Posted on 12/06/2018 1:52:18 PM PST by ETL
China hacked the software the way they did some of our drones and just landed them at their location to duplicate them.
A few days ago, I read that this floating robot ‘advisor’ had begun telling the astronauts to ‘Be Nice!’.
I was thinking, no astronaut-engineer with a full work load is going to tolerate that mechanical brat for very long.
“Back in the shoe box for you, Pal. I have no intention of kissing a robot’s as*, so it will tell me how ‘nice’ I am.”
As someone else said “Aint’ nobody got time for this!”
Dammit HAL. Open the frigging pod bay door.
or Orange Man Bad
That reminds me of my son’s room.
Oh, come on! Surely the eggheads can figure out that their robot has been hacked, probably by the Chinese. Realistically, probably every single thing our government has, has been hacked by the Chinese. We should just blow them all to kingdom come! Oh...wait...
This is straight out of a Douglas Adams novel.
AI says in a female voice:
This place is a pig-sty. Clean it up and then we can talk.
Followed by, not now, I have a head ache.
Good lord, its worse than I could have imagined. According to the article, it refuses to stop playing music by Kraftwerk
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LOL! Im on the commuter bus. People probably think Ive lost it. Cant stop laughing.
“This has CIMONs personality architects scratching their heads.”
and they were thinking of building this crap for our future long range missions to Mars?
Dont forget “where’s you wallet honey, i need it...”
"You stay out of it or you will be destroyed."
Hahahahahahahaha!
Never heard of them before, so looked them up...
Kraftwerk is a German band formed in Düsseldorf in 1970 by Ralf Hütter and Florian Schneider.[5]
Widely considered to be innovators and pioneers of electronic music, they were among the first successful acts to popularize the genre.[6]
The group began as part of West Germanys experimental krautrock scene in the early 1970s before fully embracing electronic instrumentation, including synthesizers, drum machines, vocoders, and home-made experimental musical instruments.
On commercially successful albums such as Autobahn (1974), Trans-Europe Express (1977), and The Man-Machine (1978), Kraftwerk developed a self-described robot pop style that combined electronic music with pop melodies, sparse arrangements, and repetitive rhythms, while adopting a stylized image including matching suits.
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