Top 13 Quotes & Sayings by Ken Goldberg

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American educator Ken Goldberg.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Ken Goldberg

Kenneth Yigael Goldberg is an American artist, writer, inventor, and researcher in the field of robotics and automation. He is professor and chair of the industrial engineering and operations research department at the University of California, Berkeley, and holds the William S. Floyd Jr. Distinguished Chair in Engineering at Berkeley, with joint appointments in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS), Art Practice, and the School of Information. Goldberg also holds an appointment in the Department of Radiation Oncology at the University of California, San Francisco.

'Bloom' is basically the idea that all flesh is grass, and that we can look at natural plant growth and organic material as outgrowths of the Earth.
Epistemology has always been affected by technologies like the telescope and the microscope, things that have created a radical shift in how we sense physical reality.
I was interested in the questions that come up when the Internet gives you access not just to JSTOR libraries and to digital information, but also to things that are live and dynamic and organic in some way.
As humans embrace new forms of social media to keep connected with friends and colleagues, our robots are becoming increasingly sociable. — © Ken Goldberg
As humans embrace new forms of social media to keep connected with friends and colleagues, our robots are becoming increasingly sociable.
Our robots are signing up for online learning. After decades of attempts to program robots to perform complex tasks like flying helicopters or surgical suturing, the new approach is based on observing and recording the motions of human experts as they perform these feats.
Artificial creatures date back to the ancient Chinese and Greeks. Renaissance automata were designed primarily to entertain, reflecting the value placed on leisure.
The Web meant that I didn't have to schlep a whole bunch of stuff to a museum and fight with all their constraints and make something that, in the end, only 150 people would actually get out to see. Instead, I could put something together in my lab and make it accessible to the world.
We're fascinated with robots because they are reflections of ourselves.
What was really interesting to me about 'The Telegarden' was this idea of connecting the physical world, the natural world, and the social world through the Internet.
Interferometry, like surfing, is a search for the perfect wave. But physicists don't have to paddle around and wait.
Philosophers say that perfection is unattainable. Lithographers redefine perfection according to SEMI standards.
PowerPoint is the Rodney Dangerfield of software. It gets no respect.
If you got everything you wanted, you wouldn't have everything you need.
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