The robot dog poised to replace your pet - Meet Sirius: the world’s first trainable AI canine

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He doesn’t bark, require feeding or walking, and he certainly doesn’t leave behind any unwelcome surprises on the pavement.

Sirius, the world’s first trainable AI robotic dog is on the cusp of radically transforming the pet industry.

Designed by Chinese start-up Hengbot, Sirius has been hailed by technologists as bringing advanced robotics to the masses, and is due for roll-out in October.

Although there are already robot dogs on the market, Sirius recognises its owner and learns new tricks, evolving over time to sync gestures with voice commands, similar to how a real dog is trained.

“With Sirius, we didn’t just build a robot, we created the first of a new kind of robotic species,” said Peiheng Song, the chief executive at Hengbot.

“Sirius marks the start of a growing universe of intelligent, customisable robots designed to bring your imagination to life.”


Several of Hengbot’s developers already live with Sirius. They told The Telegraph it had been a more “heartwarming” experience than they expected, especially for young designers and engineers who are often living alone for the first time.

“It feels like something between a smart assistant and curious little pet,” said one.

“While it doesn’t need feeding or walking, it often surprises you with small, spontaneous gestures: a sneeze, a stretch, a playful bark or a gentle head tilt when you get close.

“After a long day, it simply stays nearby – whether you’re watching a show, playing games, or just winding down. It adds a soft, almost therapeutic presence that helps ease loneliness and brings warmth to everyday life.”

One developer described it as “a little being that keeps you company without asking for anything in return”.

‘Therapeutic presence’​

Hengbot said that they believe robot pets will eventually become normal, not to replace real animals, but as a new form of companionship that could be particularly useful for people with allergies, demanding schedules or limited space.

“We believe companions like Sirius will feel increasingly natural, and even expected, in people’s lives,” said a company spokesman.

“It offers similar companionship and emotional joy, but with far less upkeep – no feeding, no vet visits, no shedding – while still responding to you, showing emotion, and surprising you with little gestures.

“Sirius is a low-maintenance companion that fits perfectly into today’s fast-paced lifestyle.”

Users can even pick Sirius’s personality, uploading voice packs and swapping character behaviours and moods so that it can behave like a husky, corgi or border collie. They can even change its outer appearance with 3D printable upgrades.

It can be programmed to bark and move excitedly like a playful puppy, or amble slowly and calmly around the room like a relaxed dog at home.

Owners can even upload their own dog’s bark and replicate its signature gestures.

The lifelike movement comes from special joints which mimic how real animal limbs operate, coupled with advanced AI and a motion feedback system, allowing it to respond like a real dog, including jumping and stretching.

As owners spend more time with it, Sirius begins to learn from the interactions, gradually understanding preferences and habits, and adjusting its behaviour accordingly.

It has both short-term and long-term memory, meaning it can remember recent events while also building a deeper understanding of its owner.

Developers have been surprised just how lifelike the little robot is, finding that if they playfully scold it, it barks back like a real dog.

“This level of adaptability and lifelike expression goes far beyond what we initially expected,” said the company.

So far, nearly 700 people have pre-ordered the robot, which is currently funding on Kickstarter for around £500.
 
Its a more retarded version of tamagotchi virtual pets then. So robot pets, flannel seems to be back, companies are back to putting out garbage games and movies, major celebrities are dying, king of the hill is about to air again and the president has a ton of people out to get him

Its like we went back to 1997
 
Speaking as an owner of a real dog... ugh.

I think I'll keep my dog, even if she stares at me hopefully during dinner and tries to hog the bed when I sleep.
 
Fuck off, mad scientists, I know how that shit ends.
Brian-Yuzna-Rottweiler.webp
 
I'm sure this will be completely different from all the other always online companions and won't become a paperweight when the parent company stops providing updates.
 
this article is fucking gay lol, and so is this stupid robo-dog. robots are not replacing real animals any time soon.

Several of Hengbot’s developers already live with Sirius. They told The Telegraph it had been a more “heartwarming” experience than they expected, especially for young designers and engineers who are often living alone for the first time.

you might get some of these stupid tech nerds to cope their way into calling it a pet. but the normies that operate on a lower brain level closer to the subconscious are much harder to fool. you need to replicate a very specific pattern of stimuli in order to trick the most basic human brain into conflating a toy made out of metal and plastic with a real animal. sure, it may mimic a couple aspects, it may even do so convincingly, but the closer that mimicry gets without actually reading as the thing it's mimicking, the more repulsive it will be. and the fact that the retards in this article find it to be a charming novelty means it's not a very good mimic at all.
 
this article is fucking gay lol, and so is this stupid robo-dog. robots are not replacing real animals any time soon.



you might get some of these stupid tech nerds to cope their way into calling it a pet. but the normies that operate on a lower brain level closer to the subconscious are much harder to fool. you need to replicate a very specific pattern of stimuli in order to trick the most basic human brain into conflating a toy made out of metal and plastic with a real animal. sure, it may mimic a couple aspects, it may even do so convincingly, but the closer that mimicry gets without actually reading as the thing it's mimicking, the more repulsive it will be. and the fact that the retards in this article find it to be a charming novelty means it's not a very good mimic at all.
Potential buyers are either technophiles or wealthy folk looking for a flex.... in both cases? They aren't in it for the pseudo-companionship, they're in it to be seen embracing the technology. And in that way? having one that doesn't act just like a real dog is a plus, marks yours out as the "superior" robot!


But if it stops low effort lazy motherfuckers from getting dogs, good,
Hummm......... anyone considered selling primed bear traps as "Pitbull Simulators" , all the experience but without the hassle of food and dog doo all over the yard?
 
Imagine having this little fuck in your home at night and it starts playing ads for the next Pedo Pascal capeshit movie.
 
Its a more retarded version of tamagotchi virtual pets then. So robot pets, flannel seems to be back, companies are back to putting out garbage games and movies, major celebrities are dying, king of the hill is about to air again and the president has a ton of people out to get him

Its like we went back to 1997
Fuck yeah, count me in. I was in germany and it wasn't all that bad. Lived next to a bmw dealership and a trailer full of gypsies.

Also im dying from laughter from some of the replies. I once found a random dog on the road, it almost got hit by a car. I kept it as an outside dog since it would shit on my carpet right after id walk the dumb motherfucker for like an hour. One day he ran away while I was at work. Another day a random dude approached me and asked for him... turns out he was the dogs owner and went to prison. I told him the story and we parted ways.
 
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Come on, the main consumer base will be those protogen furries.
I clicked it thinking 'Its kind of sad but Ive heard of kids who want pets and get these instead because they cant have a pet. I can kind of see a purpose for a robot pet--' Ive known plenty of shit pet owners who dont walk their dog or pay enough attention, theyll get a breed that isnt right or too high maintenance. I feel a bit bad for dogs in situations like that, so I understand maybe robot pets.

Then i read:
“Sirius marks the start of a growing universe of intelligent, customisable robots designed to bring your imagination to life.”
Shut it down before it starts because you know someone is going to 'customize' a fleshlight into one of these. Its gonna be like like people dating AI and its just gonna get real fucked up real fast.
 
The human-animal "pet" bond relies on three things:
- non- verbal communication and interaction with something that's at young child/toddler intellegence level or below
- pleasing touch stimulation, wether it's warm soft fur or cool smooth scales
- the human getting pleasure from watching the spontaneous actions of the animal
AI is seeing success because it can parrot back verbal communication. Successfully mimicking the non-verbal communication of dogs and cats is a whole diffrent level of difficulty. Cladding a metal frame in cheap plastic or tortured dog fur and having it turn it's head occasionally is going to interest no one.
 
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