"Tweenbots" Test NYC Pedestrian-Robot Relations
MBCook recommends Kacie Kinzer's tweenbots page, which documents some of her experiments with small, anthropomorphized robots that need help. Kinzer is writing a thesis (at the Center for the Recently Possible) centered around investigating whether people in New York City will help a cute little robot to get where it's going. "Tweenbots are human-dependent robots that navigate the city with the help of pedestrians they encounter. Rolling at a constant speed, in a straight line, Tweenbots have a destination displayed on a flag, and rely on people they meet to read this flag and to aim them in the right direction to reach their goal."
Griefers will love this toy.
...that the bomb squad didn't show up?
np: Radiohead - Polyethylene (Parts 1 & 2) (Airbag / How Am I Driving?)
"I'm not anti-anything, I'm anti-everything, it fits better." - Sole
Constantly text messaging other tweenbots.
Your post reminds me a little of the "Postal Experiments" that I remember reading about amongst some comments here on Slashdot nearly 10 years ago:
:-)
We sent a variety of unpackaged items to U.S. destinations, appropriately stamped for weight and size, as well as a few items packaged as noted. We sent items that loosely fit into the following general categories: valuable, sentimental, unwieldy, pointless, potentially suspicious, and disgusting.
It's tough to say what my personal favorite was, but I think the helium-filled balloon at least deserves special mention.
Whoever designed level 61 in Frozen Bubble is a sadistic bastard.
I was on a walk today. I bought a notebook and a pen, and I spent time writing anonymous, open letters or drawing things whenever I had to wait for the traffic lights to change. When I was heading back home, I began giving some of those letters and drawings to random people on the street. Some people were surprised, some didn't want to take the piece of paper (maybe thought it was just a flyer). I think I'm going to do that again.
If I had to guess, in Paris it would depend on the language the directions were written in:
English - it'd be damaged and tossed in the garbage
French - it'd arrive at its destination with a baguette, cigarette in its mouth, and have lipstick in interesting areas
German - it'd arrive along with a letter of French surrender
1. Make a sad-faced robot carrying a coin jar.
2. Give it a sign saying "Brother, can you spare a quarter so I can buy a new battery?"
3. ???
4. PROFIT!
Showing weakness to the machines is the first step towards your annihilation. First they help the "adorable robot", and next thing you know they're equipping it with firearms, you know, for "self defense".
Entomologically speaking, the spider is not a bug, it's a feature.
P.G. Wodehouse (author of the Jeeves novels, amongst other things) used to write his letters, stamp and address them, and then throw them out the window on the pavement. His theory was that anyone finding such a letter would simply pop it in the nearest post-box; which apparently, they did. He claimed never to have lost a letter this way.
[FUCK BETA]