Saturday, August 31, 2019

Bless U-2 Robot Priest


Bless U-2 is a Robot Priest that will forgive your sins. Read about it here in Popular Mechanics.  According to the author, Avery Thompson, "This holy robot questions the future of technology and the church!"


Friday, August 16, 2019

Kyoto Temple Has Robot Priest

The robot is based on the Buddhist deity of mercy.  The robot leads services at the Kodaiji temple in Kyoto.
“This robot will never die; it will just keep updating itself and evolving,” said priest Tensho Goto.
The robot was developed between the Zen temple and robotics professor Hiroshi Ishiguro at Osaka University.
Hat tip to Chief Robot - See here.

Thursday, August 15, 2019

Oodles of Robots Bowl

Oodles of Robots Bowl - A Kickstarter project to make big, fine-quality porcelain bowls festooned with oodles of robots. Click here.

Monday, August 5, 2019

Project Pope

One of my college classmates posted the following on Facebook - "Going through some of my old science fiction books, I found this. Wondering if you had ever read it?"



Amazon says:
Robot believers at the far end of the galaxy endeavor to create a true religion, but their efforts could be shattered by a shocking revelation.
Far in the future, on the remote planet End of Nothing, sentient robots are engaged in a remarkable enterprise. They call their project Vatican-17: an endeavor to create a truly universal religion presided over by a pope, whose extreme godliness and infallible artificial intelligence are fed by telepathic human Listeners who psychically delve into the mysteries of the universe. But the great and holy mission could be compromised by one shocking revelation that threatens to inspire serious crises of faith among the spiritual, truth-seeking robotic acolytes while tearing them into warring religious factions.  For the Listener Mary is claiming that she has just discovered Heaven.
 There are those among the Clifford D. Simak faithful who consider Project Pope his masterpiece. But whether the crowning literary achievement of a multiple Hugo and Nebula Award–winning science fiction Grand Master or merely another brilliant novel of speculative fiction to stand among his many, Simak’s breathtaking search for God in the machine ingeniously blends science and spirituality in a truly miraculous way that few science fiction writers, if any, have been able to accomplish.
My kind of book! Though the new cover (I got the Kindle version) is not nearly as cool!


Full report to follow here on R.U.S. Thanks, Don!

P.S. - Another added to the list...