True but I think it’s also limiting to build robots (previously just known as machines) in a human form or imitation of it.

The washing machine looks nothing like a human, and yet it’s saved millions of hours of work.

We’ve become obsessed with replacing ourselves instead of building machines that complement us.

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For industrial mass production, those non human robots are great.

For chores or other highly individual tasks, I'd love to buy a humanoid robot. I can also see the platform behind it. Like a 3D-printer you can download data for specific use cases.

I think in 10years we will all have a robot at home like we have a car

I definitely understand that, but my biggest concern is that these robots will run on centralized architecture, which means they’ll be a gold mine for highly personalized surveillance. The likelihood you can own one of these robots in a private, secure fashion is nearly zero, imo.

Good point