over
A South Korean inventor has finally created the robot that mankind has been waiting for. Scientists who have been worried about the robot apocalypse can finally set aside their fears thanks to the new robot Drinky, machines are no longer going to enslave us. They're going to puke on our shoes.
The concept of the robot encapsulates both aspects of technology. On one hand it's cool, it's fun, it's healthy, it's sexy, it's stylish. On the other hand it's terrifying, it's alienating, it's addictive, and it's scary. That has been the subject of much science-fiction literature.
Of course there are robots among us. There are also Magicians among us. I think we take turns playing each role, as a matter of fact. The Magician defines a reality-mesh and the robot lives in it. Grok?
You may not realize it, but artificial intelligence is all around us.
Machines are the concealed wishes of actants which have tamed forces so effectively that they no longer look like forces
machine learning is the general field that studies how complex mechanisms can be created without a designer.
This give-and-take prepares children for the expectation of relationship with machines that is at the heart of the robotic moment.
We're going to have robots in the home, but they're not going to be walking. Legs are complicated, unreliable and costly. Robots are going to look and be designed to meet the function they're supposed to perform. People will still name them and connect with them.
I visualize a time when we will be to robots what dogs are to humans, and I'm rooting for the machines.
Artificial intelligence is what we don't know how to do yet
There are many machines throughout history that were built to do something better than a human can.
When the robot mind is mastered, undisciplined thinking ceases and is replaced by awareness. Awareness can know love.
So if you're a robot and you're living on this planet, you can do things that you can't do in real life - things that you wished you could do: like fly; like have a car that flies; like have furniture that is alive.
I mean, what if they're us from the future?"
"And it's like The Terminator, right?" I said, rolling my eyes.
"They've come to stop the uprising of the machines. Or maybe they are the machines. Maybe it's Skynet.
a sneaking feeling that people are wrong when they say human beings can't keep track of the world any more, we have to leave it up to the machines.
In the future, all robots will act like Don Knotts.
The human-made world is mostly beyond our comprehension. Our daily survival depends on seemingly magical gizmos that provide our food, water, clothing, comfort, transportation, education, well-being, and amusement.
If you don't want a generation of robots, fund the arts!
Robotic correctness is the last thing judges want to see or hear
Be robust enough to work more than a robot!
Pretty soon we'll have robots in our society, you're going to have a lot of automated processes that used to be done by people - this is happening. Society and technology is changing so fast, and the impact of the change on society and technology is global, not local.
We aren't robots. What makes us exceptional as humans, is that we have the capacity to feel as many emotions all at once.
I have sought to offer humanists a detailed analysis of a technology sufficiently magnificent and spiritual to convince them that the machines by which they are surrounded are cultural artifacts worthy of their attention and respect.
If you ask the typical two- or three-year-old or a teenager what a robot is, they will think about a humanoid that does my homework for me or walks the dog. When I go and talk to kids and pull out the Roomba, it's not this big 'Wow!' moment.
Artificial Intelligence (AI) is the science of how to get machines to do the things they do in the movies.
With the advent of computing, human invention crossed a threshold into a world different from everything that came before. The computer is the universal machine almost by definition, machine-of-all-trades, capable of accomplishing or simulating just about any task that can be logically defined.
I'm fascinated by artificial intelligence.
We are not thinking machines that feel; rather, we are feeling machines that think.
Often people, especially computer engineers, focus on the machines. But in fact we need to focus on humans, on how humans care about doing programming or operating the application of the machines.
Artificial trees, robot sofas,
Ignorant cars-
One Way Street to Heaven
People. You're not crazy if there really are robot insects listening to every word you say."
Someone said, "I fucking told you
As computers become more and more powerful, they won't be substitutes for humans: they'll be complements.
The world of the future will be an even more demanding struggle against the limitations of our intelligence, not a comfortable hammock in which we can lie down to be waited upon by our robot slaves.
Machines will follow a path that mirrors the evolution of humans. Ultimately, however, self-aware, self-improving machines will evolve beyond humans' ability to control or even understand them.
Can't wait for what our great great grandrobots discover in our buried data
We are gene-copying bio-robots, living out here on a lonely planet in a cold and empty physical universe.
Once Google, Facebook and other algorithms become all-knowing oracles, they may well evolve into agents and finally into sovereigns.
Sometimes people talk about conflict between humans and machines, and you can see that in a lot of science fiction. But the machines we're creating are not some invasion from Mars. We create these tools to expand our own reach.
The machines do not solve problems with greater insight than men do, only faster. Only faster!
the market for consumer robots could hit $390 billion by 2017, and industrial robots should hit $40 billion in 2020. As
Machines are on track to be on par with human intelligence in less than 15 years.
First of Isaac Asimov's Three Laws of Robotics:
A robot may not injure a human being, or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.
Scientists who have dedicated their lives to building machines that think, feel that it's only a matter of time before some form of consciousness is captured in the laboratory.
If you want to solve very complex problems, you will have to end up letting machines work out a lot of the details for themselves, and in ways that we don't understand what they are doing.
The effort of using machines to mimic the human mind has always struck me as rather silly. I would rather use them to mimic something better.