Question by ben dover: Looking for the name of a SciFi movie from the late 80s or early 90s, about a killer robot head?
I saw this movie in the theaters. It was not that great, but every time it was on TV I had to sit there and watch it. It was set in the future after a nuclear war. It started off with this guy in what looked like a desert. He has a prosthetic hand. It was just a big glove with some tubing going into his arm, so you would know he had it replaced. He found this robot head in the dirt, and takes it with him. When he leaves the wind uncovers a sign that says something like Do not take items past this point. He goes back to the city. It is always dark and raining there. I think from a nuclear winter. The city is made up of tall concrete buildings. He gives the head to his girlfriend who is an artiest. She puts the head in the middle of sculpture, and paints it red white and blue. There is this fat neighbor that is spying on her with a telescope. The robot comes to life, and starts to rebuild it’s self from things around the apartment. It kills her neighbor. Then it goes after her. It sees with thermo heating, so she hides in the refrigerate so it can’t find her. Her boyfriend shows up at the end, and blows it up. There is a sean in the movie where there is this epic music playing, and the robot is standing in the middle of the apartment with a strobe light on it. It is like it is saying Look at me in all my glory with my red white and blue head. Nothing can stop me. Like I said it was a cheesey movie, but I want to know what the name of it was. I want to find out if I can get it on DVD so I can add it to my colection. I know my description of the movie might be a little vague, but that’s all I can remember about it. I think the movie started with a T or H. If you know the name of this movie it would be a big help.
Thank You
Best answer:
Answer by petergriffin
give me some of your drugs!!
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The Return of Sci-Fi: Texas Hospital Patients May Soon Be Talking To Robots
Your doctor may soon be a robot, or so the whispers warn. Sound like something out of a bad science-fiction movie? Well, maybe you should ask whichever physician shows up on-screen of the RP-7 Remote Presence Robotic System by InTouch Technologies, a maneuverable robotic system designed to allow physicians to videoconference with their patients from remote locations.
Dr. Alex Gandsas, of Baltimore’s Sinai Hospital and holder of stock options with InTouch Technologies, introduced the machine to hospital administrators as a way to closely monitor patients after the weight loss surgeries in which he specializes. Since its introduction, the length of his patients’ stays has been shorter. In Gandsas’ study published earlier this month in the Journal of the American College of Surgeons, 92 of 376 patients had additional robotic visits, and all 92 of them were medically cleared to return home faster than those who did not receive check-ins with the teleconferencing system. Shorter patient stays would be a welcome change for hospitals, health insurance companies, and patients alike — all of which have a vested interested in sending patients home faster.
While further studies should, without a doubt, be performed by physicians who do not hold a financial interest in the technology, these preliminary results do show promise. The robotic visits were not used by Gandsas to replace his personal check-ins with patients — only to add to them. Neither InTouch Technologies, nor Dr. Gandsas envisions the “Bari” or so it’s nicknamed, as completely replacing personal visits with healthcare professionals. Instead, the joystick-controlled system, which employs cameras, a video screen, and microphone, is intended to supplement physicians’ traditional visits, and to allow patients and healthcare workers to receive advice from qualified physicians and specialists when it may otherwise be impossible. Doctors may soon be able to provide their patients with additional daily check-ins and answer questions much faster, all while sitting in their own homes or while away from the area.
Sinai Hospital isn’t the only one with this technology, however. In fact, robots have been in use for some time to assist with patient care, including guiding stroke patients through therapy, and helping them play video games. Many prosthetic devices are now at least partially robotic, and if it weren’t for a certain amount of robotic technology, the public would not be able to communicate with such great minds as Steven Hawkins.
Johns Hopkins also has a robotic teleconferencing system to help communicate with patients who need a translator when one is not available at the hospital itself. Use of such technology could have tremendously positive effects on Texas’ healthcare system — particularly in Dallas, Houston, and Austin — which handles a high volume of patients who do not speak English. Lack of adequate communication is a major obstacle to receiving quality healthcare for many immigrants in Texas. Lack of quality healthcare, in turn, can lead to serious public health issues, including the transmission of communicable diseases.
Approximately 120 RP-7 Remote Presence Robotic Systems are currently in use around the world, with plans to implement many more in the coming years. China is already using similar systems to help deal with the lack of medical care in rural, inaccessible areas.
Dr. Louis Kavoussi, chairman of the urology department at North Shore-Long Island Jewish Health System, took a special interest in this new trend and conducted a study monitoring the effect of the technology on patient care. The study showed no decrease in patient satisfaction, and no increase in complications due to teleconferencing visits. The technology, Kavoussi said, is rudimentary, really, in comparison to other developing systems. The need for fear is
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