June 13, 2010, 08:18
<Proofreader>'Droid?
I may not be the most technology-savvy person around but I do know what an
android is supposed to be -- a machine that resembles a human being, like the one in
Alien.
So exactly how did the term become attached to a
telephone?
Unless it stands on two legs and talks, it's not an android.
June 13, 2010, 08:41
zmježd Android is the name of an
operating system for mobile devices that
Google developed. If you look carefully at the ads on TV, you'll notice a disclaimer on the bottom of the screen, that
droid is a trademark and is licensed from LucasFilm, Ltd.
EditDroid was an early, non-linear, editing system that George Lucas developed that used Unix workstations and laser disks. A friend of mine moved out West in the '80s to test those systems.
June 13, 2010, 08:53
goofyquote:
Unless it stands on two legs and talks, it's not an android.
Really? What about
these guys?June 13, 2010, 15:03
<Proofreader>Only one of those even comes close to resembling a human.
June 13, 2010, 16:02
goofyquote:
Originally posted by Proofreader:
Only one of those even comes close to resembling a human.
He's a jawa, so he doesn't count. But the other ones are all droids.
June 13, 2010, 16:19
<Proofreader>Sorry. You can call them anything you want but in my opinion they do not qualify using the definition I quoted. Just becasue a copywriter or adman or fantasy writer want to call an article something, that doesn't make it so.
June 13, 2010, 16:53
goofyI think we were talking at cross purposes. An
android resembles a human being. But it seems that a
droid is a more general term and can refer to non-humanoid robots. According to the OED, a droid is "A robot, freq. a humanoid one; an android." So the Star Wars robots are droids, not androids.
quote:
Skutters, the small service droids with three-fingered clawed hands, joined to their motorized bases by triple-jointed necks, whizzed between the various computer terminals. - Red Dwarf