Thread: Robot Ethics?
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Unread 30-05-2006, 23:29
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AKA: Neil Parikh
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Re: Robot Ethics?

Quote:
Originally Posted by AtalanteStar25
Don't take it apart unless it is absolutely essential. A few bits and pieces of some of our old robots have been taken off due to the fact that we absolutely needed a few of the parts, but we have never completely ripped one apart.

I remember my first robotics meeting, which was in the middle of September of this year. Some of the seniors took us freshman into our back room where we store everything. We have a shelf in there with about 5 robots on it. We were really able to get a sense of history just by seeing those retired bots up there. I looked at them, and realized what I was getting myself into. I was looking upon a legacy that I was about to become a part of. As some of the members told us about the robots, I was able to realize how much each of them meant to them.

Each season has its triumphs and some have its difficulties, and the robot is a symbol of what happened that year. Just think of th
e amount of time you spent working on that robot, testing it, programming it, designing it, building it, fixing it, etc. Now, do you really want to get take apart something you put so much into, just for a few more detailed CAD drawings? In a few year's time, you may revisit your old team (if you're still not with them, of course), and if you keep that robot, you can look back at it and remember how great this season was, or how you wished you had done better, or whatever.

Keep the robot around. It could be useful for inspiring rookies like me, or giving them a sense of history.

Besides, old bots are great for teaching new members programming, or even some of the mechanical aspects of building a robot.

Even though we're on the same team, I completely agree. Now a junior, I still remember being in Elementary School and hearing of our teaming winning the National Championship in 2000. I later got a chance to see that robot in middle school during the robot demos the team did. Then I got a chance to see 2003's National Finalist robot. For me, the robot is something more than just a few pieces of metal and electronics. Each robot represents something unique. It represents all the hard work that team members put into it. It is an everlasting(hopefully) showcase of all the sweat and toil put into an amazing machine.

I'm glad we have every robot since 2000...every time I walk into that back room I stop for a second and look at them and their legacy. As Alexa said, it's something quite amazing, quite inspiring...quite touching.
Through those robots I get a sense of the people that worked on it. I see a connection with the past and all the members of the team that have moved on. I know we'll never retire our 2000,2003, or this year's bot. They've been amazing.

But an amazing robot is much more than one that has had an impressive record of wins or one that's one lots of awards. An amazing robot is one that sticks truly in your heart as something that inspires you, something that moves you, something that helps you remember amazing times.

If this robot means something to you, if it strikes at some kind of passion in your heart, if it produces even a modicum of sentiment...I'd say keep it. Perhaps you can inspire more people. Perhaps you'll have something to look back at. Perhaps you'll have something to practice and train with. Or maybe you'll just have good memories.
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