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Robots: Are randy droids going to take over the world and become our new masters?

PREMIUM A technician by CTRL Robotics company performs a test of room service function of a robot in the Sky Hotel in Sandton, South Africa, on January 29, 2021. (Photo by Luca Sola / AFP) (Photo by LUCA SOLA/AFP via Getty Images). I’M not ashamed to say that I would like a robot companion. Already, I talk to the Lord of the Rings figurines on my mantelpiece. I’ll only start worrying about it when they talk back. “We’re not really interested in football, Rabagorn. Just tell us where the magic ring is.” More importantly, though they have good cloaks, the figurines can’t clean the house or cut the grass. And they’re not nearly big enough to hug when Scotland score a goal every three years. So robots: it’s all good. Ah-ha, and what comes after that, folks? Correct: it all goes bad. In reading this column over the years, clearly you have acquired wisdom. You now know how life works: it’s rubbish.

Self-cloning robots on the march to help save humanity

Self-cloning robots on the march to help save humanity We’re sorry, this service is currently unavailable. Please try again later. Dismiss By Ellie Zolfagharifard Normal text size Advertisement London: Hidden deep in robotics labs around the world, a new generation of intelligent machines is learning to breed and evolve. Just like humans, these robots are able to “give birth” to new versions of themselves, with each one better than the last. They are precise, efficient and creative - and scientists say they could some day help save humanity. Deep in labs around the world, a new generation of intelligent machines is learning to breed and evolve so as to explore distant planets and perhaps help save humanity.

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