Comic Discussion > QUESTIONABLE CONTENT
Humans using Chassies - Shower thought
katsmeat:
The chassis that exist in the QC verse seem incredible pieces of kit, and comparatively cheap given what they can do.
An easy application would be telepresence - using a VR-rig to hook up to a chassis that's not equipped with an AI drive. This would be incredibly useful. For example, an engineer needs to inspect something at an oil site somewhere in the Canadian Arctic. Now they could spend 18 hours traveling there and another 18 traveling back. Or they could plug into an on-site chassis for half an hour, before going to lunch. We've seen an AI get trapped in a cereal box. How useful would a chassis like her's be for working in small, confined spaces?
Of course Clinton would be all over this kind of technology. Though I would guess staying at home and using a chassis for everyday social interaction would be generally viewed a very weird thing , done by only a handful of oddball individuals (as seen in the comic book/movie ''Surrogates'')/. Possibly some AIs would be quite hostile to that, viewing it as something akin to blackface.
It's such an obvious application I can't see it not happening. If we've not seen it, it's because it's not that common (or Jeph hasn't thought of it)
Neko_Ali:
Most disabled people wouldn't need a remote VR surrogate with the tech that is available. Witness Clinton and his cybernetic replacement hand. For those that don't have missing limbs and are unwilling to go through amputation and replacement they could easily have powered frames that allow them to move about freely. The only people who would need to remotely operate an android body to interact with others would be those with some sort of condition that would keep them isolated or under constant medical care or such. I don't think a large portion of the population would live as eternal shut ins and only interact through a robot surrogate. At best they would be considered eccentric. Trust issues would be a thing, all it would take would be a single case of someone hacking a surrogate's controls and going on some criminal rampage, or even just acting horrible to people to seriously get people to question the usefulness and validity of dealing with someone via Surrogate.
As far as people operating a robot chassis as a drone puppet for work.. Well people do that already. There's no reason to think the practice wouldn't continue.
Is it cold in here?:
Your concept sounds quite close to the PICAs in David Weber's Safehold series.
DSL:
The real-world parallel would be drone aircraft.
BenRG:
In The War of the Worlds, H G Wells' narrator speculated that the squid-like Martians were actually a distant evolutionary descendent of a humanoid species. He suggested that the growth of technology and the ability of technology to replace biological functions with far more efficient synthetic augmentation would trigger an evolutionary drift towards optimisation of the form to only those aspects of the biology that were critically needed. This was, in the Martians' case, the brain, the senses and the hands (which evolved into the clustered tentacles).
The Martians, Wells put it "... were heads, just heads".
What is the relevance to this thread? Wells went on to speculate about a form of life that would 'put on bodies' according to need, these bodies being distant conceptual descendants of something as simple as the bicycle or walking stick. This could be applied to the idea of this topic. Imagine a human reduced to its most indivisible component - the brain and possibly the spinal cord, that could be transferred between various specialised chassis depending on need and the being's wishes.
This sort of extreme transhumanism is not unheard of in sci-fi as others have pointed out. One example of this is Anne McCaffery's brainships where you have a class of starship whose CPUs are volunteer quadriplegics whose brains are disconnected from their largely-destroyed bodies and connected into a 'shell', an interface unit that is then plugged into any number of chassis ranging from small courier-class spacecraft to Citadel-sized space colonies. Interestingly, one of the 'pod people', Hyptia Cade, had an android body created that she could control using her ship's drone control subsystem. This enabled her to experience life outside of a hermetically sealed life support container for the first time in over a decade and even start a relationship with her pilot. Of course, the starship of which she was the organic CPU was another body that she used when required, its tractor beams, sensors, radio and engines replacing her hands, eyes, ears and legs.
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