On the whole, it is very good, although the subject matter is not very new, it is still robot evolution, and then man-machine battle. The idea of the movie is still relatively smooth. The robot first uses deer as a killing target to practice, and then begins to evolve itself and learn human skills. The most important word in the article, "reprograming", is more appropriate to translate into reprogramming, because this can explain why the heroine loses her authority. Because the robot learns to rewrite its own program, so as to achieve complete independence. Finally, before the machine goes down, it will transmit the program to the nearby machine, so that the data can be saved, data analysis can be performed, and the skills can be continuously evolved. In addition, there should be no main robot, because there are not many robots of the same model in the base. Therefore, information is shared between robots. When one robot's information is updated, other robots will also update as long as the information is received. Therefore, this can explain why the robot transmits all the data to the hostess before it goes down. The next part is that the heroine becomes the chief leader of the killing machine. Her first step should be to continue to build robots. Given the experience of previous failures, the killing machine she built will definitely be even better.
The only thing I didn't understand was that in the end, the heroine confirmed her identity as a human, and finally the robot was shot to death. It seems that the gun was not prepared in advance, it seems that they did not have the time and ability to prepare the
base, and it is strange that the machine has not been activated and has not evolved. The main robot of these machines can start and update information. Unless the field is connected to the last fierce battle. Robots don't have permission to enter the base, but if the robots don't have permission, how are people at the base killed?
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