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Robo Brain Project Wants To Turn the Internet Into a Robotic Hivemind

malachiorion writes Researchers are force-feeding the internet into a system called Robo Brain. The system has absorbed a billion images and 120,000 YouTube videos so far, and aims to digest 10 times that within a year, in order to create machine-readable commands for robots—how to pour coffee, for example. From the article: "The goal is as direct as the project’s name—to create a centralized, always-online brain for robots to tap into. The more Robo Brain learns from the internet, the more direct lessons it can share with connected machines. How do you turn on a toaster? Robo Brain knows, and can share 3D images of the appliance and the relevant components. It can tell a robot what a coffee mug looks like, and how to carry it by the handle without dumping the contents. It can recognize when a human is watching a television by gauging relative positions, and advise against wandering between the two. Robo Brain looks at a chair or a stool, and knows that these are things that people sit on. It’s a system that understands context, and turns complex associations into direct commands for physical robots."

2 of 108 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Youtube Comments by charronia · · Score: 4, Funny

    Researchers are still determining the reason behind Robo Brain's incredibly rude behavior.

  2. Re:Youtube Comments by ColdWetDog · · Score: 4, Funny

    The system has absorbed a billion images and 120,000 YouTube videos so far,

    What this really points out is that we need to lay the groundwork for the Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Robots.

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    Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!