@ASIMO THE MOST ADVANCE ROBOT@
It must have seemed like a good idea at the time: one of Japan’s top science museums has borrowed Honda Motor’s iconic spaceman robot, Asimo, as a guide. But the confused bot is struggling to distinguish between people raising their hands to ask a question and just taking photos.
In a demonstration to reporters at the Miraikan Museum, Asimo froze mid-command and repeated questions from customers they fed into a touch-panel device. Museum officials admitted that the remote-controlled machine is unable to respond to verbal queries, or tell the difference between a child and an adult.
It seemed like a poor show for what is often billed as the planet’s most advanced humanoid robot. “Right now, it can recognise a child waving to it, but it’s not able to comprehend the meaning of the waving,” Honda’s head of robotics, Satoshi Shigemi, told the AP news agency.
Honda has been under fire for spending money on what some called an overpriced toy (a company spokesman previously declined to specify the cost of assembly, but told Forbes it was less than $1m (£655,000) per robot). In response to the criticisms, Honda said this month it has created a new Asimo prototype to survey the plant’s crippled No 2 reactor, using its ability to map an environment.
The robot was sent to check on radiation and conditions inside the Reactor 2 building. The prototype, however, looked nothing like the talking humanoid that entertained Prince Charles and Mr Fry.
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