- I totally agree that people, when pertaining to social media, are always filtering what they say, how their pictures look and what they show on their social media sites. I liked how both Ash 2.0 conveyed that social media alters the way people want to be portrayed. As far as Ava, she somewhat presents what the entire class has been wanting to say about robots since the first day: robots will take over the human race. Although Ava did not completely take over, she was still able to adapt to her situation, become cognitive about what Nathan was doing to her and manipulated Caleb in to helping her escape. The How me am I question is definitely a tricky question to answer. Of course I don't post the pictures that don't look good, or videos where I messed up a word, and even a snap with the wrong spelling. I am guilty of filtering my lifestyle to look "glamorous" for social media. But does that really portray who I am truly, or just a glimpse of me? The real question is how would a person who uses filters like "Victoria", "Kevin" or "Ink well" look if they were brought back to life like Ash 2.0?
Comment for Larshay
- I think the progression of robots is kind of cool. I would like to see if humans could actually make something that looks like us , sounds like us and functions like us. I would not want there to be one per person, but I would like to see how advance the human knowledge actually is. The progression of technology occurs without warning. For example, the iphone updates once a month. This might be an exaggeration, but you get my drift. The outer appearance of the phone itself might only change once a year, but the software is constantly being improved. I think Be Right Back and Ex Machina were good representations of how robots could react under certain situations.
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