will be fully featured in at least one high gross horror movie within the next few years
* I say waiter, there’s a bug in my soup.
* *That’s not a bug, that’s a feature.*
I did wonder when this sort of thing would start coming in. The optimistic side of me hopes that it won’t entire replace kitchen staff, just reduce the absurd workload they have to deal with.
There’s something oddly but profoundly sad about the sight of this.
The royal family already have those…oh no theirs are called “slaves”.
“Well, Grommet, lad, good thing we had this bit of cheese put by. Cracker?”
I think machine cooked food in the home will take off in the future but this is going to be looked back on and laughed at.
Why try to emulate the way a human would cook? Makes much more sense to design the kitchen equipment itself to be automatic, e.g. spinning discs inside a pot to stir instead of a robotic arm with a spoon.
After all, the dishwasher doesn’t consist of an arm, a bottle of washing up liquid and a sink.
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>the Moley Robotic Kitchen
will be fully featured in at least one high gross horror movie within the next few years
* I say waiter, there’s a bug in my soup.
* *That’s not a bug, that’s a feature.*
I did wonder when this sort of thing would start coming in. The optimistic side of me hopes that it won’t entire replace kitchen staff, just reduce the absurd workload they have to deal with.
There’s something oddly but profoundly sad about the sight of this.
The royal family already have those…oh no theirs are called “slaves”.
“Well, Grommet, lad, good thing we had this bit of cheese put by. Cracker?”
I think machine cooked food in the home will take off in the future but this is going to be looked back on and laughed at.
Why try to emulate the way a human would cook? Makes much more sense to design the kitchen equipment itself to be automatic, e.g. spinning discs inside a pot to stir instead of a robotic arm with a spoon.
After all, the dishwasher doesn’t consist of an arm, a bottle of washing up liquid and a sink.