Seems like most #scifi has #robots, #androids , etc, always either portrayed as oppressed or oppressors. Do y'all have any favorites (ideally film or tv, but also up for book or short story recs) that portray them and humans as equals that regularly interact and get along just fine?
I had to clean our Deke's cock from all the cum that had built up in the shaft. I was using cheap, off-brand cum and it didn't work well. Now I'm having it clean out its own shaft and piss the cleaner out so I can get full pressure ejaculation again
A couple of days old, if you missed it. Guess he must have been living under a rock to miss all the spying that's been going on on iPhones and #Androids. Maybe he's immune. #cybersecurity
I enjoy everything retro and psychology. Huge Linux fangirl. Find immutable distros very exciting. Very much into minimalism and simplicity. I also really enjoy environmental storytelling, besides the more standard type of stories.
Favorite books: Alien, Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, 1984, No Longer Human
Favorite games: MGS series, Alien Isolation, Souls-like games, CRPG games, Spec Ops: The Line
Favorite movies: Blade Runner, Alien, Drive
Learning more python currently and just experiencing new things.
..."#android" can mean either one of these,[3]
while a cyborg ("cybernetic organism" or "bionic man") would be a creature that is a combination of organic and mechanical parts...
The term made an impact into English pulp science fiction starting from Jack #Williamson's #TheCometeers (1936) and the distinction between mechanical #robots and fleshy #androids was popularized by Edmond #Hamilton's [very popular]..."
There is no argument in that at all.
"#Descriptive rules," so to speak.
I'm just saying that in particular, in the 2nd half of the 20th century, there were quite a few #organic#androids in #SciFi, as this informative @wikipedia entry states:
"...androids being made to look like humans on the outside but with #robot-like internal mechanics. In other stories, authors have used the word "#android" to..."
"...the clearest example of this is John #Brunner's 1968 novel Into the Slave #Nebula, where the blue-skinned #android slaves are explicitly shown to be 👉fully human👈.[35]..." might be another example.
I haven't read this book, but it review on #Goodreads sounds intriguing: "It was carnival time..."
"...on Earth. Prosperity was at its peak; science had triumphed over environment; all human needs were taken care of by computers, #robots and #androids. There was nothing left for humans to do but enjoy, themselves . . . to seek pleasure where they found it, without inhibitions and without thinking of the price."
I'm also really interested in immutable systems! They are really cool and interesting to me. Currently I'm using #VanillaOS.
I also like media with environmental storytelling a lot (where you have to figure things out yourself, put the puzzle pieces together.) And I really like CRPG and souls-like games.
I'm kinda new to this social platform and really awkward and shy, sorry for that. I'm not sure if I'm gonna post here a lot. I'm not used to being social.