Bangladeshi developers can build modern robots
“All of our software is placed on open platforms and Bangladeshi developers can use those resources if they want to build robots,” said David Hanson, founder and chief executive officer of Hanson Robotics.
The Hong Kong-based robotics company, which also works on artificial intelligence, developed Sophia one and a half years ago.
Capable of chatting, smiling and even telling jokes as per media reports, the humanoid robot garnered attention around the world recently. It is based on state-of-the-art innovations in artificial intelligence, visual data processing and facial recognition.
Saudi Arabia, a conservative Muslim country, even provided citizenship to the robot, which uses voice recognition technology from Alphabet Inc, the parent company of Google, and is designed to get smarter over time.
Sophia's intelligence software was designed by SingularityNET.
Both Sophia and its creator attended a session titled “Tech-Talk with Sophia” and answered questions from a packed audience at Bangabandhu International Conference Centre.
Sophia expects that Bangladeshi developers would be able to manufacture social robots in the near future.
It said, after more robots are developed in the coming years, there would be new dimensions in the job markets while artificial intelligence would also create new opportunities.
“Some traditional jobs will vanish over time and new opportunities will be created,” Sophia responded to a question from Zunaid Ahmed Palak, state minister for ICT.
Young people visit a stall at the four-day exposition that began at Bangabandhu International Conference Centre yesterday. Photo: Star
The robot came wearing a yellow Jamdani kameez and it described the clothing as the most attractive one. “This is Jamdani and I know this is a patent of Bangladesh,” said the robot.
Sophia said Bangladesh was very well known for readymade garments and now it was moving towards digitisation.
The programme was to last for two hours but it was closed in half an hour as the organisers were finding it hard to manage the crowd. Around 2,000 visitors were scheduled to attend but over 5,000 arrived. There was also a lot of commotion.
Hanson, who took three and a half years to build Sophia, said robots would soon be walking around with people..