I would have to go with landmines. If that isn’t enough of a deterrent, and claymores or even some bouncing betties.
I would have to go with landmines. If that isn’t enough of a deterrent, and claymores or even some bouncing betties.
Who could have seen that coming? /s
An industrial grade robot is no joke. I hope whoever set up that robot got sued.
You either need a weak enough robot that it can’t really harm you, or you need several measures to prevent exactly this from happening. Either make all the joints compliant or set up PSD’s/invisible fences to prevent the robot from operating when hands are near the boards.
Exactly. Like, how hard would it be to reverse engineer the poison and create a reversal tool that applies the exact opposite modifications. Hell, I wouldn’t be surprised if it could be defeated by something as simple as a little image compression or noise.
Here’s my variant of the quote:
Many of the most talented engineers of our time don’t do anything important — instead, they work on making our entertainment more immersive.
They work on better 3D renderers, more appealing shaders, faster VR hardware, better spatial sound, more powerful game engines, more immersive games, more colorful phone screens, more eye-catching app animations, etc.
The point he’s failing to understand is that all of these “useless” innovations are a part of what is pushing the edge of technological innovation. Sure, while the direct goal of each one is often entertainment, indirectly they all push the limits of a technology.
I managed to get through it on my old 1050ti. Laggy at some parts, but still mostly playable.