INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
The robotic monk is facing a wall, charging up when I first approach the Longquan Temple booth at TechCrunch event in Hangzhou, China
There probably a good metaphor here for meditation or mindfulness, but as a terrible meditator who semi-regularly runs into objects while
his mind is somewhere else entirely, I&m struggling to find the right one.
The whole spectacle is an unusual one, alongside row after row of
the Chinese companies that dot Startup Alley
Robe-wearing monks meander around, in front of cartoon drawings and figures of Xian&er, the &Worthy Stupid Robot Monk.& He a two-foot-high
robot who something akin to a Buddhist version of Softbank Pepper
He an adorable little ‘bot with little in the way of articulation, who sports a small tablet atop his belly.
This particular model is one
of three version of the robot that currently exist in the world, designed to greet young visitors at Longquan Temple in Beijing
Children can interact with the robot through the touchscreen or a voice remote, asking it one 100+ questions
Rather than utilizing some bit of consumer AI like Alexa or Siri, however, the robot is trained to offer up answers provided by the temple
masters.
The robotic version of Xian&er, who is also the subject of books and cartoons, was created in 2015 with help from a number of key
Chinese tech firms, including Tencent andiFlytek
He designed to serve as an ambassador, helping to help educate, children about the ways of Longquan and help bring the temple into the 21st