Ed, the Unit 3 SALV, is undergoing the SALV&H Project where Ed is tested to see if it is fit to safeguard humans from any kind of danger, especially the deadly meteorites. In this project, Ed must keep Milo completely safe while defeating the ten dummy robots that are specifically programmed to target Milo. The test is successful, and Ed is now officially Milo’s SALV robot.
+Author’s Comment+
Hi everyone! Hopefully, your weekend was fun and restful. I’ve got used to drawing these weekly illustrations, and now it’s one of my favorite things to do throughout the week. Stay safe everybody!
Unit 3 SALV, also known as Ed, and Milo are hanging out together in Doctor’s room as they start to develop a special bond. Ed and Milo are jokingly discussing how one day they should escape to another planet just in case the earth fails to hold human life. Ed is getting ready for his final test if it has enough empathy to be able to shelter and protect humans.
+Author’s Comment+
Hi all! Hope everyone is doing well and is hopefully stress-free now that the elections are over. Have a great rest of the week 🙂
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Unit 3 SALV also known as Ed meets with Milo, a child who Unit 3 is assigned to protect whenever a meteorite strikes in the bleak and arctic climate of the Earth. Milo is the younger brother of Doctor who contributed to the production of SALV, specifically Ed.
+Author’s Comment+
Hi all, hope everyone’s doing well and had fun celebrating Halloween. Christmas getting closer…but wait! There’s Thanksgiving.
For those who are curious about how SALV is meant to stop the extinction of humanity: SALV protects people in various ways, such as sheltering people when the Earth’s weather conditions become too harsh or when an unexpected meteor hits earth.
The period of mass production of robots known as ‘SALV’ has begun in the year 2067 to protect humanity’s extinction from deadly meteorites that continue to destroy the earth, making it inhabitable for life. The unfinished UNIT-03 is the first model that will soon be tested to see if it is suitable to connect with humans.
+Author’s Comment+
Hi all, welcome to the first blog post of my art collection. Drawing robots and science fiction related settings have always been an interest of mine, so this is a very exciting opportunity for me. A new illustration will be published each week that follow the plot from the previous week’s post, indicated by a short description below the image. These images, however, can also be freely interpreted by the readers as well, so let your imaginations flow along!
Recently I read the book The Clockwork Dynasty by Daniel Wilson, which follows a girl named June, a post-grad specialist of ancient machinery, and Peter, the automaton who sweeps her up in his quest to stop another automaton who is bent on consuming all the anima, the spirit that keeps the automatons alive.
Though the book was mediocre, it had some very interesting thematic content, pondering over how we discover our purposes in life and what our life is worth if we don’t know how to pursue that purpose. However, there was a much subtler theme which I found more interesting: are robots who think and act exactly like humans, just as good as humans–and if so, are they better?
If automatons, robots, artificial intelligence, whatever name we give them, gain the same footing as humans in terms of perception, cognition, and whatever else that would make them more “human,” would that make our two species interchangeable? If they can’t feel physical pain, does that make them better than us? What about emotional responses–if they can feel love and loss, does that make them our equals? If they can’t, are they our inferiors or superiors? Even some humans are incapable of feeling physical pain or experiencing emotions, so are these categories absolutely necessary when comparing humans and artificial intelligence? How do we place a value on things that make us human?
How do we decide what makes us human? When we can artificially craft those characteristics, does that make crafted being a human? If we can make working robotic ears, limbs, brains, where is the distinction between those and fully organic bodies? Can a being be 50% human, 50% robot? 25-75%? 1-99%? Is the 1-99% being still deserving of the dignity and respect we should give to all humans? Or is it a robot about which we need not feel remorse when we throw it out because its iOS is outdated?Â
With our rapidly improving technology, we are racing closer toward perfecting AI each day. As our robots become more like us and we them, I wish I could say I had these answers. I wish I could say The Clockwork Dynasty helped me come up with a better solution. All I can do now is ask you these questions, spark discussion, and hope that we become more conscious of our humanity and how we value it as it comes time to be challenged.
Last night, I saw the UMS show “Nufonia Must Fall” by DJ Kid Koala. What initially began as a wordless graphic novel has now turned into a full-on performance, complete with puppets, live music, sound effects, and even a pre-show Bingo game.
The plotline changes significantly between the text and the filmic version (especially the ending), but the basics stay the same: a plain and “old-school” robot repeatedly is bested at his work at the deli by the new and improved, faster model called Hexabot who can make ten times the amount of sandwiches that our protagonist (let’s call him Plainbot) can. Plainbot meets a humanoid woman, Malorie, who is also lonely and works all the time with little satisfaction. After getting fired, Plainbot enters a contest, hoping to write “the best love song of all time.” He’s writing them for Malorie. But SPOILER! He’s super bad at writing songs, to the point of making people throw up upon hearing them, as seen in the novel. But Malorie likes Plainbot for how he is, and they go on dates together (dinner, ice skating, movies, all the old fashioned tricks).
The comic ultimately comes down to being a feel-good love story, as creator Kid Koala and director KK Barrett explain in this video.
In minute 2:23 of this video, KK Barrett remarks on something I’d like to stop and think about. He says that because of the silent novel, silent film, and puppet characters, “You don’t project onto them, but right into them.” This is what Scott McCloud would call “masking” : the use of simplistic, archetypal characters with familiar and minimal details that allows for a stronger emotional connection and easier identification (Wikipedia’s definition).
By using little details, no color and no dialogue, the characters themselves are masks for the “everyman,” save for Malorie’s gender and Plainbot’s android nature. The reader supplies the psychology, the emotion, and the connections between characters and frames. We can even create our own dialogue and background sounds. We are active participants in the creation of the story.
But, then again, I can’t say that I’ve ever been able to empathize with a robot before.
And if you actually slow down and think about the story itself, it’s kind of insane! A girl is basically falling in love with a robot and vice versa. If this happened in real life, serious exams on the woman’s mental stability would take place. The robot’s chip would be taken out to be analyzed, and maybe his body would be sacrificed as “research” at the next DARPA competition.
So why, at the Power Center, were the folks around me “awwing” when Malorie and Plainbot held hands for the first time, when they know a human-robot relationship is obviously weird and a little wrong? Why do we gasp “Oh no!” when Plainbot discovers that Malorie created the Hexabot? Why did I myself feel a flutter in my heart when Plainbot writes on his mixed tape “Lovesong for Malorie <3”? He’s JUST A ROBOT!
The funny thing is that I never questioned the relationship of Malorie and Plainbot while I read the graphic novel, alone in the quiet of my apartment. To me, they were both just characters in a story. Even though Malorie worked in an office cubicle, her lack of a nose and mouth and eye irises blurred the lines between being human and robot. This artistic choice within the novel made it easier to see them as simple, flat, masking characters. It was only until I was sitting amidst the hundreds of other viewers, hearing their responses that I began to be aware of the relationship on the screen in front of me. Suddenly, I saw 3-D puppets who could move their arms up and down, just as I do. Malorie had an expression and was obviously human. There was motion, there was life on that screen.
Photo Credits: AJ Korkidakis
We always are engaging with stories and characters differently depending on the medium it’s shown to us. But in “Nufonia Must Fall,” it was the emotion and “realism” of the piece itself that was altered from paper to film.