Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My favorite is "is the dishwasher clean or dirty?" as my husband stands in the kitchen with a dirty dish in his hand and I'm in the next room.
Pitiful
If it’s any consolation, mine does this too, because he’s never learned what the light on the door means (or just looked).
This is a man with two advanced degrees.
Anonymous wrote:My favorite is "is the dishwasher clean or dirty?" as my husband stands in the kitchen with a dirty dish in his hand and I'm in the next room.
Pitiful
Anonymous wrote:Not interested in robot warriors.
Make me a robot that will make dinner, do the dishes, clean the kitchens and bathrooms, change the sheets and do laundry (wash, dry, fold and put away), and I'd pay good money for that!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:LOL. If given a choice, no one wants to do the boring work of being clean, being organized and doing daily chores needed to be functional - cooking, cleaning, organizing, laundry.
That is why, I have so much hope with AI and robotics providing a way for ordinary people to not do these chores, not have to provide the physical aspect of childcare, eldercare, patient care, petcare etc.
I have a client whose son is working with the government to build lethal robots with AI.
Let me introduce you to unmanned drones used in Ukraine and many other conflicts around the world... they fly around, identify enemy troops and fire entirely on their own. And there's plenty more where that came from.
Anonymous wrote:My kids are 13 and 16. I just shrug and say don’t know. Unless I do know without looking-
Then it’s “your phone is on the foyer table under your baseball cap” and I look like the magician I am.