So, we're becoming evermore
integrated with technology.
It's everywhere.
But technology is really
what we make of it.
And, we should really
bring it to the next level.
And I think the way we can do this,
is ask the question,
"how can technology learn from us?"
And the way it can learn from us,
is that we can teach it.
We can teach about humanity.
And by doing so,
it can make us more human.
Lack of understanding
knowledge and empathy,
is the root cause
of many human problems.
And I believe we could use technology,
to increase our level of understanding.
We can get knowledge from places
like the Internet,
but the Internet in itself
is not inquisitive.
These are the BlabDroids.
And they are robots created
to learn about people.
And they do this by going around,
and asking people questions,
as most of us do when we want to learn.
And you can see they are very cute,
and made to be very friendly.
Because if you want to have
a relationship with a robot,
it better be pretty nice .
(Laughter)
So, next you'll see a couple of examples
of the BlabDroids asking some people
somewhat difficult questions.
Robot: if you could give someone any gift,
what would it be?
Woman: Give my mother the gift
of not worrying about me
before she dies.
And she wants me to lose,
like a ton of weight,
and get really really healthy.
And she needs to see that,
before she dies,
For her to feel like I am going
to be Ok when she is not here,
and I wish I could give her that.
And I am not positive I can.
You asked!
Robot: if you died tomorrow,
what would you regret the most?
Woman: I switched out her shampoo
for a Nair hair remover
when she wasn't looking,
and clumps of her hair fell out.
I felt like she deserved it,
it's very much still justified .
And I would do it again to her
in a heartbeat.
I still don't like her.
So these are the types of things
that you may not tell a person
who is coming up to you with questions,
but the robots in fact got those answers.
So, the ideas are these robots will become
a tangible manifestation
of cloud intelligence
that can both learn and teach.
And as I said before,
the Internet in itself
doesn't necessarily learn,
but these robots can be made in a way
that we want to interact with them
on a very high level.
Think of them as if you had
a dog in your house
that asked you questions,
but you could also ask it questions.
So how do we make
something like this happen?
Well the first step is making it,
and we partnered with a few people like
Dragon innovation to do manufacturing
and bolt to form a company around us.
The idea is that these Robots,
will connect to the cloud
through your cell phone
using bluetooth.
So we're all carrying around
these devices in our pockets
that are basically very smart computers,
and they also have network connectivity.
So, we can do things with a robot like,
asking simple questions,
you know, will it rain?
The robot would say, yeah, it might rain,
you may want an umbrella.
But asking it more
difficult questions like,
are we alone in the universe,
or things of that sort,
Need a bit more of a human touch
than things like Google or Wolfram Alpha,
or things of that sort,
may have a hard time answering.
And one way to do this
is use cloud knowledge
and cloud intelligence.
So say you have
a question for BlabDroid,
and it isn't one of
the simple things like,
do I have a meeting
scheduled for tomorrow?
It might say, "Well, gee!
I don't know I'll ask my friends."
So the robot then accesses the cloud,
and talks to all his other
BlabDroid buddies
and asks them, "hey,
does your human know
something about this person's question?"
They may say, "Yes, let me contact them."
But as you can see,
some of these guys are a little busy
but a couple of them
may have a good idea.
So these people can
tell the robot the answer,
either by looking up or
maybe they're an expert in the field.
And that knowledge
can be returned to that robot.
And at the same time,
that knowledge can be saved online
in this sort of emergent intelligence
where, OK, the robot couldn't find it
through traditional means,
now it's stored that human knowledge.
So imagine like,
a Robot asking grandma
what her favorite cookie recipe is.
That's something that might have been
lost to time in the past.
But by using these social
interfaces that can be stored.
And there are obviously things right now
where you can talk to your cell phone,
and talk to other things where
you can ask it questions
and they'll give you answers,
but the primitive parts for our brains
don't think cell phones are alive,
even if they had voices because
they're not persistent beings,
they're not objects that always stay
alive, in a way, where, a robot,
a robot in itself is a physical form,
so even though it is connected
to this cloud intelligence,
it's something that our brains
perceive as alive,
and the way you want to do this,
is that we want them
to be very fun and playful,
so you want to talk to them,
you want to converse with them,
not only asking them things,
but also having them
with you as companions.
So in the future,
we think that these can create a...
until now undocumented part of humanity.
So a lot of this oral tradition,
a lot of storytelling,
which has been, interacting
into humanity,
has been kind of lost in the Internet age
for these can start getting ideas.
Reduce costs of cell phones.
will allow these to permeate more places,
And a new breed of social knowledge
through sharing and interacting
allows to connect to people,
that maybe culturally disperse.
There are a lot of problems
to solve obviously,
technical issues such as
voice recognition and data storage,
and that AI in the backend,
issues such as privacy and security,
Because obviously
you're telling the robot things,
and other problems such as
will personal robots be adopted?
That's more of a social question.
So to trail off here,
I figured we would have one example,
so, imagine you asked your robot,
you know, what created the moon?
Who better to answer it
than someone like
Chris Hatfield and ISS astronauts.
So let's see what he has to say.
Robot: What created the moon?
Chris Hatfield: What created the moon?
The moon was created about
four billion years ago,
when a huge rocky early planet
slammed into the Earth.
Something about the size of Mars
crashed into the Earth
like two big wet pool balls,
billiard balls, slamming into each other,
and ripped a big section out of the Earth,
went off like a big globe into space
and started orbiting the world
and slowly cooled
and got further and further
from the world over the billions of years
until it finally coalesced
and looks just like our moon does today.
So truly, the moon is like
the daughter of the Earth
(Applause)