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Japan Launches Talking Humanoid Robot Into Space

An anonymous reader writes "Kirobo, a talking humanoid robot, has been launched into space and is headed to the International Space Station. From the article: 'Japan has launched the world's first talking humanoid robot "astronaut" toward the International Space Station. Kirobo — derived from the Japanese words for "hope" and "robot" — was among five tons of supplies and machinery on a rocket launched Sunday from Tanegashima in southwestern Japan, the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, or JAXA, said. The childlike robot was designed to be a companion for astronaut Koichi Wakata and will communicate with another robot on Earth, according to developers. Wakata is expected to arrive at the space station in November.'"

12 of 87 comments (clear)

  1. I'm sorry Dave-san, I cannot do that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Dave-san, I cannot let you jeopardize this mission.

    1. Re:I'm sorry Dave-san, I cannot do that by MichaelSmith · · Score: 2

      Please open the pod bay doors Kibo.

  2. Re:no article? by djupedal · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's basically a toy - less than a foot high, I think - it responds to basic verbal pre-programmed commands. And since it only responds to Japanese and no one up there right now speaks enough to play with it, they will use someone on earth that has already worked with it to communicate over radio.

    I'm going to call this more of a stunt than anything else, sorry.

  3. Re:And good riddance! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It gets kids interested in space

  4. Re:Kirobo = Kibo + Robot by Seumas · · Score: 2

    I suspect less than one percent of people online are old enough to even know who Kibo is. :)

  5. oh my. by Gravis+Zero · · Score: 3, Funny

    Japan Launches Talking Humanoid Robot Into Space

    wow, they must really hate when robots talk.

    --
    Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
  6. A different side of HAL by Tablizer · · Score: 2

    "I won't, I won't open the pod bay doors; nanny nanny poo poo! Davie Gravy, I betcha can't get in without a helmet, betcha betcha, chickeeeen!"

  7. Useless by Taantric · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I have never understood Japanese robot innovations or the hype around them. What they are doing so superficial and useless. They intently focus on the mechanics of robotic movement and facial design while either ignoring or paying superficial lip service to the Artificial Intelligence aspect. The moment the robot interacts with a human the illusion will be broken. Most of these Japanese robots have essentially the same AI as an IRC bot. Restricted list of recognized commands and related actions. Obsessively focusing on the form and ignoring the soul of the machine.

    These are useless toys outside of manufacturing and very specialized industries. And frankly the problem of robot mechanics is an easy one to solve. Just copy Nature.

    1. Re:Useless by codepigeon · · Score: 2

      Look at it this way: one guy invented peanut butter...while some other guy was working on chocolate.....fast forward to the future and we have delicious peanut butter cups.

      I am glad they are perfecting this aspect. When the AI is smart enough (and compact enough), it will have a suitable container to be put into.

      On that day we will welcome or new robotic overlords (or sexy fembots).

  8. Grammatically, yes, practically, no. by tlambert · · Score: 4, Informative

    Is Japanese easier to process for voice recognition than English?

    Grammatically, yes, practically, no.

    Japanese is more regular than English, and it is SOV order instead of SVO order. Subject -> Object -> Verb means you have your subject object, and the parameter object, before you're told to call the Subject object's member function.

    Idiomatically, however, there's a huge amount of context use to imply subject and object, so if you were to try and parse spken Japanese, you might have a problem if you weren't there for the start of the conversation. I rather expect that it's limited to completely context free full sentences and/or simple commands, rather than understanding idiomatic usage.

    Someone else mentioned homonyms; you can get a homonym of "you are a tall man" that could also mean "you have just crossed a bridge" and "you are a martian" (one of my favorite Japanese puns, actually, because of the story a friend tells which goes with it), but again, it requires idiomatic usage to get to that point, so practically, you can eliminate ambiguity intentionally, the same way that you can avoid puns in English, by further constraining how you are allowed to talk to the thing.

    Or you could just flag ambiguous idiomatic usage, and have it ask for clarification, which is what most robot engineers would do.

  9. Re:Waste of weight by tftp · · Score: 2

    They probably had an allocation of weight. They could ship anything they wanted in that allocation, from a toy to dried whale meat.

  10. Re:Toy story by lxs · · Score: 2

    No marketing can disguise the inherent creepyness of RealDolls.