| on 18-01-2007 20:25 |
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Seokyong Lee for The New York Times
Jupiter, a robot built by a South Korean company for domestic use.
This year, networked robots
that, say, relay messages to parents, teach children English and sing
and dance for them when they are bored, are scheduled to enter mass
production. Outside the home, they are expected to guide customers at
post offices or patrol public areas, searching for intruders and
transmitting images to monitoring centers.
If all goes according
to plan, robots will be in every South Korean household between 2015
and 2020. That is the prediction, at least, of the Ministry of
Information and Communication, which has grouped more than 30
companies, as well as 1,000 scientists from universities and research
institutes, under its wing. Some want to move even faster.
"My
personal goal is to put a robot in every home by 2010," said Oh Sang
Rok, manager of the ministry's intelligent service robot project.
Reeling
from the Asian financial crisis of 1997, South Korea decided that
becoming a high-tech nation was the only way to secure its future.
|
The
government deregulated the telecommunications and Internet service
industries and made investments as companies laid out cables in cities
and into the countryside. The government offered information technology
courses to homemakers, subsidized computers for low-income families and
made the country the first in the world to have high-speed Internet in
every primary, junior and high school. |
As with robots and most
other specific technologies, the government has had a strong hand in
guiding businesses and research centers. Failures have occurred — most
spectacularly in biotechnology, when the cloning scientist, Dr. Hwang Woo Suk, was exposed as a fraud — but the successes are many.
South
Koreans use futuristic technologies that are years away in the United
States; companies like Microsoft and Motorola test products here before
introducing them in the United States.
Since January, Koreans
have been able to watch television broadcasts on cellphones, free,
thanks to government-subsidized technology. In April, South Korea will
introduce the first nationwide superfast wireless Internet service,
called WiBro, eventually making it possible for Koreans to remain
online on the go — at 10 megabits per second, faster than most
conventional broadband connections.
South Korea, perhaps more
than any other country, is transforming itself through technology.
About 17 million of the 48 million South Koreans belong to Cyworld, a
Web-based service that is a sort of parallel universe where everyone is
interconnected through home pages. The interconnectivity has changed
the way and speed with which opinions are formed, about everything from
fashion to politics, technology and social science experts said.
Chang
Duk Jin, a sociologist at Seoul National University who has studied the
effects of technology on society, said it had profoundly influenced
domestic politics. Two years ago, after the opposition-led National
Assembly impeached President Roh Moo Hyun,
a consensus began forming on the Internet that the move was politically
motivated — two hours after the vote took place, Mr. Chang said.
"That
quickly led to mass demonstrations," he said. "That kind of thing had
never happened in Korea before. Everyone is connected to everyone else,
so issues spread very fast and kind of unpredictably."
There has
been at least one unpredictable side effect: fierce witch hunts. In a
case that caused national soul-searching, a woman riding the subway
with her dog last year refused to clean up after it defecated in the
car. One angry passenger photographed her with a camera-equipped
cellphone and later posted the photos. Soon, all of wired South Korea
seemed to be on the hunt for "Dog Poop Girl." Several misidentified
women were verbally attacked, and finally the woman herself was
identified on the Internet and humiliated as the topic of countless
online discussions.
Such problems have led the government to
consider curbing anonymity on the Internet, a proposal that has drawn
strong opposition here. In another response, in February, the
government released a 256-page "IT Ethics" textbook for junior and high
school students. Teachers are expected to spend 30 hours instructing
from the textbook, whose chapters include "Healthy Mobile Phone
Culture," and "Protecting Personal Privacy."
"Education has lagged behind the technology," said Park Jung Ho, a professor of computer science at Sunmoon University here.
The
government, though, is pushing ahead relentlessly. It has drawn a
precise timetable on specific technologies to develop or invent, one of
them robotics.
Mr. Oh of the Communication Ministry said South
Korea lagged behind American, Japanese and European competitors in
robotics but was aiming to be No. 3 by 2013. While other countries have
focused on developing military, industrial or humanoid robots, he said,
South Korea decided three years ago to develop service robots that,
instead of operating independently, derive their intelligence from
being part of a network.
Late last year, three types of robots
were distributed to 64 randomly selected households, as well as two
post offices, with mixed results, Mr. Oh said. In October, a second
phase in the testing will put robots in 650 households and 20 public
places.
By 2007, the networked robots are expected to be on the
market. Yujin Robot started developing prototypes in 2004 and has sold
100, mostly to universities and research institutes, said Shin Kyung
Chul, the company's president. It is the leader in making small, $500
robots that move around the house using sensors, vacuuming or sweeping.
They have become popular gifts for newlyweds.
One of the
networked robots — the two-foot-tall Jupiter with a big monitor in its
chest, a round rotating head with big eyes that change shape to emulate
emotions — can recognize faces and voices. Jupiter recited a nursery
rhyme and danced, as Mr. Shin explained his vision of a robot-centered
"intelligent society."
Kim Mun Sang, director of the Center for
Intelligent Robotics, which groups about 500 scientists in a project by
government and industry, said networked robots needed a "killer app"
before they could become fully integrated into the wired society. He
said the conditions were not ripe yet and would not be for another "5
to 10 years."
"But eventually robots could change how we live in
a way we can't predict right now," Mr. Kim said. "It's like the PC. No
one ever thought the PC and the Internet would transform our society
the way they have."
Last update: 18-01-2007 20:27
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