He sees that the mirror is not a robot and that he is quite a dashing thing himself, rubs a speck off his metallic face, walks away and stomps on the neighbour's roomba?Imagine a robot designed to destroy other robots.
It sees itself in a mirror.
What would happen?
Imagine a robot designed to destroy other robots.
It sees itself in a mirror.
What would happen?
What if it's programmed to understand reflections?
Then it will see a robot roughly at the place it occupies.
Now what?
Well then, if it wasn't capable of realising that reflections aren't real entities, and that it was to destroy robots on sight without question, what happens next depends on what it was given by way of weaponry. Maybe it would punch the mirror, or maybe it would fire a laser beam, and then just maybe, if the mirror was a near-perfect reflector, it would melt itself to the great chagrin of its designers and entertainment of the global news agencies.What if it's programmed to understand reflections?
Then it will see a robot roughly at the place it occupies.
Now what?
Boom goes the thunderbirds! :jiggy: (I went to the Great Tennessee Air Show yesterday, you can understand my happiness)
Oh, I know the feeling. Back in Ohio, I had plenty of closed airshows. None of them had the thunderbirds, but one of them had a F-22. Then they just moved on to the next state. But here, Blackhawks and C-130's often wake me up at 5 in the morning. I think I saw that blackhawk there. Oh well.
Lol, my family loved it. They had a F-18 demo first and it flew by (supersonic of course) and so it was silent, my little brother (he 6 so don't judge) was like "Whats wrong?" Then BOOM! The sound hit us and he got a kick outta that.
IIRC they aren't allowed to go supersonic. :shrug:Lol, my family loved it. They had a F-18 demo first and it flew by (supersonic of course) and so it was silent, my little brother (he 6 so don't judge) was like "Whats wrong?" Then BOOM! The sound hit us and he got a kick outta that.