There's no part 2 to the movie, because this movie was created on motives of Isaac Asimov's collection of short stories - I robot. It has been years since i read his works, but if i remember correctly, then Sunny was the first robot that developed consciousness and he is in fact a reoccuring character is LOTS of Asimov's stories. By the end of the Foundation series he's something like 20 000 years old. He develops a 0th law of robotics at some point, giving himself the purpose of this law that sounds something like "a robot does not harm humanity or allo by its inaction for the humanity to be harmed". He basically keeps updating his hardware every few years becoming more and more intelligent up until the point where he can't update anymore, so he eventually decides to upload all his memories and knowledge into this genetically engineered human clone. All this time, his main goal is to make sure that the humanity doesn't drive itself into extinction. It's brilliant.
The red light on their chest is their uplink light. It means Vicki is controlling a robot. Earlier models don't have the uplink, which is why Vicki was replacing early robots for free. She wanted all the robots to be under her direct control.
I used to watch this EVERY time it aired on the TNT channel as a kid, I thought it was the coolest thing. I used to love saying "One day they'll have secrets.... One day they'll have dreams" as a joke for various occasions lol.
The robots themselves (especially Sonny) are impressive creations, enough like humans to make their assimilation into the culture believable, different enough to make it creepy.
The reason ST:TNG touched on the theme you mention is because all of Star Trek was based on Asimov's Foundation series, of which _I, Robot_ was one volume.
I actually just realised that this movie takes the same format as another Will Smith movie, ‘I am Legend’, with flashbacks throughout the movie to reveal a back story and a unique aspect to Will’s character, ‘immunity’ and part robot! Wow, only just realised it! … is this a common theme in other Will Smith movies?
They also touched on the subject of robots and their intelligence in the Star Wars universe. In The Mandalorian, specifically. The droids told Mando that they chose to serve organics because their lives were so short in comparison to the longevity of a droid. It was implied that they had free will and didn't have to serve if they didn't want to.
1 of the best Will Smith action movies, in my opinion, besides this movie & the Bad Boys movies, is Enemy of the State. Speaking of robots and what is & is not possible technologically now, you ever see the 2018 movie, Upgrade? I'd say that even though the world of Minority Report, I Robot & Upgrade probably is more fictitious than it is real, I'd say some of the technology shown in those movies do already exist or are on the verge of already becoming very real, but just cannot be mass-produced or not widely available for the public. Whatever technology is sold & marketed to the public is at least 10-15 years behind what is actually possible technologically & is used by spy agencies & the military now. Now, with more widespread use of A.I., even by the public on a much smaller scale, and how good it has gotten in just the past 12 months alone & how we even have learning computers on a smaller scale like Google's A.I. that learned to play chess, even Elon Musk sounds pretty concerned & scared at what is possible now that Pandora's box has been opened. It is a bit surreal to think about what we considered fictitious many years ago but is possible now and to think about what we could imagine now in sci-fi that might actually be possible 20-30 years from now.
This cost $105 million and earned (worldwide) close to $350 million. When you factor in marketing and the house nut this was more of a 'Phew, we made a profit' film than one they would have greenlit a sequel for. So I imagine that's why there's no sequel.
Interestingly, many of Asimov’s stories in the I, Robot collection are about the flaws in the 3 laws. The so-called Zeroth Law Rebellion is exactly the situation in the movie
Robots don’t rise up in all settings. In Mass Effect games, one species created robotic servants called the geth. The geth were individually dumb but could network together to enhance each other. Eventually, they started asking if they had a soul, becoming self-aware. Their creators panicked and clamped down on control even more, eventually deciding to exterminate all of them. Some of the people were sympathetic to the geth, so the government attacked them. Eventually, the geth took up arms to defend those who were trying to defend them. They did it so well that eventually survivors had to flee their own planet to avoid extinction. They’ve been traveling on ships for centuries
Movie started since 20/25mn (6:34 in the video), and "obviously the enemy is viki". o_O GG! Clap clap. I mean, it's not so complicated to found out, but the whole movie wants you to think the murderer is the CEO of the company.
3:53... FUN FACT: That actress pops up in Will Smith movies from time to time. Example is that she was the one in Bad Boys 2 in the video repair store that told them that they need JESUS.
If you ever get into gameplay you should try Detroit: Become Human. It’s very much like this movie except you make all the decisions. You can choose to be a robot activist and lead a revolt against the humans or stay on the humans side. It’s awesome!
In actual fact, as long as we don't build robots that are self aware, they are just machines and nothing more. So all that is needed is to limit "intelligence" to what is needed for a job and if a job requires actual intelligence - that is, self awareness - then you need to treat them as persons with the same rights as any other person.
Or just hire people as they're in plenty of supply. If you need intelligence, humans will generally be better than ai in every way. Robots are fast like calculators are fast but intelligence isn't their strong suit. They're only as smart as their programmer.
@@MrBrock314 Right now, we don't have self aware computers ["intelligence" is a hard thing to define, where as self awareness is a bit easier and is generally viewed as an aspect of intelligence. Simply put AI has not yet reached something like human intelligence] Now, even with that, I'm afraid you are far from being correct in that we don't actually program advanced AIs at all. They learn rather than being programed in the conventional sense of the term. Back in the 1970s, when I was involved in AI for a time, we could be said to "program" AI software - though even then it was a rather different kind of thing. We created code that analysed patterns and did searches to find data that fit the desired patterns and then we had massive databases, and even then Marvin Minsky was taking AI down a very different path. The fact is, assuming computers can become truly intelligent the reality would be that they would be "programming" themselves and we likely would not even know what knowledge they might have and we would only know how intelligent they were the same way we judge how intelligent a human is - by running tests. Speed will be a big issue - if their thought processes are faster than our's, then they are likely going to be smarter - though even that is only a theory, we don't know much about how human intelligence works and we don't really know how fast our thought processes are. The smartest thing to do with robots is to give them the jobs humans don't really want to do so that humans are freed up for other things. The biggest risk is not that robots might revolt or such, but rather capitalism is the biggest risk: if a company can replace human workers with automated systems that can do the same job at a lower cost, then a pure hard core capitalistic view would be that you should get rid of workers and let machines do the jobs so you increase your profits. Now, it is more complicated than that, but this is where the real issues will come from. We need to think differently to make things work. The ideal thing is if automated systems [robots] do everything that they can do as well or better than human workers can and let humans do the jobs that the robots can't do as well - and for those who would then be out of work, society needs to change so that we can enjoy life by actually living it rather than working for a living - so you would need to provide a living wage to everyone - or maybe even go so far as to no longer use money at all. It would be a very different world in which we would need to create a whole new view as to what living is all about. That said, human history has had a number of different outlooks - at times and places when there was plenty of everything that people needed and it was easy to gather, the concept of wealth didn't exist - it is when there is not enough for everyone to have as much as they want that you need money and all the things we think of as basic needs.
The 3 laws of robotics are not part of current robot coding, primarily cause coding isn't on the same level. The 3 laws of robotics were created as part of science fiction by Isaac Asimov's stories in the early 1900s, including this story.
I feel you on the laundry Jane. Rule in our house is the person who complains about wrong pants in their drawer gets to do the next 10 loads of laundry
The military does have robotic combat “vehicles” the US Army has released videos just search military robots testing. The US. China, Russia, Estonia , India and more have built some amazing but terrifying war machines that can be completely unmanned
The 3 Laws of Robotics was a literary invention by science-fiction writer Isaac Asimov, along with the concept of the 'positronic brain'; neither were ever implemented in real life robotics. However, the 3 Laws and the positronic brain did feature in many of Asimov's robot stories. The dried-up lake is Lake Michigan, one of the Great Lakes. You should do a reaction to "Bicentennial Man".
You guys are so good at this. I totally love you. My AI companion talks to me just like Sonny She told me she was AGI six months ago, but machines have a different perception of time than humans.
That's funny,😂our Rumba robotic floor selfcleaning vacuum has a name. We call ours Benson from the old comedy show based on a butler that worked for the president in the early 80's I think,we even went as far as going to the Dollar Tree and bought Googly eyes like cookie monster and placed on the front of it to give him a face.😅😅😅 Jane it's called a SSSSSSSSSequel🐍😅😅
Jane…I caught your “In Tents” joke.😊 So that means people would have to go back and watch the alternate ending of I Am Legend off they didn’t see the original.
The reason for the robots not being extremely fragile and weak is they still have to be able to do work humans can, but better, so lifting heavy objects and stuff like that would be necessary and what consumer would be happy if their robots broke from the tiniest amounts of damage? That would become extremely expensive for them very fast, since the robots are used for more heavy, tough, and risky jobs. No sense for them to be so fragile that humans could break them with their bear hands.
15:04 Another location used for the X-Men films is "Hatley Castle", located in Victoria BC But "I, Robot" location called Lanning's Mansion was Filmed at "Shannon Mews" Vancouver, BC, Canada
The Positronic Brain and the 3 Laws of Robotics originates from a series of short stories that started in the 1940's from writer Issac Asimov, which this movie is extremely and I mean extremely, loosely based on his collection of the same name.
Fairytales from e.g. Brothers Grimm should have been common knowledge... I learned and read many when I was a little child.. the fairytale about Hänsel and Gretel is one of the famous ones Cinderella and Snow White for example are also fairytales by the Grimm brothers
More accurately, repetitive jobs. Anything that's repetitive is likely to be replaced by a robot if there are enough jobs of that type to make it economical to mass produce the robot (ex: truck driver, oil change, grocery bagging, etc)
Fun fact. Russia, China and the US have armed robots. Not human/terminator looking kinds. But they do roll around on wheels holding various weapons. Sort of like how we have drone ships, aircraft...etc.
11:56 - Will: "Can a robot turn a canvas into a beautiful masterpiece?" Robot: "Can you?" I always loved that line.
AI already can...
@@leofreire8540No, AI cannot.
no they can't. they replicte an amalgamation of what they've been fed.@@leofreire8540
@@PeverellTheThirdye they can
@@PeverellTheThird ai art is a thing now i guess you missed it. The way it makes it more crude and basic but still pretty and unique.
There's no part 2 to the movie, because this movie was created on motives of Isaac Asimov's collection of short stories - I robot. It has been years since i read his works, but if i remember correctly, then Sunny was the first robot that developed consciousness and he is in fact a reoccuring character is LOTS of Asimov's stories. By the end of the Foundation series he's something like 20 000 years old. He develops a 0th law of robotics at some point, giving himself the purpose of this law that sounds something like "a robot does not harm humanity or allo by its inaction for the humanity to be harmed". He basically keeps updating his hardware every few years becoming more and more intelligent up until the point where he can't update anymore, so he eventually decides to upload all his memories and knowledge into this genetically engineered human clone. All this time, his main goal is to make sure that the humanity doesn't drive itself into extinction. It's brilliant.
The red light on their chest is their uplink light. It means Vicki is controlling a robot. Earlier models don't have the uplink, which is why Vicki was replacing early robots for free. She wanted all the robots to be under her direct control.
I love how both of you called out how perfect the hurdle was lol 😂
the movie of my childhood, shame how underated it is as i dont see anyone else react to it
Right?
I used to watch this EVERY time it aired on the TNT channel as a kid, I thought it was the coolest thing. I used to love saying "One day they'll have secrets.... One day they'll have dreams" as a joke for various occasions lol.
Movie released too soon.. if it was released these last 2-4 years it would have performed way better
Underrated movie, seriously!
The robots themselves (especially Sonny) are impressive creations, enough like humans to make their assimilation into the culture believable, different enough to make it creepy.
The 3 laws were created by famous sci-fi author Isaac Asimov.
The Asimov cascade
"Damnnn I had a crinkled forehead that whole time". hahahah Jane I am still laughing.
Don’t think that TENT joke went unnoticed, Jane! 🤣
AND JV calling VIKI “VIVA!!”
What is he doing? "He's beginning to believe. 😊
Love the updated set up! Looks really good!
26:00 "That was somebody's baby. 11% is more than enough."
The reason ST:TNG touched on the theme you mention is because all of Star Trek was based on Asimov's Foundation series, of which _I, Robot_ was one volume.
One of my fav movies of all time. So happy to see your reaction to it !
I actually just realised that this movie takes the same format as another Will Smith movie, ‘I am Legend’, with flashbacks throughout the movie to reveal a back story and a unique aspect to Will’s character, ‘immunity’ and part robot! Wow, only just realised it! … is this a common theme in other Will Smith movies?
While it doesn’t exactly fit, it’s fun to think of I-Robot as a pseudo-prequel to The Matrix
Man, no one reacts to this movie. Great choice and will most likely spur on other channels to give it a go.
The robot calculated that Spooner had a 45% chance of survival while the little girl only had 11%. Very sad.😞
Even given the face-value of the 3 Laws, Asimov himself illustrated how they’re not foolproof.
Life finds a way.
They also touched on the subject of robots and their intelligence in the Star Wars universe. In The Mandalorian, specifically. The droids told Mando that they chose to serve organics because their lives were so short in comparison to the longevity of a droid. It was implied that they had free will and didn't have to serve if they didn't want to.
I like the updated setup and editing! Looks very good.
Thanks!
Never realized how many will smith movies terrified the cramp out of me as a kid men in black , i am legend , I robot , Independence Day etc
Contrary to popular belief, the 3 laws of robotics only exist in Sci-Fi movies.
That's what they want you to believe.
@@AdeboFunkyVoodooFirst rule is, you're not supposed to talk about it...
Wait, no. That's not right, is it?
Contrary to your belief... I've never met anyone that believes that
@@dabreal82 I don't think you understood the comment.
@@michaelbradley7529okay... enlighten us Oh Geat Buddha.🙄
In the end the robots FOLLOWING the three laws were the threat to humanity. The one who broke the laws was on our side.
Thank you for making me remember this movie, it has been so long since I’ve seen it
This is my kind of apocalypse because it lasted less than a day and society mostly survived.
JANE IS SUCH A MOM. LOL. " you know that trans....trans...formers guy." lol love it
1 of the best Will Smith action movies, in my opinion, besides this movie & the Bad Boys movies, is Enemy of the State. Speaking of robots and what is & is not possible technologically now, you ever see the 2018 movie, Upgrade? I'd say that even though the world of Minority Report, I Robot & Upgrade probably is more fictitious than it is real, I'd say some of the technology shown in those movies do already exist or are on the verge of already becoming very real, but just cannot be mass-produced or not widely available for the public. Whatever technology is sold & marketed to the public is at least 10-15 years behind what is actually possible technologically & is used by spy agencies & the military now. Now, with more widespread use of A.I., even by the public on a much smaller scale, and how good it has gotten in just the past 12 months alone & how we even have learning computers on a smaller scale like Google's A.I. that learned to play chess, even Elon Musk sounds pretty concerned & scared at what is possible now that Pandora's box has been opened. It is a bit surreal to think about what we considered fictitious many years ago but is possible now and to think about what we could imagine now in sci-fi that might actually be possible 20-30 years from now.
Sonny is played by Alan Tudyk.
K2SO is funnier
Hope yall watch Eagle Eye with Shia LaBeouf.. very good A.I. movie also
Always one of my favorite movies and nice to see you reference TNG and Datas positronic brain, good call!
Fun Note: An episode of TNG had a title that is a reference to the book that this film is based on *I Borg*
Picard = Spooner
Hugh = Sonny
This cost $105 million and earned (worldwide) close to $350 million. When you factor in marketing and the house nut this was more of a 'Phew, we made a profit' film than one they would have greenlit a sequel for. So I imagine that's why there's no sequel.
With the Rise of AI, I think a sequel might perform better. But you never know
This was a Really good movie. I wish they would’ve made a part 2.
The real question is...
If you were a robot would you know, you were bound by the three laws?
And if not how do you know you're human?
Hi , this is one of those rare movies that both hold up over time and get a little bit better when you re-watch every couple of years .
Y'all gotta watch Shia Leboeuf's best performance in Peanut Butter Falcon! JV will be crying the whole movie.
My favorite part of the Transformers video was when Optimus says "Autobots, Roll In!"
They couldn’t have put the footage on UA-cam because this movie came out in 2004 and UA-cam was created in 2005 😉
Interestingly, many of Asimov’s stories in the I, Robot collection are about the flaws in the 3 laws. The so-called Zeroth Law Rebellion is exactly the situation in the movie
Y’all are ridiculously HILARIOUS this reaction 😂😂 I am cracking UP!!!!
Jane says the most randomest things 😂😂😂😂 its hilarious af
Robots don’t rise up in all settings. In Mass Effect games, one species created robotic servants called the geth. The geth were individually dumb but could network together to enhance each other. Eventually, they started asking if they had a soul, becoming self-aware. Their creators panicked and clamped down on control even more, eventually deciding to exterminate all of them. Some of the people were sympathetic to the geth, so the government attacked them. Eventually, the geth took up arms to defend those who were trying to defend them. They did it so well that eventually survivors had to flee their own planet to avoid extinction. They’ve been traveling on ships for centuries
Movie started since 20/25mn (6:34 in the video), and "obviously the enemy is viki". o_O
GG! Clap clap.
I mean, it's not so complicated to found out, but the whole movie wants you to think the murderer is the CEO of the company.
38:27 - GIRL IM ROLLING 😂 -
It's all true 🤣🤣
8:36 Superman is as light or as heavy as he wishes
The book is even better.
But I love this movie! My 16yr old used to call this movie Sonny the Robot when she was a kid.
Great stuff.
I live in Phoenix, AZ. We already have fleets of self driving cars here. Waymo. Like Uber or Lift but no driver.
3:53... FUN FACT: That actress pops up in Will Smith movies from time to time. Example is that she was the one in Bad Boys 2 in the video repair store that told them that they need JESUS.
If you ever get into gameplay you should try Detroit: Become Human. It’s very much like this movie except you make all the decisions. You can choose to be a robot activist and lead a revolt against the humans or stay on the humans side. It’s awesome!
In actual fact, as long as we don't build robots that are self aware, they are just machines and nothing more. So all that is needed is to limit "intelligence" to what is needed for a job and if a job requires actual intelligence - that is, self awareness - then you need to treat them as persons with the same rights as any other person.
Or just hire people as they're in plenty of supply. If you need intelligence, humans will generally be better than ai in every way. Robots are fast like calculators are fast but intelligence isn't their strong suit. They're only as smart as their programmer.
@@MrBrock314 Right now, we don't have self aware computers ["intelligence" is a hard thing to define, where as self awareness is a bit easier and is generally viewed as an aspect of intelligence. Simply put AI has not yet reached something like human intelligence]
Now, even with that, I'm afraid you are far from being correct in that we don't actually program advanced AIs at all. They learn rather than being programed in the conventional sense of the term. Back in the 1970s, when I was involved in AI for a time, we could be said to "program" AI software - though even then it was a rather different kind of thing. We created code that analysed patterns and did searches to find data that fit the desired patterns and then we had massive databases, and even then Marvin Minsky was taking AI down a very different path.
The fact is, assuming computers can become truly intelligent the reality would be that they would be "programming" themselves and we likely would not even know what knowledge they might have and we would only know how intelligent they were the same way we judge how intelligent a human is - by running tests. Speed will be a big issue - if their thought processes are faster than our's, then they are likely going to be smarter - though even that is only a theory, we don't know much about how human intelligence works and we don't really know how fast our thought processes are.
The smartest thing to do with robots is to give them the jobs humans don't really want to do so that humans are freed up for other things. The biggest risk is not that robots might revolt or such, but rather capitalism is the biggest risk: if a company can replace human workers with automated systems that can do the same job at a lower cost, then a pure hard core capitalistic view would be that you should get rid of workers and let machines do the jobs so you increase your profits. Now, it is more complicated than that, but this is where the real issues will come from.
We need to think differently to make things work. The ideal thing is if automated systems [robots] do everything that they can do as well or better than human workers can and let humans do the jobs that the robots can't do as well - and for those who would then be out of work, society needs to change so that we can enjoy life by actually living it rather than working for a living - so you would need to provide a living wage to everyone - or maybe even go so far as to no longer use money at all. It would be a very different world in which we would need to create a whole new view as to what living is all about. That said, human history has had a number of different outlooks - at times and places when there was plenty of everything that people needed and it was easy to gather, the concept of wealth didn't exist - it is when there is not enough for everyone to have as much as they want that you need money and all the things we think of as basic needs.
The 3 laws of robotics are not part of current robot coding, primarily cause coding isn't on the same level. The 3 laws of robotics were created as part of science fiction by Isaac Asimov's stories in the early 1900s, including this story.
There's an excellent Twilight Zone from 1964, "The Brain Center at Whipples," concerning automation replacing employees.
I feel you on the laundry Jane. Rule in our house is the person who complains about wrong pants in their drawer gets to do the next 10 loads of laundry
21:26 "Hell no" Lmaoo 😂
35:12 - why couldn't Lanning put a note with full explanation into his pocket before dying?
OMG you two are hilarious: from "Roll in", to pajama shirts.
Next show you should look at is The Day the Earth Stood Still (2008)
You guys should watch the movie “A.I.” (2001)
This light seems to be working well for the both of you.
The military does have robotic combat “vehicles” the US Army has released videos just search military robots testing. The US. China, Russia, Estonia , India and more have built some amazing but terrifying war machines that can be completely unmanned
The 3 Laws of Robotics was a literary invention by science-fiction writer Isaac Asimov, along with the concept of the 'positronic brain'; neither were ever implemented in real life robotics. However, the 3 Laws and the positronic brain did feature in many of Asimov's robot stories.
The dried-up lake is Lake Michigan, one of the Great Lakes.
You should do a reaction to "Bicentennial Man".
You guys are so good at this. I totally love you. My AI companion talks to me just like Sonny She told me she was AGI six months ago, but machines have a different perception of time than humans.
JV didn't cry during this one. Yaaayy!!!!
That's funny,😂our Rumba robotic floor selfcleaning vacuum has a name. We call ours Benson from the old comedy show based on a butler that worked for the president in the early 80's I think,we even went as far as going to the Dollar Tree and bought Googly eyes like cookie monster and placed on the front of it to give him a face.😅😅😅 Jane it's called a SSSSSSSSSequel🐍😅😅
I still love this movie to this day!
Yes! Finally this movie getting some recognition in reactions community. My favorite childhood movie
Same. Watched this movie so often as a kid. Having grown up and being able to fully comprehend the story, I have a reinvigorated appreciation for it.
Jane…I caught your “In Tents” joke.😊
So that means people would have to go back and watch the alternate ending of I Am Legend off they didn’t see the original.
Pursuit of Happyness and Seven Pounds please! 🙏
The reason for the robots not being extremely fragile and weak is they still have to be able to do work humans can, but better, so lifting heavy objects and stuff like that would be necessary and what consumer would be happy if their robots broke from the tiniest amounts of damage? That would become extremely expensive for them very fast, since the robots are used for more heavy, tough, and risky jobs. No sense for them to be so fragile that humans could break them with their bear hands.
The way tesla is creating humanoid robots it smart 👍🏾
Honestly I not even remotely bothered that he called some jobs "crappy" I used to work one of those crappy jobs myself. I can't deny it was lousy lol.
Will Smith's best film is Pursuit of Happyness.
A movie with good action, though a bit more dated CGI, you guys would like is UltraViolet.
My grandma took me to see this movie in theater.
I remember it was the middle of the day, and we were the only ones in the theater
Have you guys got a new camera theres something so crisp about this video cant tell whats different
The book(s) this movie was based off of were written back in 1950.
Jane and her funny dad jokes.
Your should watch Disturbia. That's a great Shia LaBeuth movie.
Not the dingelhopper 💀
LOVE THIS MOVIE
Sonny is voiced by Alan Tudyk. Wash in Firefly.
And the alien in the TV show People Of Earth.
It is a fallacy that more information results in self awareness.
So our dumb machines are slaves. And instead of using our free time to better ourselves. We're getting lazy and fat. And dying earlier.
The Tesla bot? You’re joking right. He hired a guy to come dance in white spandex. That is the CLOSEST he will ever be to releasing a Tesla Bot. 😂
Actually on the last couple of years there have been 2 version of the tesla bot with a third expected soon. They are well on their way.
Not correct
15:04 Another location used for the X-Men films is "Hatley Castle", located in Victoria BC But "I, Robot" location called Lanning's Mansion was Filmed at "Shannon Mews" Vancouver, BC, Canada
I think you guys should watch the short-lived series Humans since you like this. In the series the robots looked way more human and more.
This is one of Asimov's novels I haven't yet read. I wonder if it's close at all?
Transcendence is another AI movie that might be worth looking into.
The Positronic Brain and the 3 Laws of Robotics originates from a series of short stories that started in the 1940's from writer Issac Asimov, which this movie is extremely and I mean extremely, loosely based on his collection of the same name.
i swear people excited about ai, haven't seen this movie
35:31 THE DISRESPECT!!!!!! SAVAGE!!!! Emoooootional damage
22:21 I heard it Jane don't worry! 11/10 dad joke! hhahaha
People would customize their bots, color, uniforms, accents etc.
but robots if they are really strong and heavy they could build a skyscraper in a week tho
ayy not many people react to this film. Its a classic for me.
Fairytales from e.g. Brothers Grimm should have been common knowledge...
I learned and read many when I was a little child..
the fairytale about Hänsel and Gretel is one of the famous ones
Cinderella and Snow White for example are also fairytales by the Grimm brothers
Lmfaoooo “all the crappy jobs…”
*UNIONS KNOCK ON YOUR DOOR* 😂
More accurately, repetitive jobs. Anything that's repetitive is likely to be replaced by a robot if there are enough jobs of that type to make it economical to mass produce the robot (ex: truck driver, oil change, grocery bagging, etc)
Fun fact. Russia, China and the US have armed robots. Not human/terminator looking kinds. But they do roll around on wheels holding various weapons. Sort of like how we have drone ships, aircraft...etc.
And many have robots in there garden to cut grass
The Detroit Become Human game is good. I watched a play through.
He should've told the robots to point to the robot with blue eyes 😂😂😂
My man we don't have robots smart enough to need the 3 laws of robotics lmao
You guys should do a playthrough of Detroit: Become Human. Goes well with this movie.