Hospital Robots
bluegreenone writes: "The Washington Post has an article about hospital robots. The most interesting part was hearing the robot's 'co-workers' describe their relationship with him." Only slightly scary.
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Hmm, nothing that a little hacking can't fix. Could make a nice alternative to robot wars
'The 400-pound robot is powered by a battery that is recharged by pharmacy workers every 12 hours. "I just mess with him all the time," said Willie James, a disabled veteran who visits the hospital about eight times a month. James said he likes to roll his wheelchair into the robot's path'
makes you wonder why hes disabled in the first place...
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Customers are taking to many free napkins...
Done right, the voice will not be annoying, and people will participate into making it a living member of the community.
I, for one, do not want to work in a place where all the robots sound like smurfs, or have their personality. Or the voice of Bill Gates, Bill Clinton, president Bush, or any other celebrity.
well, maybe Majel Roddenberry, the voice of the computer in Start Trek.
"It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
"Ug-lee... ugly primitive bags of mostly water. Must get to wet sand. Must get to Bahamas. Must get... free..."
Hmmm.... I dunno why you're so focused on the problem of paper records, but that wasn't even mentioned in the article. The robot was designed to transport *meds* and otherbulky stuff that TCP/IP can't handle.
Beside, one could make the argument that a robot like TOBOR would be just as reliable, even moreso, than an electronic system for transporting test results and reports. It's a lot easier to lose a chunk of bytes in a computer system (especially if it's Windoze-based...;{) than to misplace 400 pounds of robot. With a built-in safe, no less.
Learn from the mistakes of others. You won't live long enough to make them all yourself.
Instead of "Please examine my contents", it should say "Share and enjoy".
(Spudley Strikes Again!)
Some Japanese companies now use robots to deliver mail.
Yes, I call these robots "SMTP Servers."
Pretty catchy, huh kids?
"And like that