Member Reviews
This was informative! But it felt more like sci-fi dreaming than a realistic view of our future with robots. It's hard (maybe impossible) to separate out technology with people like Jeff Bezos and modern-day oil barons, but it still feels insidious.
THE HEART AND THE CHIP by Daniela Rus and Gregory Mone is a generally optimistic non-fiction work that is subtitled "Our Bright Future with Robots." Author credentials are impressive and contribute to making this a relevant, easy to read text: Rus is actively involved in the robotics field as director of MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory and Mone has co-authored several other texts with scientists like Susan Cain, Bill Nye and Neil deGrasse Tyson. Rus and Mone have divided their new text into three parts: Dreams, Reality, and Responsibility. Focusing on robotics, artificial intelligence (AI), and machine learning, they are adept at providing useful definitions ("a robot is a machine capable of following and repeating these three steps: (1) Sense (2) Think (3) Act") and distinctions: "machine learning and artificial intelligence are often confused, as the latter has become a business and marketing buzzword, but you can think of machine learning as pattern recognition systems that work in service of AI, to assist with higher-level decision-making and reasoning."
It was also very exciting to read about their positive spin on current (e.g., using scans in medical diagnoses with significantly reduced error rates when humans and robots work together) and future applications (e.g., developing exoskeletons to improve the mobility for older people), including numerous suggestions (a wish list, really) for inventions capable of meeting needs like: smarter, more sensitive hands; softer, safer robots; more agile robots (and perhaps ones that are better at anticipating human actions, especially when driving); ways to build robots faster; incorporating better artificial muscles and more powerful batteries, plus better sensors and faster brains; and mechanisms for communicating more naturally with robots. Yet another section outlines eleven attributes for future robotics systems, addressing questions of regulation and ethics at a high level. Rus and Mone acknowledge that there is vast potential for malicious hackers and see the need for cybersecurity as a reason that could "spur tremendous job creation." Roughly five percent of the text is notes for reference by readers and researchers.
This is not a book I would typically read, but found the title intriguing. I was drawn into it with the authors easy, relatable way of describing the past, present, and future of robotics. I felt like I gained a better understanding of this field of technology having read this.
So far, this is my favorite book in 2024.
Romanian roboticist Daniela Rus joins forces with expert writer Gregory Mone to make a engrossing book about future robots.
She defines robots loosely: self-driving cars and the daVinci surgical robot (which is teleoperated) are robots.
As a result, the book has a wide scope.
She's a techno-optimist who believes robots will co-exist and complement humans.
Yes, jobs will be destroyed just like cars and computers destroyed industries and jobs.
However, new jobs will crop up.
What she emphasizes is that the heart must work with the computer chip.
It's a perfect book for anyone who wonders where robots are and where they're going.