Robots and artificial intelligence

The word “robot” was created by Czechoslovakian playwright Karel Capek in 1920 — “robota” being a Czech phrase for boring work — but the first real commercial software was integrated 1954 by Henry Devol.  Five years later, the Boston Institution of Technological innovation established its Synthetic Intellect Lab in a search for automatically simulate human thoughts as well as arms.  Today, spiders set up products better, quicker and often less expensive than guide workers, while more than 8 thousand U.S. air travel flight tickets a year are planned, advised and traveled with the superhuman support of innovative software.  Still, some People in america eye such systems with the negative opinion of author Kurt Vonnegut, whose 1952 tale “Player Piano” cautioned that the devices might keep people without a reason — or a job.