Information for "Ridiculously-Human Robots"

Basic information

Display titleRidiculously-Human Robots
Default sort keyRidiculously-Human Robots
Page length (in bytes)119,671
Namespace ID0
Page ID131823
Page content languageen - English
Page content modelwikitext
Indexing by robotsAllowed
Number of redirects to this page2
Counted as a content pageYes
Number of subpages of this page4 (0 redirects; 4 non-redirects)
Page imageBender smoking 3778.png

Page protection

EditAllow all users (infinite)
MoveAllow all users (infinite)
DeleteAllow all users (infinite)
View the protection log for this page.

Edit history

Page creatorm>Import Bot
Date of page creation21:27, 1 November 2013
Latest editorHeneryVII (talk | contribs)
Date of latest edit18:55, 6 October 2023
Total number of edits41
Recent number of edits (within past 180 days)0
Recent number of distinct authors0

Page properties

Transcluded templates (14)

Templates used on this page:

Lint errors

Missing end tag1
View detailed information on the lint errors.

SEO properties

Description

Content

Article description: (description)
This attribute controls the content of the description and og:description elements.
Robots in television—particularly comedic television—are usually human-like in ways that very few sane programmers would deem useful. It can be something as simple as being philosophical (wanting to understand human emotion, wondering if they have a soul, etc.), but can extend to such things as robot social cliques, robot food, robot entertainment, robot religion, and even robot sex. It doesn't matter if it makes no sense in the context of a mechanical servant, or even if it's truly undesirable, the designers have put it in there for some twisted reason. This will often take the form of having an Artificial Human, a robot that looks exactly like a human.
Information from Extension:WikiSEO