Dal Giappone, il primo robot cantante. Ecco il video

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Ecco il video del primo robot che parla e canta proprio come un uomo, progettato e realizzato dal professor Hideyuki Sawada della Kagawa University, in Giappone. Ovviamente si tratta soltanto di un prototipo e, quindi, necessità ancora di molte modifiche per migliorare la qualità e la modulazione della voce.

Ma, intanto, è il primo robot costruito dall’uomo capace di riprodurre dei suoni quanto più simili a quelli della voce umana e, anche se non ha ancora un’eccellente intonazione, nel video riesce perfino a canticchiare la canzone giapponese “Kagome Kagome”.

Nel video di Youtube che vi proponiamo è possibile ascoltare sia l’esibizione del robot, che la canzone originale per poter sentire la differenza, ma anche per capire le potenzialità di questo prototipo.

Gio 14/07/2011 da Fabrizio Capecelatro in

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Zhino 2 maggio 2012 08:58
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a word to her all evening long (yes, I unndrstaed that this can be a symptom of shy attraction, but even so, he DIDN’T speak up), therefore she knew very little about him.And that’s the main problem with guys these days. They don’t WANT to KNOW more, or to spend their time and energy finding out what women want, because they feel that this knowledge would ruin the magic for them. Their passion is all and enough, to them. It even trumps their (and the woman’s) need for information. Guys hold immature views of what sex is. Sure, they can do it, but it’s the on-the-way-to-it part that they all have difficulty with (yeahmetoo).Men all seem to assume that a woman will have no problem with the idea of swooning into the arms of an utter stranger. Remember, the MAN is the one with the magic in his head first. The woman only finds out about that (and it’s nearly always a huge surprise) when he finally pulls out his cork.Picture the moment, guys. Two friendly people alone together in an elevator. The guy suddenly spills his guts, and the woman’s brain goes (BOIIIINNG!) Oh no, not THIS! What do I do now? as her mind starts to try to begin to wrap itself around the idea of a sexual relationship with this guy a guy she’s likely never thought of in that way before. He’s barreling along toward what he thinks will be the imminent consummation of his desires, and she’s trying to tread water in this new ocean she’s been unceremoniously dumped into. He’s heading toward deep water, and she’s trying to find the beach. And all the time, of course, she’s still alone in the elevator with him, he having just proved to her that he’s unpredictable at the least, and likely enough getting more and more passionate in his proposals.I don’t have the answer to this mismatch, but remember: HE’S (almost) always the one who wants it first, but the woman MUST be the one who decides whether an alliance will work or not based typically on so many factors that the man would likely be shocked to find out the depth of thought she gives the idea in those few minutes, while he’s emotionally writhing on his spit.I would simply suggest giving up the elevator moment approach completely it’s far too much of a surprise, for a woman to make an informed decision (which she NEEDS to make), and when she therefore turns you down, she’ll likely never reconsider you again (women rarely do; after all, there’s a line a mile long, and man in each place in it, every one of them similar to the next).And when she does turn him down, quite likely on perfectly sensible grounds, it destroys him because he wasn’t using sense at all, so he can’t unndrstaed it in that way. He put his whole heart and soul into his push, and when she rejects him, it’s the end of the world. I’d be surprised if some rapes don’t get their impetus in that moment of utter rejection, as the man rebels (as men are supposed to do, remember?) against the outcome.

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