(anyway, I'm only winding you up, I'm sure they went there)
I'm just playing, too.
the rover and the lander itselves were quite
Lo-Tec.
nothing compared to a robot that is still today bloody
Hi-Tec.
compare a robot with a human being...
a human being can take decisions in unexpected situations.
still in 2007, 40 years after the moon-landing, we are not able to program an AI that is able do so.
a human being is robust.
it can get a physical shock that breaks its legs and chest, and still is able to take decisions, press buttons and pull levers.
a robot after such a shock is nothing more than a bunch of very expensive scrap metal that will never again do anything.
in 1969, a robot would have been a really, really heavy device, heavier than three human beings in scaphanders.
additionally, three human beings are a double-redundand system.
a single robot is not. if it fails, it's all failed.
and, a human being is
cheap.
even with this expensive training much cheaper than such a robot would be.
so, bringing such a robot up there in 1969 would have been a thousand times less possible than bringing human beings up there.
cut out by Ockhams razor.
@Trond
yap, thanks.. I really didn't get the point of his post.
oh... and have a nice day.