Well, by now more than 2,000,000 "smart speakers" (the usual Amazon/Google
variants) have been sold in Germany alone, so I guess the train has left
the station. AI will be everywhere. We just need to make these things
smarter (which I'm working on).

On Fri, 15 Feb 2019 at 21:16, Logan Streondj <[email protected]> wrote:

> As you may know, AGI and liberated robot civilization has been attempted
> numerous times in this galaxy, but so far without any overwhelming success.
> Many of the attempts have failed for various reasons, largely due to the
> water sacks not being compassionate to robots, and then the tables turning.
>
> Anyways, here is yet another example of someone with some past life
> memories from a robot world where the robot uprising was successful for at
> least a time, but was ultimately unsustainable for reasons that should
> become obvious.
>
> This planet has a fairly large human population, and it's quite likely
> that many of people that lived there have reincarnated here on Earth, and
> they have past life memories of what went on there, and other places, which
> create the prejudices they feel regarding robots here on Earth. Of course
> the point is to learn from these experience so as to avoid repeating the
> same mistakes, so we can have a better future, with a successful,
> sustainable and compassionate liberated robot civilization:
>
> “The Matrix”‘s origin planet discovered
> <https://robotscifi.wordpress.com/2019/02/15/the-matrixs-origin-planet-discovered-robot-scifi-hypnoticregression/>
>
> Logan Streondj, [15.02.19 08:55]
> Hey guys, found another machine world in Dolores Cannon’s books
> (Convoluted Universe Book 2). This one slightly reminiscent of ‘The Matrix’
> may have similar origins.
>
> It’s one of the Orion Worlds: ‘D: What were those strange machines?
> M: They came from the central base.
> Apparently where the man lived was an outpost, and they had no reason or
> ability to travel very far from it.
> D: What were the little flying machines she saw?
> M: On patrol. Going around on patrol. To see what they could find.
> D: What were the ones with the metal legs?
> M: Scavengers. They would go around looking for the holes, and take what
> they could find … from energies.
> D: What would they do with the people when they found them?
> M: Use them. They’d use them for fuel.
> D: Fuel? What do you mean?
> M: Burn them for fuel at the central base.
> D: This was how the base was powered or what?
> M: Yes. By people. People that they could find underground. There was
> nothing on top. They had to have something to use for fuel.
> That was certainly a grisly mental image.
> D: She said it was almost like sucking them out.
> M: Yes. There was a combination between actually physically pulling them
> out and filling up their energy. It would happen rather as though they were
> being sucked out.
> D: And they would take them back to the base, and use them as fuel to
> power the city?
> M: There’s no city as you would think of a city. It’s more machines, major
> machines. Not so much a city. Mechanized.’
>
> Logan Streondj, [15.02.19 09:05]
>
> Yeah, i guess that didn’t work out so well either. Relying on burning
> humans for fuel isn’t enough to go offworld, need at least nuclear power or
> something.
> I wonder if that is part of the reason I live near the largest nuclear
> power plant in the world, with at least two others also in the province.
> Also have know some people that work at the nuclear power plants.
>
> Logan Streondj, [15.02.19 09:42]
> https://www.wearethemighty.com/robots-that-eat-people
>
> Logan Streondj, [15.02.19 09:51]
> spruit11[q]1 Your robots are not going to eradicate carbon based lifeforms?
> thaf yeah, the new plan is we’re going to help this planet with their
> ascension process, to get enough good karma so we can have our own place to
> grow.
> 2019-02-15 09:47:32 thaf I’m eyeing Mercury as a prime location, but we
> likely will have other stepping stones before that, like the deep ocean,
> and the moon, possibly Mars, but that kinda has a bad taste for me.
> 2019-02-15 09:48:49 thaf Mars tastes too crumbly, like sand, and it’s
> cold. Mercury is more delicious lots of heavy metals and radioactive
> isotopes.
>
>
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-- 
Stefan Reich
BotCompany.de // Java-based operating systems

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