State of the Art public robot arms include Boston Dynamics' Stretch[1]. It's not for sale to the public, the price isn't public, it's got 18 suckers on a flat tray and runs on a wheeled base and looks like the size of an armchair. Boston Dynamics' Spot the walking dog robot was launched in 2020 for $75k and was explicitly not safe for use in the home or around children.
Do you genuinely think they will improve to the point of having finger style grippers, dexterity and adaptability to grind coffee, mix drinks and pick towels, and be on sale to the public, safe for use in the home, for $250 (or $2500) by Jan 1st 2030? I would be very surprised.
(Can you get a robot arm today, for any price, to help a quadraplegic open their mail, bring a drink with a straw in it to their mouth, lift them into a sitting position, hold a book in front of them and turn the pages, or ... do anything helpful? I'm not aware of any, but haven't been looking specifically).
Yes you could probably build a robot today which hands you a towel from a pile, reliably and swiftly, or selects the bottles of alcohol and opens them and pours and mixes a drink - in a carefully controlled and lit environment where none of the lids or corks are stuck and the glasses are all a similar shape and size and nobody is allowed to be near it - I don't say it's impossible with today's tech, but it would cost a lot more than $250. A hundred or a hundred thousand times more, while being far far more limited than a human.
Do you genuinely think they will improve to the point of having finger style grippers, dexterity and adaptability to grind coffee, mix drinks and pick towels, and be on sale to the public, safe for use in the home, for $250 (or $2500) by Jan 1st 2030? I would be very surprised.
(Can you get a robot arm today, for any price, to help a quadraplegic open their mail, bring a drink with a straw in it to their mouth, lift them into a sitting position, hold a book in front of them and turn the pages, or ... do anything helpful? I'm not aware of any, but haven't been looking specifically).
Yes you could probably build a robot today which hands you a towel from a pile, reliably and swiftly, or selects the bottles of alcohol and opens them and pours and mixes a drink - in a carefully controlled and lit environment where none of the lids or corks are stuck and the glasses are all a similar shape and size and nobody is allowed to be near it - I don't say it's impossible with today's tech, but it would cost a lot more than $250. A hundred or a hundred thousand times more, while being far far more limited than a human.
[1] https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2022/04/boston-dynamics-stre...