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| wiki:androids [2024/10/25 15:51] – iaart | wiki:androids [2024/10/25 15:51] (current) – iaart |
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| ^ A militarized //Karina// archetype of a [[wiki:novadieta|Novadietan]] [[wiki:ethra-model android|Ethra-model android.]] ^ | ^ A militarized //Karina// archetype of a [[wiki:novadieta|Novadietan]] [[wiki:ethra-model android|Ethra-model android.]] ^ |
| </WRAP> | </WRAP> |
| Androids have become an integral part of society, shaping the landscape of the labor force and human interaction. The two types of androids commonly seen in society constitute the jargon for serviles and lifelikes, respectively, each serving a unique purpose and adhering to a set of regulations that ensure their compliance with the safety and ethical standards as established by national and international agencies. | Androids have become an integral part of society, shaping the landscape of the labor force and human interaction. The two types of androids commonly seen in society constitute the jargon for serviles and lifelikes, respectively, each serving a unique purpose and adhering to a set of regulations that ensure their compliance with the [[wiki:baudelairean_laws|safety and ethical standards]] as established by national and international agencies. |
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| //Serviles// are androids that have been designed to be cost-effective and utilitarian, primarily employed for tasks that do not require complex decision-making or emotional engagement. They serve as a workforce to perform repetitive and physically demanding tasks that were previously handled by humans (and demand a human body plan, unlike previous form of assembly-line robots). The design of these androids is intentionally minimalist and utilitarian, with a clear focus on functionality over aesthetics. This is in effect not only due to the cost-effectiveness of such, but also as a result of legislation across multiple alliances and nations that necessitate clear visual cues for these androids. This includes non-human skin coloration and texture, defined symbology such as the "checker-circle" used in the past for crash test dummies, and inhuman features (or lack thereof) such as a lack of orifices or exposed optical sensors. | //Serviles// are androids that have been designed to be cost-effective and utilitarian, primarily employed for tasks that do not require complex decision-making or emotional engagement. They serve as a workforce to perform repetitive and physically demanding tasks that were previously handled by humans (and demand a human body plan, unlike previous form of assembly-line robots). The design of these androids is intentionally minimalist and utilitarian, with a clear focus on functionality over aesthetics. This is in effect not only due to the cost-effectiveness of such, but also as a result of legislation across multiple alliances and nations that necessitate clear visual cues for these androids. This includes non-human skin coloration and texture, defined symbology such as the "checker-circle" used in the past for crash test dummies, and inhuman features (or lack thereof) such as a lack of orifices or exposed optical sensors. |