Robot eyes are power hungry. What if we gave them tools inspired by the human brain? (theconversation.com)
from Pro@programming.dev to technology@lemmy.world on 20 Jun 05:51
https://programming.dev/post/32543571

#technology

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Archangel1313@lemmy.ca on 20 Jun 06:26 next collapse

Can we just not?

charade_you_are@sh.itjust.works on 20 Jun 07:52 next collapse

Don’t worry about it. Human brains are perfect and I’m sure these robots will never turn into serial killers.

[deleted] on 20 Jun 09:25 next collapse

.

junkthief@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 20 Jun 10:21 collapse
catty@lemmy.world on 20 Jun 15:38 collapse

because they want more human brains?

Dasus@lemmy.world on 21 Jun 04:06 collapse
Bubs@lemm.ee on 21 Jun 01:29 collapse

It’s nothing dystopian like you think. Basically just a variation on camera sensors:

[…] bio-inspired cameras that capture the world more like the human eye does. These are called dynamic vision sensors, and they work like motion detectors for each pixel. They only “wake up” and send information when something changes in the scene, rather than constantly streaming data like a regular camera.

<img alt="" src="https://i.imgur.com/wNSq9sV.jpeg">

These bio-inspired cameras are also highly energy efficient, using less than 1% of the power of normal cameras.

ShoeThrower@lemmy.zip on 20 Jun 09:07 next collapse

Technically, it’s the brains (image processing and recognition) that uses most of the power, not the eyes (camera sensors), but okay.

glimse@lemmy.world on 20 Jun 11:09 next collapse

Let’s give em depression

phoenixz@lemmy.ca on 21 Jun 04:22 next collapse

Very nice and very impressive

altphoto@lemmy.today on 22 Jun 06:01 collapse

Let’s not? I think we’ve had enough robots with AI for now. Thank you.