English, asked by tejaswi2007, 11 months ago

a story on a robot which was made for doing household chores and couldn't do it properly so one of the family member decided to dismantle it and join a new software which would work properly.



Also add that it had a negative point that he could give a 100 volts shock if he/she would insult anything in front of him



come on guys really need ur brains to work on this and i will chose you as a branliest if u ans without spamming​

Answers

Answered by Aakarsh25
1

Answer:

Explanation:

It can be easy to generalize our talk about robots under a single “robotics” banner, but there are significant differences between the various subsets of robotics, such as industrial versus consumer robots.  There is some overlap, where innovations made in one sphere are applied in the other, and vice versa.  But the Average Joe isn’t too invested in what robot arm can build cars the fastest—most people want to know, “What can a robot do for me?”

The answer to this question leads to the consumer robotics market, where engineers, programmers, roboticists and designers are striving to develop robots that will make our daily lives easier, help care for the sick and injured, or provide companionship and entertainment.

       The current market for personal and domestic robots is growing, with a rapid rise expected over the next three years, according to a report by the International Federation of Robotics.  Vacuum and floor cleaning robots are currently the most established type of robot in the market.  According to the IFR, the value of the domestic service robot market is up by 27 percent, to USD$2.1 billion, which includes robots sold for tasks including evacuate current market for personal and domestic robots is growing, with a rapid rise expected over the next three years, according to a report by the International Federation of Robotics.  Vacuum and floor cleaning robots are currently the most established type of robot in the market.  According to the IFR, the value of the domestic service robot market is up by 27 percent, to USD$2.1 billion, which includes robots sold for tasks including vacuuming, window cleaning, and lawn maintenance, among smothering, window cleaning, and lawn maintenance, among others.

“Floor cleaning robots, robo-mowers and robots for edutainment (the latter increasingly referred to as social robots), have increasingly become part of our lives. Future product visions point to domestic robots of higher sophistication, capability and value, such as assistive robots for supporting the elderly, for helping out with household chores and for entertainment,” said Martin Haegele, chairman of the IFR Service Robot Group and author of the report.

So, what do people really want from home robots?  And what types of robots could fulfill these wishes and applications?  There are new, more advanced bots making their debut each year, and soon they will be capable enough to be truly useful, and ubiquitous enough to bring the price down to something reasonable affordable.

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