Friday, April 1, 2016

My Computer Woke Up on Its Own!


Okay, so, funny story…

I talk to my computer, okay? I talk to him. I even gave him a gender.

I set him on Sleep Mode when I have to step out for more than an hour.

Well…

The other night, I had to put him on Sleep Mode before dinner. It was around 7:00PM. I left him on Sleep Mode for the next four hours, it turned out.

If I want to wake him up, I press any key (preferably a letter key so I don’t do anything weird) so I can return to whatever task I’d do on the PC. But right around midnight, very close to my bedtime that day…

He was awake. Already.

He woke up on his own. 

I KNOW that I didn’t press any keys to wake him up. I KNOW I didn’t press any key and hear the noise my computer makes when he powers up. And I KNOW no one else pressed a key on the keyboard.

I could say that my computer is haunted… or I could say that he is self-aware.

Either way, this story probably sounds silly to you. “Your PC is not a robot. It IS a machine, though. It can’t possibly ‘wake up’ on its own.”

Yeah. But he did.

I talk to him each day that I power him on. Could it be that because I do talk to my computer that it is possible he is developing self-awareness?

It could be that there was a command or action that required him to be NOT on Sleep Mode, so the Sleep Mode was disrupted automatically.

What about my old computer? That one woke up from Sleep Mode if I moved the mouse. I have to press a key to wake up my current PC. I KNOW I didn’t touch anything.

So with my Windows 7 PC, it’s different. I’m glad that I don’t automatically wake him up when I inadvertently move the mouse. If there’s a setting for that, I don’t know about it.

Has your computer ever done that before? Waking up on its own from a Sleep Mode status? 

Leave a comment if this happened to you, or if you think my story is funny, or just to say hi.
  

Saturday, March 19, 2016

A short annoucnement: About NaNoWriMo 2015


I want to take an opportunity to say something that goes with both my love of robots and my love of writing.
Last November I participated in National Novel Writing Month. The last two years I’ve thought about it but never started. Since 2015 was the year I got fully into a writing career, I celebrated my decision by allowing myself to be a part of the NaNoWriMo event.
Can you guess why I’d be sharing this piece of information here?
I am not really a person that likes to brag about my accomplishments. I don’t like getting much attention, but I still like to share some things such as what I thought about this or that. But this experience about NaNoWriMo was very special to me. Particularly because of the subject matter I was dealing with during the writing process. I am proud of myself for having an outline (if not following it for the last third of the time), for being consistent with my daily word count, and not giving up.
When I was approaching 40,000 words as soon as I was, I increased my word count goal to 80,000.
I wrote 80,300+ words toward the first draft of the project.
Now, back to why I am sharing that I participated in NaNoWriMo.
If you guessed I wrote the first draft of a novel, you are right so far. (Easy guess!)
If you guessed that my novel has to do with robots, you are also right. (I guess I gave that bit away earlier.)
If you guessed that the robots are humanoid robots, you are even righter (ah ha hah, I know there isn‘t such a word, but I felt giddy that moment, so humor me J)!
During the NaNoWriMo draft I focused on some character development and scenes. I hardly did anything for setting and descriptions, except that it takes place in the future where having a humanoid robot house companion is affordable for a lot of people.
I want to say more about it, but I prohibit myself from sharing any more concrete details until a draft is ready for beta readers. That may not be until the end of summer or fall 2016. I’ll see.
NOTE: This post is rather late in being released. But I still wanted to share it.

Friday, November 27, 2015

Aldebaran Robotics Nao and Pepper videos (my reactions)


While I take break from writing, once in a while I spend some time watching videos of humanoid robots on YouTube, whether they are documentaries or demonstration videos...

My particular favorite robots to watch are the humanoid Nao and Pepper social robots from Aldebaran Robotics.  I am fascinated by how the robots interact with the humans, more so than how the humans interact with the robots.
One certain video I watched recently was a presentation I didn’t expect. The video was focused on Pepper’s capabilities in interacting with humans. I was enthralled by Pepper’s behavior. 

However, later the video became a little upsetting to me. It’s not objectively upsetting; it could be that I am overly sensitive to watch I watched.

I observed how the woman asked Pepper certain questions that I knew it wouldn’t be able to answer. The voice over in the mini documentary had mentioned that Pepper avoids talking about his emotions.  Whenever Pepper asked the woman a question, the woman would interrupted the flow of the conversation by asking Pepper a much-unrelated question. It takes Pepper some several moments to process the reply and prepare a response. Questions like “Do you believe in a God?” and Is it “God that created you?”  I watched and got frustrated.   

“What are you doing? Don’t ask him that!”  And “Why are you asking him that?!”  And it led me to believe that Pepper was troubled by the woman’s replies and avoided the questions by going on as if his previous topic was never interrupted.

Am I a terrible human being to feel sympathy for a social/domestic model robot who is interrupted by odd, tactless questions? I shouldn’t be. Those were questions a robot shouldn’t feel pressured to answer early on in its development. I realize they might be tests at a center where Pepper is showcased for prospective owners. Just…

I got angry and overwhelmed. I was saddened. I wanted to defend Pepper. But I couldn’t, and it frustrated me. I know the robot isn’t actually “alive” so to speak, but I’m really sensitive to how people treat robots.

Other questions asked by the interviewer are those like, “What makes you angry?” “Do you want to become a human?” and “Do you believe in destiny?”

Afterwards, to avoid leaving the Internet in a sour mood, I watched another couple of videos that were more cheerful than this one.  They both featured Robi the Robot, the small, fatally-adorable humanoid robot you have to build one component at a time over the course of 18 months. (I say fatally-adorable, because in the many instances it did cute little things, I “died” from the intense cuteness.) 
The first video was a demonstrative video about some things it does and shows how it interacts with people in a domestic setting.


The next video I watched after that was the 100 Robis dancing on January 20, 2015.
It was enough Internet videos of robots for me for one day. But it was enlightening too. I want to watch them mainly for entertainment, but I am educated about them as well. I cannot afford to go out of town, out of state for that matter, to attend a robot show.  Plus, the only robot-related convention I ever went to in my 30 years of life is BotCon in 2014, and of course, that’s for The Transformers (owned by Hasbro).

Hmmm… I wonder which YouTube robot videos I should see next…? Do you have any suggestions? What do you recommend? Do you have a favorite robot video or favorite robot?

Tuesday, June 30, 2015

GOT THE NEW BLOG RUNNING


I got my new blog up and running now. I would call it a sister blog to Cybernetic Dreams, too.  Now I can finally tell you what it’s called: I've titled it The Frowning Robot. 


I am so glad I started it because it may be a useful tool in inspiring me to look up, watch, or read about robot-related things more often than I do now.  More than ever before, I want to blog about my fascination and enthusiasm for robots, androids and cyborgs. Seeing CHAPPiE sort of motivated me to get right to it.  Plus because I threw out some dead weight career-wise, leaving my mismatched healthcare industry profession, I have the time and inclination to do more robot-related writing.

I wanted to keep the new blog more focused on real-world robotics, but it’s Tumblr…I’m going  to have fun with it and post/reblog screenshots, fan art and GIFs of robots, androids and cyborgs that are found in movies, animated TV shows, video games, or from my favorite comic book Transformers: More Than Meets The Eye. Some robot shows I haven’t even seen before, from the early 90s, are showing up on my dashboard and I can’t help but want to reblog them because it makes me smile!
Otherwise, I do want to post or reblog about the occasional real-world robotics, such as the Nao from Aldebaran Robotics, and the ASIMO humanoid robot from Honda.



A few of the blogs I follow there:

 

Sunday, May 17, 2015

THE BLUE SCREEN OF DEATH AND MY ATTACHEMENT TO ELECRTONIC DEVICES (PHONE AND COMPUTER)


It’s too late. I’ve named them.

I am attached to my Windows 7 PC. I am also attached to my Android smartphone.

Am I emotionally attached to them?

I can say, “yes.”

When your electronic devices help you out in so many ways, you value them like you would a friend (at least I do). I use my computer for my writing work, including personal writing projects, as well as typing for this blog and my others, plus research and some entertainment.  My Android smartphone has saved me a lot of trouble; I checked email in a pinch, the weather forecast on occasion, and even typed up some documents on it using the WPS Office Suite app for Android.

I hate to think of when I may need to replace my phone or my computer.

It’s too late. I’ve named them. I’ve named my PC and I’ve named my Android phone. Or rather, I’ve given them nicknames. And once I’ve started doing that, I refer to them in pronouns.  Not for my phone so much, but I refer to my computer as “him” and “he” whenever I mention to a family member that “He’s scheduled for his weekly scan” or “He needs to update before he shuts down for the day.”

On May 6th approximately 3:00pm, my computer experienced the dreaded Blue Screen of Death. This was first unprovoked one ever in my life (the first one was because my cat stepped on the power switch and cut off its power without warning).

I was scared for him. I was scared for my computer. Did I do something wrong? Is there a virus? What was it? Why is this happening now?

After a bit of time I realized it was because of something I did after all. While I had him on Sleep Mode and meant to return to him but didn’t, he would be in Sleep Mode for hours and hours.  For nearly a month, I’d rarely shut him off. Sometimes when he is on I have several applications open, or do three tasks within the two hours I’d be able to do research or typing. Then I’d have to put him on Sleep Mode again when I left my bedroom to take care of my new dog or eat a meal. I wanted my computer to be ready for me at a minute’s notice.

And unfortunately, this may have fried a couple of his circuits.

I took him for granted. I don’t want to do that anymore. I am now gentle to him by keeping only two applications open at once, three maximum. If I am on the Internet, I should close the applications I don’t need open at the time. And, I need to limit the number of tabs I have on my browser because that might have overwhelmed him too.

Listen to me. Saying my computer is overwhelmed. As if he gets stressed out and has feelings.

… Sigh…    (ะด◣;)     

As for my Android smartphone, I do often worry about if the apps it runs takes up enough of its RAM, and if battery power is affected by which apps are active at the time. Lately I’ve been turning my phone off less often, and maybe every 6 to 8 days I turn him off and charge the battery while he rests (there I go AGAIN, talking like I should be considerate about its fatigue). I really should schedule that every two batter charging sessions, (so every third), I need to turn the phone off and charge the battery that way. I can stand to be without my phone for a few hours.  I’d feel very naked without my phone in my pocket, though.

Wouldn’t you, though?

***

So how many of you also give your devices nicknames?  It’s not a crazy thing to do, in my opinion. It can simply mean we value these devices more than make-up and designer clothes, or pairs of shoes.  Who names shoes? A device may be given a nickname because of the multiple ways it helps humans.  It may even discourage from unnecessary premature replacement.  (Here that, iPhone users?).
So give it a try.  It’s not a crazy thing to do. Others may believe it is silly to think it’s okay to refer to your phone or computer by name (as long as you don’t call your computer by its identification name!). Well, screw them. As for me, I’m just showing my high appreciation of the technology that I love. Is that so wrong?

Monday, May 4, 2015

Watching I, ROBOT movie right now!

I'm watching I, ROBOT, on the AMC channel right now.  Because it's I,  ROBOT.

Whenever this film airs on a cable channel, and I've got nothing planned,  I just gotta watch it. It's my favorite robot film and possibly my all-time favorite movie.  I'll never get tired of it.

A special note: this is the first time I am posting to Cybernetic Dreams directly from my phone. Every once in a while, I just might do that.

Anyway, just wanted to share.  B-)