Summary preview
{ "title": "The Real Thing: Asimov's Vision of Robots Comes to Life", "sections": [ { "heading": "From Teenage Dreams to Industrial Reality", "content": "Isaac Asimov, starting as a teenager in 1939, envisioned robots as safe, purposeful tools, a stark contrast to the scary or overly emotional machines common in early science fiction. By 1942, he formalized this with the 'Three Laws of Robotics,' and in 1950, his collection I, Robot cemented this vision in the public consciousness. Asimov likely didn't foresee living to see his fictional concepts manifest as a massive industrial reality, yet today, robotics is a booming industry, a testament to his prescient ideas." }, { "heading": "Why Robots Make Sense (and Always Should Have)", "content": "Asimov argued that robots are essential for industry, capable of performing simple, repetitive,
